Arthur Miller, writing in The New Yorker in 1998 about life in 1927 or ’28:
Even through the nights, the pall of heat never broke. With a couple of other kids, I would go across 110th to the Park and walk among the hundreds of people, singles and families, who slept on the grass, next to their big alarm clocks, which set up a mild cacophony of the seconds passing, one clock’s ticks syncopating with another’s. Babies cried in the darkness, men’s deep voices murmured, and a woman let out an occasional high laugh beside the lake. I can recall only white people spread out on the grass; Harlem began above 116th Street then.
comments: 4
https://www.newspapers.com/clip/26730389/sam-bow-foll-1949-tel-number/
An added incentive.
I wish Miller had mentioned the practice of going to the movies to cool off — air-cooled theaters, all of that.
heatwave
https://dl.mospace.umsystem.edu/umkc/islandora/object/umkc:44096
They need to be playing in an air-cooled theater.
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