The Gut - Directed by Dominik Chadwick

Комедия

"The Gut" is a low-income neighborhood of Italian immigrants located in Rutland, Vermont. Given the recent decline in community strength, this film examines what makes "The Gut" special, and why it has fallen on harsh times.

Пікірлер: 50

  • @altega
    @altega Жыл бұрын

    born and raised in rutland, but moved states when i turned 19. seeing this while on a little nostalgia trip and seeing your name on this was nuts! we literally went to school together! lmao great video though, man. really appreciate that you took the time to interview people, too.

  • @tammyzokaitis5011
    @tammyzokaitis5011 Жыл бұрын

    I proudly work at the old “caggies store” one of the last remaining corner store’s here in Rutland.I’m 52 years old and I remember that 10 of 9 whistle!! I really wish they’d bring that ordinance back in order. I remember all those store’s growing up.

  • @elainewilcomb6000
    @elainewilcomb6000 Жыл бұрын

    My Dad's family lived in the Gut - the Bizzarro's of 100 South St. This video hits very close to home. I remember this community and it was a very special place. I also felt that MSJ gave me the best education and the teachers and coaches there, including my Dad Frank Bizzarro, were very special human beings. Thank you for putting this story together.

  • @anotherprop1673

    @anotherprop1673

    Жыл бұрын

    Do you still live in Rutland?

  • @vincentdodenbrett
    @vincentdodenbrett Жыл бұрын

    My Family is Salvatore and Carmella Gallo from South Street Rutland. My mother, Rosalie, and my brother Sal and I lived on Forrest Street. Next door was mom's sister Mary Gallo Bernardo. Most of Grampa and Gramma's children lived in 'the gut'. The Gut was so named, in my eyes, as it is prominent in Naples Italia (which I visited numerous times during my years in the U.S. Navy. Dominick, you did a marvelous job. Thank you. Vincent Dominic Odenbrett, Florida

  • @salgallo5291

    @salgallo5291

    Жыл бұрын

    When you gonna unblock me on the Gallo family page ?

  • @MGBguy72
    @MGBguy72 Жыл бұрын

    Wonderful work Dominik!!! So true! Lots of honest commentary. I grew up on Robbins Street in the 1950s -1960s just north of State Street and West Street and the "Gut" or "Happy Valley" . Wonderful people. I had several friends from "The Gut". A wonderful tribute!

  • @sarahyoung8121
    @sarahyoung8121 Жыл бұрын

    Wow! My family moved away from Vermont when I was only four, but I loved it when we would visit. My dad, Dick Noble, always spoke fondly of the Gut. So many of the places, traditions, and terms discussed in your video brought me right back to his well-told stories. Thank you for documenting this!

  • @peterpolcaro9786
    @peterpolcaro9786 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you Dominick, Made me home sick.

  • @pattikent7415
    @pattikent7415 Жыл бұрын

    Dominic you did an awesome job So happy that you interviewed my cousin Gene and his wife Jan We always had Sunday lunch at Aunt Mae’s My mom was her sister

  • @tammyross1137

    @tammyross1137

    Жыл бұрын

    Then we would go swimming in the pool!

  • @hogieflocka
    @hogieflocka Жыл бұрын

    Excellent cinematography! The story pulls everything together and is a very important narrative of the culture that people deserve to know about. Great job all around, cheers

  • @elaineweber1068
    @elaineweber1068 Жыл бұрын

    I lived in Rutland from 1945 -1949. We lived on Forest St and South St. Then lived with my grandfather Shoro at 92 Meadow Street. These are my memories as well! I've talked to my family about the wonderful life I lived in Rutland. My family and community existed in that area. Remember the Daltos as well!🥰

  • @anotherprop1673

    @anotherprop1673

    Жыл бұрын

    Why did you leave Rutland?

  • @salgallo5291
    @salgallo5291 Жыл бұрын

    I was born in Rutland , VT. My grandfather was Salvatore Gallo & Grandmother lived 158 South street where he operated a little trucking company & service station. I left in 1949 when my mother remarried & we moved to Iowa .

  • @joshwalker2027

    @joshwalker2027

    Жыл бұрын

    My great great grandfather was Salvatore gallo married to Carmella Esposito.. my grandmas name was Betty who lived by the middle school also. Could we be related ?

  • @salgallo5291

    @salgallo5291

    Жыл бұрын

    @@joshwalker2027 we very well could be, my grandmother was Carmela Esposito Gallo .

  • @joshwalker2027

    @joshwalker2027

    Жыл бұрын

    @@salgallo5291 yeah my dads name is Robert Walker.. Salvatore had two daughters Angeline and Josephine. I’ve been trying to learn more about the Italian side of my family

  • @salgallo5291

    @salgallo5291

    Жыл бұрын

    @@joshwalker2027 I had Aunts with those names , my grandpa had 5 daughters & 2 sons. Dominic drowned at 16 yrs old .

  • @salgallo5291

    @salgallo5291

    Жыл бұрын

    What was your mom's maiden name

  • @lindajackson6180
    @lindajackson6180 Жыл бұрын

    My father’s family grew up in the Gut, living on Franklin St and Granger St.

  • @Bonitafarmer
    @Bonitafarmer Жыл бұрын

    Loved it!!! You should make more. Nice work.

  • @michelleburgess7638
    @michelleburgess7638 Жыл бұрын

    Absolutely Fabulous!!!

