| Bresci
Thompson (1908 - 2004)
A painter who learned his art at the Guild where he served
for many years as a member of the board of trustees, he was
a protégé of John Lovejoy Elliott, founder of
the Hudson Guild.
Born in poverty and a committed pacifist, he was a community
activist who never forgot the struggles of his youth. In interviews
he gave 10 years ago to Studs Terkel for his book “Coming
of Age: The Story of Our Century by Those Who’ve Lived
It” and 15 years ago to Jeff Kisseloff for his book “You
Must Remember This: An Oral History of Manhattan from 1890 to
World War II, ” Thompson spoke about his heritage and
his life.
His grandfather emigrated from Scotland to Argentina as a bridge
builder and married an Indian woman. His father jumped ship
in New York to escape military service in Argentina and found
work in a Patterson, N.J., silk mill at the side of an Italian
anarchist, Gaetano Bresci.
“Gaetano was saving money each week to send for his sister
who was a silk worker in Italy. But they had a strike there
and the king sent out the soldiers to disperse the strikers
and in that melee, his sister was killed,” Thompson told
Kisseloff.
Gaetano Bresci went to Italy and in Monza, outside of Milan,
“he approached the carriage of Humbert the First, Umberto
Primo, and he shot and killed him. That was in 1900. He was
imprisoned for life and it was ruled that the name Bresci, which
was a surname, should not exist anymore. My father said, ‘If
I ever have a child, I’m going to name him Bresci,’
and that’s how I got my name,” Thompson said.
Bresci Thompson was born in 1908 on 49th St. and 10th Ave.
in Hell’s Kitchen and moved with his family when he was
4 to 27th St. between Ninth and 10th Aves. in Chelsea. The Hudson
Guild settlement house was nearby and Thompson was enrolled
in the Guild kindergarten.
His father found work on the docks but was beaten when he resisted
the kickback system. “He came home with black eyes. He
couldn’t really get work after that, so he had to leave
the docks,” Thompson said. “My father played the
guitar. He liked to sing Argentine songs and folklore….
But when he didn’t have a job the guitar was in the pawnshop,
so we knew that was bad times. But when we heard the guitar
playing again, good times came to the house because my father
had a job again.”
Thompson recalled his first day at the Guild. “It was
traumatic because I didn’t speak English, I spoke Spanish.
I was left there with all those people and I was an outcast.
Then Miss Bergen brought over this man with black hair and a
black mustache. He spoke to me in Spanish. That opened up my
world to me and from then on I was in love with the place. That
man was Dr. Elliott,” Thompson told Kisseloff.
Thompson’s sister, Liberta, died in the influenza epidemic
of 1918 at the age of 11 months. At P.S. 33, students earned
thrift stamps for collecting tinfoil and peach pits that were
ground into a material for gasmasks for the World War I war
effort. “But my father was a pacifist and I had a very
difficult time because he would not let me collect peach pits
or tinfoil,” Thompson recalled.
A German family who ran a grocery store on 31st St. and Ninth
Ave. and lived in the back of the store would give credit to
most of the neighbors. “Then somebody broke the windows
and the store was all boarded up,” said Thompson, who
recalled his father saying, “Look what happens. There
was a nice man. He trusted us, he trusted everybody. But he
was forced out by the rah-rah-rah of the war.”
Thompson’s father eventually got work as a fireman at
the National Biscuit Company plant (now the Chelsea Market complex)
on 16th St. between Ninth and 10th Aves. but died a year later
at the age of 45.
Bresci Thompson married Margaret Fox, who taught at the Hudson
Guild and later in the city school system. He was working as
a display designer for Abraham & Strauss, the Brooklyn department
store, when he was called up for the draft at the beginning
of World War II.
“I told them I was a conscientious objector,” he
told Kisseloff, but he had a bad time because he didn’t
belong to a church. A judge asked him if he would serve in the
medical corps and he said he would. “But they never called
me,” he said.
“The F.B.I. came to the Hudson Guild and to Abraham &
Strauss, they even went to some of my teachers. They asked my
wife’s aunt, who was living with us, if I was a Communist,”
Thompson said. “One thing I’ll never forget was
when Mr. Michellini, the head of the local [draft] board, saw
my name and said to me, ‘This is ironic. You’re
a pacifist and you have the name of an assassin.’”
Thompson retired from the department store in 1968 and his
wife, who also appears in Kisseloff’s book, died in 1986.
He was a lifelong painter; his first show was in 1947 when
the Guild’s Lowe Gallery opened. Thompson went on to solo
exhibits at the gallery in 1974 and 1989. A retrospective exhibit
in 2000 set a record for Lowe Gallery sales. Ro Gallery in Long
Island City also handles his paintings.
Thompson was a founding member of the Guild’s first community
theater group, The Cellar Players, in the 1920s and performed
in the Guild’s first building on W. 27th St. He began
a second career as an actor in film, television and commercials
and as a model in print ads. He was also an enthusiastic ballroom
dancer.
“Dancing is for me,” he told Terkel. “I’m
a good ballroom dancer and they’re in great demand at
senior centers. When the women find out I’m a dancer —
that’s it!” he said.
Thompson is survived by his daughter, Nancy, a founder of Hudson
Guild’s Book Fair, a grandson Michael Cooper, a reporter
on the New York Times, and a great-grandson.
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