Years ago, I first blogged about the camp where I spent some time for several summers as a pre teen and a teen. I've blogged about it several times since. The below post is from 2015 and it's time to update it.
I grew up in a New York City housing project, and by the definition of a particular non profit, my family was considered poor. So I was eligible to be sent to a sleep away camp in Sussex, New Jersey, opened in 1924, and run by a Jewish Fresh Air Camp association (yes, I was a Fresh Air child - of sorts). Its attendees were "orphans and poor children".
Mel Brooks, among a handful of famous people, went to this camp.
The camp closed in 2005, and has been extensively vandalized.
In researching this throwback, I
found that the site was finally sold at auction earlier this year, and may be reopened as a nonprofit children's camp for children from Korea.
One can only hope that, by next year, this may not be a nostalgia backfire.
Don't you love a possibly happy ending?
On County Road 565 in Sussex County, New Jersey, lies an abandoned
summer camp that I, and other low income children, attended back in the
20th century. I first wrote the below post in 2010. Sadly, this camp
still lies abandoned.
No one seems to want to buy it.
Nostalgia sometimes backfires.
Do you have memories of sleepaway camp?
Another Reason Why I Can't Go Home Anymore
One more reason why trying out nostalgia can bite you in the you-know-where.
I sometimes surf around Facebook and type in stuff from my past, just to see what comes up.
Today I decided to type in the name of my sleepaway camp. It wasn't
just any sleepaway camp. You see, as a child of public housing growing
up in the Bronx in the early 60's, the fact that my parents didn't own a
car, and their income made me a disadvantaged urban youth. Luckily, I
didn't know that growing up and I wouldn't have cared.
Through a elementary school friend, I found out about a camp in northern
NJ called Camp Sussex. My friend went there. She lived in a different
housing project so was disadvantaged, too. Since she was going, I
wanted to also. Three weeks away from home. It would be my first time
away from home, at this camp for poor kids. So poor, we weren't even
expected to bring our own clothes. The camp provided them. The camp
provided everything, including transportation from Manhattan.
I went to camp and a couple of things happened that first day.
First, my friend treated me like I didn't exist.
The second was, I was massively homesick. I ended up in the infirmary
overnight, as I had somehow worked myself into a fever. Literally.
I was shown a lot of kindness there, and reported to my bunk first thing
the next morning. I never looked back. I survived being snubbed by my
"friend" and made other friends.
This camp was located in a then-rural area of northern NJ. It was
surrounded by beautiful hills. There was a lake. There were hiking
trails (rumored to contain quicksand pits and lethal snakes). There was
the opportunity to put on a camp musical. Every dinner, before the
prayer (yes, there was a religious element to this camp) we sang "Be
Kind to Your Web Footed Friends". I still remember the words. We woke
up to "Reville", made our bunks, had an inspection, watched the American
flag raise, and listened to "taps" at Lights Out.
Many of the camp counselors were college students. I became friends
with one in particular, who went to Bryn Mawr. We wrote to each other
for months after that session but lost touch.
I had my first crush at Camp Sussex, and my first "boyfriend".
Years later, my cousin married someone who had gone to Camp Sussex. And
at work, for several years, I sat feet from a former Camp Sussex
counselor. Problem was, she was born the last year I went. So we
didn't speak about it much. I wish we had.
Anyway, I had known that the camp had never quite changed its mission,
but had closed around 2005. There were hopes to turn it into a sports
camp, an "education through sports" camp. Derek Jeter's father was
somehow supposed to be involved.
Well, on Facebook, I found out, as Paul Harvey used to say,
"The rest of the story".
The closed camp has been severely vandalized. It was alleged that the
local police had never been too happy about the camp being there (I
guess we disadvantaged kids polluted the place?). Over the years, the
rural area had become urbanized and the local youth had their way with
my beloved camp. The camp hadn't been secured, anyone could just walk
in, and the police didn't seem to care too much. (in all fairness, I
only know one side of the story.) Bottom line, it would take over a
million dollars just to get the camp fixed up enough to even begin about
reopening.
There were pictures on Facebook showing the damage. (there's even a 3
minute short on You Tube documenting some of the damage.) My heart
broke, seeing those beautiful hills for the first time in over 40 years.
And, on two Facebook sites, I saw discussions among some of over 400 people
who belonged to a fraternity of former campers, counselors and even
administrators. They loved Camp Sussex. I loved it
in some ways, too, because it showed me there was a lot more to life
than the streets of the Bronx.
Know what? I wish I could find out how all of us "disadvantaged
youth"of Camp Sussex turned out. How many of us are professionals?
People who have made life better for others? (
The talented Mel Brooks was one.) And, for how many of us,
did Camp Sussex make a difference?
I wish I didn't know about the vandalism, though.
Like my neighborhood, now a slum, now my beloved sleepaway camp.
Sometimes you just can't go back home. How I sometimes envy people who
can!