From both sides of the street
That's a common concern most frequently heard from those with a ''N'' suffix. (I live on an ''N'' block now and I've lived on a ''NE'' block also.)
After being in the neighborhood for 7 years, my own feeling is that ''N'' or ''NE'' is simply a technical distinction whether I live east or west of 1st Street. Within the neighborhood association, I've never seen it matter nor been a point of discussion.
Like you, I also liked the inclusiveness and seeming historic objectivity of ''North Shore.'' But I converted to the new name when it seemed that the original historical designation for North Shore didn't correspond with our current boundaries, when it became clear that ''Old Northeast'' was already our identity to the rest of the world, and when I realized that all our existing neighborhood markers say ''Old Northeast'' already. The fact that our association's name was North Shore then seemed more like an anomoly.
P.S. I like your signature as ''greater'' old northeast. There's a new perspective!
That's a common concern most frequently heard from those with a ''N'' suffix. (I live on an ''N'' block now and I've lived on a ''NE'' block also.)
After being in the neighborhood for 7 years, my own feeling is that ''N'' or ''NE'' is simply a technical distinction whether I live east or west of 1st Street. Within the neighborhood association, I've never seen it matter nor been a point of discussion.
Like you, I also liked the inclusiveness and seeming historic objectivity of ''North Shore.'' But I converted to the new name when it seemed that the original historical designation for North Shore didn't correspond with our current boundaries, when it became clear that ''Old Northeast'' was already our identity to the rest of the world, and when I realized that all our existing neighborhood markers say ''Old Northeast'' already. The fact that our association's name was North Shore then seemed more like an anomoly.
P.S. I like your signature as ''greater'' old northeast. There's a new perspective!