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- <text id=93TT0401>
- <title>
- Dec. 02, 1993: Lowell's Little Acre
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Dec. 02, 1993 Special Issue:The New Face Of America
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SPECIAL ISSUE:THE NEW FACE OF AMERICA
- Lowell's Little Acre, Page 34
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>For centuries, one neighborhood has served as a gateway for
- immigrants
- </p>
- <p>By Ann Blackman/Lowell
- </p>
- <p> Across from a small, grassy park dedicated to Greek and Irish
- immigrants, Joe Cogliano, whose grandparents were Italian, sells
- mangoes to Hispanic customers from the back of his truck. Children
- play tag while chattering in Spanish on O'Brien Terrace, part
- of a housing project built in 1939 for Irish laborers. The pungent
- odor of Vietnamese fish sauce fills a Southeast Asian restaurant
- where Giavis' Greek grocery once thrived for more than 70 years.
- </p>
- <p> In Lowell they call it the Acre. Less than one-seventh of the
- current 105,000 citizens of this Massachusetts mill town call
- it home. But tens of thousands of working-class immigrants going
- back a century and a half before them have left marks as vivid
- as the archaeological artifacts uncovered in successive layers
- of limestone. In few places are the textures and tensions of
- ethnic urban history as legible as they are here.
- </p>
- <p> Francis Cabot Lowell built the country's first water-powered
- cotton mill on farmland near Pawtucket Falls in northeastern
- Massachusetts in 1814. Within two decades the area had become
- one of the foremost industrial centers in America. As more mills
- were built, their owners recruited young, single New England
- farm girls as laborers. When the "mill girls," as they were
- called, rebelled against the long hours and low wages, they
- were replaced by Irishmen fleeing the potato famine of the 1840s.
- In a scheme to rid downtown Lowell of the unwanted Irish workers,
- the Yankee mill owners donated an acre of land southwest of
- the city's center. The neighborhood became a gateway for generations
- of immigrants who went to Lowell in search of work and a better
- life. On wages of 75 cents a day, the early laborers crowded
- into a shantytown of mud huts and shacks. "I learned to speak
- French just hanging out on my street," says Nicholas Georgoulis,
- 76, who grew up in the Acre with Greek Orthodox parents and
- French-Canadian neighbors. The Irish were followed by Greeks,
- Poles, Scots, Portuguese, French Canadians and Italians, all
- escaping economic and political chaos in their native land.
- Today Hispanics, mostly from Puerto Rico, make up 35% of the
- Acre's 15,000 population. Vietnamese and Cambodians who fled
- their war-torn countries and moved to Lowell in the mid-1980s
- constitute another 30%. While Lowell's overall unemployment
- stands at 8%, in the Acre it is close to 50%.
- </p>
- <p> Although chronically plagued by crime and violence, the gateway
- still beckons. Family by family, block by block, each ethnic
- group adds its own restaurants, markets and schools to the Acre's
- evolving mosaic. St. Patrick's Catholic Church, built for Irish
- immigrants in 1831, and the Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Church,
- circa 1906, remain firm spiritual landmarks for each generation
- of new workers. "At midnight Mass on Christmas Eve, Silent Night
- is now sung in Vietnamese," says David McKean, 40, a third-generation
- Acre-ite of Scottish and Irish descent. "For some it's a sign
- of unity. For others it hurts."
- </p>
- <p> Age-old tensions between old-timers and new arrivals remain.
- George Karafilidis, a tailor whose Greek family has owned a
- business in Lowell for 35 years, complains that newcomers are
- ruining his neighborhood. When a reporter reminds him that his
- relatives were immigrants, Karafilidis flies into a rage and
- bellows, "Don't come in here and talk to me about immigrants!"
- </p>
- <p> Tarsy Poulios, 67, grew up on the third floor of a crowded cold-water
- tenement around the corner from 29 Bowers Street, where he lives
- today. When Poulios was a child, his neighbors were predominantly
- Irish and French Canadian. Now a Cambodian family lives on one
- side of his turquoise-shingled house, a Lebanese family on the
- other. His father, who spoke only a few words of English, worked
- for three decades as a spinner in the Merrimack textile mill.
- Poulios, a city mailman for 34 years, has served six years on
- the city council. Today he is Lowell's mayor. "The Acre is the
- bottom of the social ladder," he says. "The last group that
- comes in is always on the bottom rung. But you can climb that
- ladder. You just have to prove your worth to the group ahead
- of you to be accepted."
- </p>
- <p> As Irish, Greek and French-Canadian merchants have proved their
- worth and moved to better neighborhoods, energetic Southeast
- Asians have opened their doors for business. Dien Tran, 43,
- and his wife Buu Ma came to Lowell in 1980 speaking little English.
- Six years later, both graduated from the local branch of the
- University of Massachusetts. Now they own an apartment building
- in the Acre as well as two Vietnamese restaurants. Each works
- more than 80 hours a week. "We're not successful yet," says
- Tran. "Success will be a big income and paying off my debt."
- </p>
- <p> Gradually, each ethnic group has found that hard work pays.
- Poulios is Lowell's third Greek mayor. The superintendent of
- schools is Greek American. The city fire chief is of French-Canadian
- ancestry. The police chief's grandparents were Irish. And Lowell
- native Paul Tsongas, whose parents were Greek, served as Massachusetts'
- Congressman and Senator for 10 years before running for President.
- History suggests that a Vietnamese-American boy or girl may
- someday run Lowell--and who knows what else after that?
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-