Almost five years ago now, I interviewed a new transplant to Ypsi by the name of Lee Azus as part of our ongoing Ypsilanti Immigration series. Azus, a former San Francisco bookstore owner, as you might recall, was anxious to hit the ground running and really get to know this community which he had chosen […]
Tag Archives: Currie’s barbershop
Lee Azus on how urban renewal remade Ypsilanti’s Southside
Posted in Architecture, History, Uncategorized, Ypsilanti | Also tagged ABC-Polk Brothers Recreation Center, Arbor Manor, Arborland, black business districts, blight, Bobby Franks, Brewster-Wheeler Recreation Center, Brown Chapel, Chicago, Currie's barbershop, Dan Boatwright, Dwight D. Eisenhower, Eastern Michigan University, Elliott Currie, eviction, fair housing, Federal Housing Administration, Gault Shopping Center, Great Migration, Harriet Street, Harry S. Truman, housing, Housing Act of 1949, Housing Act of 1954, housing discrimination, Lee Azus, Leopold and Loeb, Mattie Dorsey, mortgages, murder, Paradise Valley, Parkridge Community Center, Parkridge Urban Renewal Area, poverty, racism, recreation centers, redevelopment, segregation, slums, subsidized housing, Tulsa, Tulsa race riot, urban renewal, World War II, Ypsilanti Business and Professional League | 6 Comments
Ypsi Immigration Interview: Lynne Settles
While I’d talked with Ypsi High art teacher Lynne Settles a few times over this past year, about the HP Jacobs mural that she and her students had created on the side of Currie’s barbershop, and other community art related things, I didn’t realize until a few weeks ago that she was actually a relatively […]
Posted in History, Special Projects, The Saturday Six Pack, Ypsilanti | Also tagged African American history, art, black lives matter, Currie's barbershop, diversity, Doug Jones, Great Migration, Howard University, HP Jacobs, Imani, Kate de Fuccio, Kwanzaa, Laura Bien, Lynne Settles, Matt Siegfried, Maulana Karenga, murals, Nia, public art, race, racism, teaching, teaching in public school, Westland, Ypsi immigration interview, Ypsilanti Community Schools, Ypsilanti high school, Ypsilanti Township | 12 Comments
Two awesome teen murals unveiled in Ypsilanti in just one week’s time
On last night’s episode of the Saturday Six Pack, I talked with Ypsi Community Schools (YCS) art teacher Lynne Settles, an Ypsi High student by the name of Paris, Jackson-based artist Douglas Jones, and local historian Matt Siegfried about a new mural that, thanks to their tireless efforts, and the efforts of a good many […]
Posted in A2Awesome, Art and Culture, Education, The Saturday Six Pack, Uncategorized, Ypsilanti | Also tagged Alejandro Chinchilla, Ann Arbor Awesome Foundation, cool kids and the cool shit that they do, cool local initiatives, Currie's barbershop, Dos Hermanos, Douglas Jones, Eastern Michigan University, EMU, Harriet Street, HP Jacobs, immigration, Jackson State University, Lynne Settles, murals, Normal College, public art, QR code, runaway slaves, slavery, undocumented resident, undocumented workers, Washtenaw Interfaith Coalition for Immigrant Rights, WICIR, WICIR teen group, Ypsilanti Community Schools | 8 Comments