07.10.08
Posted in Daily Journal, Smile for the Camera at 12:01 am by Administrator
The first house in which I lived is located at 783 Park Avenue in Albany, New York.

Jane Niedzialkowski and Frank Danko on Park Avenue
SOURCE: Jane Niedzialkowski and Frank Danko on Park Avenue (Albany, Albany Co., New York). Photographed by an unknown photographer on 29 Nov 1946.
Park Avenue in Albany bears little resemblance to the street of the same name in New York City, but there is a park - Ridgefield Park - just a few hundred yards from the house.
My uncle, John (Jack) Danko, owned the building at the time my family lived there. The structure is two stories high, one flat on each level, with a full basement and attic. For the first few years of my life my family lived in the second story flat, and then we moved downstairs to the first story flat.
Each flat included a living room, dining room, three bedrooms, a kitchen, a pantry, and a bath. Behind the house are a garage and a small yard partly planted in grass and partly paved. Uncle John, who owned a gasoline station, used the garage to store automobile tires and my parents usually parked their car on the street. The snowplow blade for Uncle John’s truck was stored on the side of the house.
The photo above shows my parents in front of the house on Friday, 29 Nov 1946. My parents were not yet married when this photo was taken and still lived in Worcester, Massachusetts. Because this photo was taken on the day after Thanksgiving, my parents were apparently in Albany to spend the holiday with some of my father’s siblings who had already moved there.
My cousins still own and live in this house, and I usually stop by to visit them when I’m in Albany. The house and neighborhood are still very much as I remember them when my family lived there in the 1950s.
Written for Smile for the Camera - A Carnival of Images.
Copyright © 2008 by Stephen J. Danko
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06.10.08
Posted in Daily Journal, Smile for the Camera at 12:01 am by Administrator
My father was discharged from military service in World War II on 25 Jan 1946. Upon returning home, I suspect the year 1946 and the first half of 1947 were very busy for him. He married my mother on 22 May 1947.

Frank Danko and Jane Niedzialkowski - 1947
SOURCE: Frank Danko and Jane Niedzialkowski (probably Worcester, Worcester Co., Massachusetts). Photographed by unknown photographer on 28 Sep 1946.
The photo above was taken about halfway between the time my father returned from the war and the time he was married. From the way they were dressed, I’d guess that they had attended a special event. In 1946, September 28 fell on a Saturday, which leads me to believe that they may have attended someone else’s wedding that day.
Written for the 2nd Edition of Smile for the Camera - Beaus and Belles.
Copyright © 2008 by Stephen J. Danko
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05.10.08
Posted in Daily Journal, Smile for the Camera at 12:01 am by Administrator
Way back in September 1955 while on an outing to the park, my father snapped this photo of my mother and me enjoying the warm, sunny weather.

A Mother’s Love
SOURCE: A Mother’s Love (Washington Park, Albany, Albany County, New York). Photographed by Francis J. Danko in September 1955.
The photo was taken in Washington Park in Albany, New York. While I don’t, of course, remember the event, I do remember seeing this set of photographs when I was young. The picture was taken with a Kodak Brownie Hawkeye Camera, a camera I still own as a family heirloom.
In the years to follow, our family would make frequent visits to the park to enjoy the open spaces, to feed the pigeons and squirrels with saltine crackers or stale bread, to view the flowers, and to swing on the park swings.
As I’ve grown older, it seems that the park has grown smaller, though indeed it has not actually changed in size at all. Until recently, my Aunt Helen lived across the street from the park, and my older sister worked just a couple blocks away.
My mother passed away 28 years ago. She would have been 86 this year.

Written for “Smile for the Camera - A Carnival of Images”.
Copyright © 2008 by Stephen J. Danko
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