Suburban Poverty: Atlanta's Hidden Epidemic

1thouwow

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Im talking the whole Baltimore-DC area. A ton of black middle and upper middle class. Mad business owners and political influence. Theres large black populations in the burbs. Some burbs are majority black. You wont find one area of the country like this
I'm talking Baltimore. On paper y'all can claim DC, but let's be honest here :comeon:
 

Scientific Playa

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How well do you know Atlanta's historically black neighborhoods?
Lifestyles

By Curt Holman - Living Intown Magazine

Posted: 6:00 a.m. Friday, March 4, 2016

HunterChurch1.jpg

Courtesy of the Kenan Research Center at the Atlanta History Center
Ralph David Abernathy (cneter) and his wife Juanita (right) attend the dedication of the West Hunter Street Baptist Church in 1973.
Sometimes it seems as though Atlanta has always been a one of America’s crowning cities of African-American leadership and culture. Look to its origins in the mid-19th century and the community’s achievements prove even more impressive.

This story originally appeared in the March/April 2016 edition of Living Intown Magazine.

Before the Civil War, such Southern cities as Charleston and Savannah included thousands of free black citizens in their populations, in addition to those in bondage. In Atlanta, however, “only 19 free blacks — 13 female and six male — lived in the city in 1850, and a decade later, that number had risen to only 25,” according to Allison Dorsey in her book “To Build Our Lives Together: Community Formation in Black Atlanta, 1875-1906.”

The war and Reconstruction caused drastic shifts. The military footing brought more slave labor into the city, while the aftermath saw more free black migrants attracted to Atlanta from neighboring states. From this foundation gradually grew thriving black neighborhoods. Some of them remain, some have been heavily changed and some have gone with scarcely a trace, but in many ways, they’ve given the city its heart.

When old wards were new

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Courtesy of the Kenan Research Center at the Atlanta History Center
A musician performs in downtown Atlanta circa 1950.
After Atlanta’s incorporation in 1847, the city in 1854 was divided into five wards, many of which had black settlements.

The western First Ward included Jenningstown, originally a shantytown built atop Diamond Hill, with an all-black population apart from some white missionaries.

The Second Ward, to the Southwest, featured Mechanicsville, named for the workers of the railway lines. Neighboring Mechanicsville, Summerhill was one of the first post-war settlements with freed slaves as well as Jewish immigrants.

AJC Living Intown
Most famously, the northeastern Fourth Ward contained a shanty town called Shermantown, named after Gen. William T. Sherman.

From humble beginnings, the communities evolved in the subsequent decades. “After the Civil War, there were three major areas of African-American clustering,” says Tim Crimmins, Georgia State University history professor and director of the Center for Neighborhood and Metropolitan studies. “One was along Auburn Avenue, then called Wheat Street. One was east of what’s now Turner Field, Summerhill. And one was on the West Side, with the establishment of Atlanta University, now Morris Brown. That’s where churches and schools were located.”

Crimmins cities Atlanta University’s Gaines Hall, originally called North Hall, as the city’s most important historic landmark. William H. Parkins, Atlanta’s first architect to practice after the Civil War, designed the Italianate building. “Built in 1869 by the American Missionary Association, it began with elementary and secondary education,” Crimmins says. “In the 1870s, it had white members teaching black children, eating with them. It was one of the first signs of what Martin Luther King Jr. would call ‘the beloved society.’ But nobody knows about it.”

Churches also became centers of community activity beyond spirituality. “They were not just religious gathering spots — the larger ones ended up as big meeting places,” Crimmins says. “ In the 1890s, when white officials like Gov. [William J.] Northen wanted to talk to black community, they would have rallies at churches like Big Bethel. And they were places for rallying around civil rights before what we’d call the ‘civil rights era.’”

Rising despite resistance

Atlanta’s African-American community suffered a pair of blows in the early 20th century that significantly influenced where its people would live and work. In 1906, a race riot erupted in downtown that lead to at least two dozen black fatalities (with some estimates much higher). The bloodshed accelerated the move of African-American businesses away from downtown.

“There had already been a clustering of business and churches on Auburn Avenue,” Crimmins says. “After the race riot, [the street] saw increased building of offices for black professionals, like the Atlanta Life Building. Alonzo Herndon built Atlanta Mutual, [and] the grandest of all was the Odd Fellows building, with its grand theater.”

