Arthur Battisto, 22, waited in line at the recruiting station in lower Manhattan to enlist in the Navy. It was January 1942, and ahead of him stood just about every young man who felt it was his duty to join the war effort. Art didn’t hesitate to do his part, but he held off on telling his parents, especially his mother, who cried upon hearing the news.
While Art was serving in WWII, his father, John, died, but when Art came home, he carried on John’s trade of shoe repair. He opened Art’s Shoe Service on Aug. 14, 1946, paying $25 per month for rent. Memories of the Depression were fresh, and shoe repair was a good business.
Art was my uncle, and just about everyone in Boonton knew him…