I was proud to call Vinny Amato my friend, but it’s not
something I could have predicted. He
was forty years my senior, a businessman and a Republican – I was a Wesleyan
alum who’d stayed in town, a self-professed do-gooder and activist. If we were in Congress, we would have been on
opposites sides of the aisle. Instead,
in Middletown, we found ourselves around the same table – united by a love of
Main Street and a belief that it offered a unique stage for the individual to
create something lasting and worthwhile.
On committees, at Chamber meetings and running into each
other on Main Street, I often heard Vinny’s views on how we could protect our
downtown from decline. He started each
month with a Thursday morning meeting in the Chamber basement, discussing
collaboration between the business community and the City. He worked to create a special taxing
district, so that the businesses themselves could get extra services and
grow. And as his health was declining,
he participated in yet another multi-year parking study, serving as the voice
of the small business owner. On that
project, he worried out loud that we were making a mistake in creating a
parking department rather than an independent parking authority – how would the
interests of government not dominate the needs of customers? Though the votes weren’t there to create an
authority, he wasn’t dissuaded from arguing for what he thought would be right
for the City.
Many years ago, after a night of swing dancing up at
Wesleyan, my spouse and I walked a darkened Main Street, taking advantage of
the last hour of babysitting before we headed home. We stopped in front of the old vacant
storefront where the original Amato’s toy store had been before it moved across
to the JC Penney building. Wouldn’t it
be the perfect place to hold dances right on Main Street? Could it be a place where people would come
to socialize in a healthy way and learn a new skill? The next day, Mark called Vinny and asked if
we could use the old store to create a community dance hall – and without
hesitation, Vinny said yes, saying that he remembered how much fun it had been
to go dancing when he was younger. I’m
not entirely sure that we really got his permission on the name, but that’s how
Vinnie’s Jump & Jive came about.
I came to rely on Vinny as an uncompromising voice of common
sense that gained in wisdom over the years.
He was our institutional memory, reciting in astounding detail every
revitalization effort that has been tried in Middletown. He was never afraid to consider new ideas, and
he had the courage to speak his mind without being disagreeable. In short, he was a citizen, in the full
meaning of the word.
I remember, shortly before Vinny became ill, having a chat
together outside his store. He was unusually
expansive that day and he talked about how there had been so many times over
the years when he’d had the opportunity to move the store out of town. “It was foolish,” I remember him saying, “but
I couldn’t do it. I couldn’t leave Main
Street”. What he meant was that from a
pure business perspective, and from the direction that his peers and
competitors were taking, it didn’t make sense to keep the store on Main Street,
where parking was a problem, where customers would have to mingle with the occasional
down-and-outer on the sidewalk, and where his destiny was tied to the dwindling
pool of neighboring stores rather than a shopping mall management team. I remember looking at him and saying that I
hoped he knew that his decision to stay was the foundation of his prosperity
and wasn’t a mistake at all – how many of those old competitors were still in
business today? He agreed that most
weren’t, but it seemed like he still felt that perhaps he’d allowed sentiment
to outweigh reason in that choice. At
the core, it hadn’t been a business decision at all. He gestured down Main Street and said, “I
just couldn’t leave the people.”
The obituary and funeral information for Vincent Amato are at this link.
Beautifully said, Jen. We take everyone who visits Middletown to Amatos. It makes our Main Street a delight. It's great to hear a little more about the man behind the store we love so much.
ReplyDeleteWell said, and with the respect and affection so many of us havd had for Vinny.
ReplyDeleteGrowing up in the Middletown area meant that Amato’s and particularly Vinny were a part of my youth. From trains to Dungeons and Dragons and onto radio controlled cars and planes – Amato’s provided much of the fun in my younger days. When I returned to the Middletown business scene as an adult, I was proud (and maybe a little awe struck) that I could sit with Vinny and talk about how the Downtown Business District could make Middletown a better place. Vinny was an icon of my youth and now we worked together to try to make Middletown a better place. I will always remember Vinny and even though I did not see him on a regular basis anymore, I miss him very much. For just a moment I would like to be the geek kid that shopped at Amato’s for hours looking for just the right D&D accessory in the presence of Vinny Amato. Amato’s brought so many smiles to so many kids for so many years. Soon I will smile again - Vinny, but for now - I'm just sad. Middletown has lost of friend, a parent and guardian.
ReplyDeleteGrowing up in the Middletown area meant that Amato’s and particularly Vinny were a part of my youth. From trains to Dungeons and Dragons and onto radio controlled cars and planes – Amato’s provided much of the fun in my younger days. When I returned to the Middletown business scene as an adult, I was proud (and maybe a little awe struck) that I could sit with Vinny and talk about how the Downtown Business District could make Middletown a better place. Vinny was an icon of my youth and now we worked together to try to make Middletown a better place. I will always remember Vinny and even though I did not see him on a regular basis anymore, I miss him very much. For just a moment I would like to be the geek kid that shopped at Amato’s for hours looking for just the right D&D accessory in the presence of Vinny Amato. Amato’s brought so many smiles to so many kids for so many years. Soon I will smile again - Vinny, but for now - I'm just sad. Middletown has lost of friend, a parent and guardian.
ReplyDelete