The name Sweet Auburn was coined by civic leader John Wesley Dobbs, who called it the “richest Negro street in the world,” and it featured the all-black Atlanta Daily World newspaper and such night life as the Top Hat Club.

Today’s tourists are well familiar with the civil rights attractions along the avenue, such as King’s 1929 birthplace at 501 Auburn and Ebenezer Baptist Church, where King first spoke from the pulpit, at 407 Auburn.

Auburn Avenue was spared by the Great Fire of 1917, which devastated the Old Fourth Ward. It began the morning of May 21 at a Grant Street residence, but at least four other fires contributed to the day’s blaze, exacerbated by dry conditions and wood-shingled roofs.

More than 300 acres and 1,938 buildings were consumed by fire, leaving more than 10,000 homeless (mostly African-Americans). Only a few injuries and one death were reported, but the fire caused more than $5 million in property damage, and caused many African-Americans to relocate to such West Side neighborhoods as Ashby Heights and Washington Park.

Crimmins points out that African-American suburbanization began to occur in such neighborhoods as Summerhill and Washington Park, comparable to Virginia-Highland and Candler Park.

“Old Hunter Street was an important a node of African-American suburbanization that took place on the West Side from the 1920s onward,” he says. “A commercial district developed along what’s now Martin Luther King Boulevard.” Popular spots along Hunter Street included the Amos Drug Store, Young’s Artistic Barber shop and the Ashby Theatre.

Paschal’s Restaurant became a gathering place for African-American leadership in the 1960s. Opened as a sandwich shop by Robert and James Paschal, the restaurant took onsuch nicknames as the kitchen of the civil rights movement and “Little City Hall.” King and his aides planned the Poor People’s campaign and the march from Selma to Montgomery there, and other customers included Andrew Young, Julian Bond, Stokely Carmichael and H. Rap Brown.

In 1960, the Pascal brothers opened a nightclub downstairs, which featured acts such as Aretha Franklin and Dizzy Gillespie, and in 1967 included Atlanta’s first black-owned hotel on the property. The restaurant was sold to Clark Atlanta University in 1996 and closed in 2003.

Some of the city’s most impoverished neighborhoods served primarily as places to escape from, but left some enduring footnotes with names like Tanyard Bottom, Tight Squeeze, Lightning and Beaver Slide. One of the most memorable, Buttermilk Bottom, was on the east side of the downtown business district.

Michael Rose’s “Lost Atlanta” offers theories for the origins of the name, including that the “pooling of excess water on the neighborhood’s unpaved streets created the appearance of buttermilk.” The neighborhood’s extensive urban renewal displaced more than 1,000 homes and businesses, and it took the new name Bedford Pine in 1970.

Atlanta’s tendency to pave over its past particularly takes a toll on its black history, with significant sites like Gaines Hall and Paschal’s Restaurant facing uncertain futures. An exception is Collier Heights, also called “The Historic Collier,” found in 1948 in the city’s Southwest.

One of the first U.S. communities designed exclusively by black planners for black middle-class residents, Collier Heights became the first community listed as a historic site on the National Register of Historic Places in 2009. It serves as living proof that the city’s heritage extends beyond Sweet Auburn.

How well do you know Atlanta's historically black neighborhoods?




Six reasons to love Mechanicsville
Atlanta Magazine-Jul 11, 2015
But by 1990 the area had lost nearly 70 percent of its population thanks to the construction of the interstates and Atlanta–Fulton County Stadium ...
 

Poitier

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Jobs are gonna disappear altogether in another 30 years thanks to technology . The CACs have a very limited time left and they want to spend their last generation in convenience, and they forgo having kids altogether. City life was never meant to raise a healthy family, and they know that since they skip the process of an organic family altogether.

Breh, they aren't ready for this discussion.
 

Wild self

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Lol hope you aint talking about reselling Ali baba crap and google ad revenue

When these corporations get a hold of it, it will wipe out the concept of a job. McDonald's got robots preparing food.
, and soon truck drivers and taxi drivers will be automated. Skilled jobs are next in line.

We got to break away from the concept of having a job and living to work for an employer altogether, before automation forces us to be more entrepreneurs.
 