  • @caseyrichards
    @caseyrichards Жыл бұрын

    Amazing video. I hope you do more material about Rutland.

  • @thebestrutlanddocumentarie1799
    @thebestrutlanddocumentarie1799 Жыл бұрын

    Excellent work Dominik.

  • @tammyross1137
    @tammyross1137 Жыл бұрын

    It was the best neighborhood to grow up in. Gene and Jan were right… we were all a big family. My grandmother lived next to the Esposito’s. I lived 3 blocks down on Forest St. great memories

  • @anotherprop1673

    @anotherprop1673

    Жыл бұрын

    Why did you leave, then?

  • @tammyross1137

    @tammyross1137

    Жыл бұрын

    @@anotherprop1673 I got married and moved to Chittenden. I now live in Middletown Springs. My parents sold our house because crime got bad.

  • @maureenobrien4223
    @maureenobrien4223 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you Dominik - lot's of memories of visiting the Gut with my late mother, Stella Cotrupi.

  • @donnamillsify
    @donnamillsify Жыл бұрын

    Interesting and I lived in The Gut for many years, Franklin Street, the corner of River Street and Forrest Street and Meadow Street ~ I was also a lunch lady at MSJ.

  • @dylanpilcheruniverse6515
    @dylanpilcheruniverse6515 Жыл бұрын

    Nice work dude!

  • @brittanytruman9170
    @brittanytruman9170 Жыл бұрын

    My grandfather Angelo Maniery moved to Granger st with his parents from Italy! Im currently raising my kids in the house my Great grandfather build! ❤️

  • @brittanytruman9170

    @brittanytruman9170

    Жыл бұрын

    Barb and Sam where my grandfather neighbors! The best people you’d ever meet! She loved to stop by and see my kids!

  • @bomoaccavallo7924
    @bomoaccavallo7924 Жыл бұрын

    Wonderful adaptation of Rutland gut I lived in the gut for 25 years grew up there and I loved it

  • @anotherprop1673

    @anotherprop1673

    Жыл бұрын

    Then why did you leave?

  • @followyourlight7978
    @followyourlight7978 Жыл бұрын

    Since the elders have passed, Rutland has declined. I miss my great aunts n uncles. Rutland isn't like it was 30+yrs ago.

  • @tammyzokaitis5011
    @tammyzokaitis5011 Жыл бұрын

    Irish families moved in? Did they not? Wasn’t that the cross road? I dk, I’m still learning. Italians lived on one side of route 7, Irish moved on the east side? Just a question. Either way… I’ve always lived in the “gut” proud owner of that that! P.S. I’m not Italian. I have been to St. Peter’s school, I’ve been to IHM as well.

  • @anotherprop1673

    @anotherprop1673

    Жыл бұрын

    You bring up a good point, Tammy. I believe us Irish were the "minority" in the neighborhood.

  • @gordonsheldon8251

    @gordonsheldon8251

    Жыл бұрын

    I grew up in IHM church .

  • @loughourna

    @loughourna

    9 ай бұрын

    "Nebraska" as it was then called , was from the 1850s , the original Irish neighborhood in Rutland, St Peter's being their parish. Around the turn of the century many Italians began moving in but if you look in the city directories from the 1930s there were still many Irish. But it would have been an Italian majority by the decades these folks were referring to.

  • @lisaforrest2492
    @lisaforrest2492 Жыл бұрын

    Oh my gosh!! My mom rented the upstairs apartment from your grandparents on south st. I remember their store right door. We moved to corner of Granger at and First st oh the days those were days I would love to tell you about them My name is Lisa forrest however my maiden name is coffi

  • @Alex_Cornelius
    @Alex_Cornelius Жыл бұрын

    🐐

  • @anotherprop1673
    @anotherprop1673 Жыл бұрын

    Wow! So many great memories here by the Italians, of the Italians. Did anyone realize that there actually were Jewish and Irish families in the neighborhood as well? Even as Catholics, our Irish family was not nearly as welcomed and "popular" as this Italian majority. As a very young child, I recall being bullied quite a bit for looking different by having "freckles!" What a shock, freckles! I wonder if this is because we were one of these "other families" who moved in (see 7:18). Or was the real problem "those Jews?" After all, their temple was (is) pretty close to The Gut! Yes, there was something about those Italian families that was different from others, as the Esposito's explain at 8:05. Perhaps it was just that they "clung to what they knew," as they say here. In modern times, this is what we call "xenophobia." I'm curious, though- when all these "other families" moved in to the Gut, what was done to welcome them? Include them? Maybe even acknowledge them? Or was that too far from what "you knew and had to cling to?" And as far as these wonderful parochial schools go.....if your family did not have the money to pay them, you did not go. And some of us were reminded of that by the kids that did go, on a regular basis. Even the ones whose families were on Food Stamps, I kid you not! Sorry to digress, back to these wonderful Catholic institutions. Remember our good Father Paquette, of Christ the King Church? You should. I wonder how many of our citizens were molested as young children by this monster disguised as a Priest. And then enabled over and over again by this same Catholic institution. For reference, please read: The Blue Hole, a memoir by Dan Gilman. Unless you want to throw Mr. Gilman under the bus with those damn Jews & Irish & other invaders of your Glorious Gut.

  • @gordonsheldon8251

    @gordonsheldon8251

    Жыл бұрын

    Luv it , a luv it ❤️

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