Unknown Poster

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This been going on in Dallas.

Hell just look at LA for an example. Compton like the orginal ghetto suburb that was formerly all white
I can see compton getting gentrified and lily white hipsters making jokes about living there....

"yea, hi, it's Zoey and me and girls got a new spot in comptonnnnnnnnnnn.....represent LBC" (makes gang sign while sipping frappucino)
 

unit321

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I can agree with you on that point, but I will say that in order to build those overpriced shyt boxes; they force poor Black people to relocate. So it is not so much White flight as much as it is a forced relocation of poor Black folks. I do agree with you though on that point.

Btw, I think that the real enemy to Black people neighborhoods is not White flight, but government policies of scattered site Section 8 Housing. Regular Black people don't give a damn about regular working brothas and sistas living in their neighborhoods, because people who pay for their shyt usually try to take care of their shyt. This government policy of Section 8 scattered site housing literally ruins regular black neighborhoods and prevent working class black people from entering the middle class through the development of equity in their homes.
I guess it depends on the city. There are developers who want to push out the poor, in an effort to boost their property value. I don't see that where I am though.
There are developers who don't have to push anyone out because there's nothing there but empty property. That's what it is like where I am. These empty factories are not near any homes, and it gets converted from business to residence. The "retro" factor is a cool, old brick factory walls and stuff. Then, there's the suburbs where they buy farm land. Rural landowners are willing to sell for what seems like a money grab. No poor folks to push out. These homes are expensive and huge.

Section 8 housing is a whole different thing unrelated to white flight.
 

Wild self

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Breh, they aren't ready for this discussion.

I will keep spitting that info till itnhappens, and then be :snoop: because people choose to be ignorant of the wave of the future.

The concept of working for a job and living near to your job, when automation is on the horizon, is setting up them for failure. On top of cacs not having babies anymore and want to live out the college lifestyle well into their 30s, 40s, and 50s in a bland ass urban setting. :heh:

We got to learn to embrace and profit off of entrepreneurship and technology together (not CERTS or STEM majors either).
 

Scientific Playa

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When these corporations get a hold of it, it will wipe out the concept of a job. McDonald's got robots preparing food.
, and soon truck drivers and taxi drivers will be automated. Skilled jobs are next in line.

We got to break away from the concept of having a job and living to work for an employer altogether, before automation forces us to be more entrepreneurs.[/QUOTE]

the zeitgeist documentaries covered those same thoughts

Zeitgeist (film series) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 

beenz

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My block actually isn't that bad. It's only 2 vacants on the whole block. The next block down is a different story. Gary got some nice areas tho. Miller is pretty nice and Tolleston ain't that bad either. And yeah it's rough as a whole now but if we band together we can make it better. Jobs are coming back too. They doing a good job of poaching a few factory jobs from surrounding areas. It's slow but you can't undue decades of nobody giving a fukk over night. we can do it breh.

I knew you were gonna mention miller. I have been over there, and it's nice. they got beachfront housing. like a totally different world.

besides the casinos/schools/municpalities/steel mill, what do people do for a living out there?

cost of living is low out there tho.
 

Wild self

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Yeah, soon that shyt will go at full swing. @Scientific Playa

Every time that happens, when new technology comes out, more jobs are gone forever.
 

Apollo Creed

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When these corporations get a hold of it, it will wipe out the concept of a job. McDonald's got robots preparing food.
, and soon truck drivers and taxi drivers will be automated. Skilled jobs are next in line.

We got to break away from the concept of having a job and living to work for an employer altogether, before automation forces us to be more entrepreneurs.

Automation is the official death of America lol you're not speaking any unknown info. America is doing what it was designed to do when it comes to capitalism. The issue is people are trying to save a system doing what it was designed to do or get in where they fit when the system was not designed for you to fit in. If you are hurting your head trying to figure out how you will exist in America under automation you already lost lol.
 

Wild self

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Automation is the official death of America lol you're not speaking any unknown info. America is doing what it was designed to do when it comes to capitalism. The issue is people are trying to save a system doing what it was designed to do or get in where they fit when the system was not designed for you to fit in. If you are hurting your head trying to figure out how you will exist in America under automation you already lost lol.

I'm already taking measures to prepare for automated America.
 
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