Youth Advisory Council Detroit Trip: Exploring Creativity and Careers

Above: The students and chaperones on the 2014 Detroit Trip.; Trip participant Toni Dixon takes a wildflower back from Michigan Central Station.

The Youth Advisory Council, our eleven intrepid students from 15-21, takes an annual trip to visit colleges and discover the history of a place they may never have been before. This year: Detroit and the youth came ready to experience all the city had to offer: art, culture, education, and just a little bit of bowling.

Todd Palmer, NPHM’s Interim Director, Daniel Ronan, the Sites Project and Outreach Coordinator, Maria Sopena, a resident leader and the mother of one of the YACers, and I, the Programs and Development Associate, went along for the ride. This trip was also a major planning project for our summer interns, Salyndrea Jones and Savannah Wright.
 
Our train to Detroit arrived late, but yielded more time to complain about homework, sample the latest video games, and discover that a card game like War might take the entire trip to finally declare a winner, the YAC’s own Shakira Johnson. We were ready for sleep when it came and hoping to be ready for all we would see that weekend.
 
Our Saturday morning started with a colorful bus waiting to take us around what was a new city for most of the YAC. The Detroit Bus Company, a small business dedicated to reusing former school buses, exemplified what we hoped for the trip: what had been and what could be.

What will be for many of the YAC next year is college, and our first stop that morning was the College for Creative Studies where a few of our YACers, Ture Champion, Destin Sopena, and Adam Vscheransky saw ways that their natural curiosity and creativity might one day be a career path.
 
It was a day of creative study. First, an unplanned detour to the Heidelberg Project, blocks of outdoor art on Detroit’s east side created by artist Tyree Guyton in 1986, where some of the youth lingered over the art and some found the use of abandoned stuffed animals and shoes as part of the art as sad, but all signed their names to the house that visitors sign.

Later, the youth would visit Detroit Institute of Art and get their minds around what exactly Diego Rivera had been up to with his WPA mural and a tour of the Motown Museum, where lots of YACers remembered this song and that song because their mothers and grandmothers had played them so often. We ended the day with food and walking and more walking. Too much walking, they all said, and the day was finally done.
 
Our Sunday was as a Sunday should be, leisurely. We had breakfast and got on our bus to see some of Detroit’s Wayne State. But, there were more important site for the YACers to see they said: like Eminem’s 8 Mile. “They do know it’s just a street?” our bus driver asked. They did and they did take pictures.

There was lunch and vintage shopping at Detroit’s historic Eastern Market and at the very end of the day, there was bowling. But, that last day, though Detroit’s abandoned buildings weren’t the focus of our time there, destruction could also lead to creativity and so we saw old abandoned plants, houses half torn down, and Detroit’s beautiful and abandoned Michigan Central Station.
 
Toni Dixon, one of the YAC’s seniors, wanted to remember more than just the abandoned buildings and picked up a flower growing just outside of the chain link fence surrounding the train station. She mentioned the need to take a bit of the beauty back home with her to remember Detroit. As we all did.

by Camille Acker, the Programs and Development Associate of the NPHM
 

Helping Tell the Story: The NPHM Research Team

NPHM Staff, Interns, and Researchers in Residents in September 2013. From top to bottom, left to right: Daniel Ronan, Salyndrea Jones, Rich Anderson, Camille Acker, Robin Bartram, Todd Palmer, Savannah White, & Ayelet Pinnolis.

NPHM Staff, Interns, and Researchers in Residents in September 2013. From top to bottom, left to right: Daniel Ronan, Salyndrea Jones, Rich Anderson, Camille Acker, Robin Bartram, Todd Palmer, Savannah White, & Ayelet Pinnolis.

“We were poor. Absolutely poor. But we were happy,” says Ines Medor, mother of NPHM Board Member Jack Medor and core exhibition oral history participant on her experience living in the Jane Addams Homes.

She, her brother, and her parents were among the first residents who moved into the new buildings in 1938. We were able to lift these perspectives and many other nuggets of wisdom, raw observation and sometimes paradoxical reflections out of the raw material (audio and transcriptions) collected in 2011 thanks to a talented crew of researchers that joined NPHM this summer and bade their farewells in mid-September. 

The narratives and photographic resources they uncovered debuted in partnership with the University of Chicago Graham Foundation’s annual “Know Your Chicago” tours.  To illustrate Alexander Polikoff’s keynote address at the KYC kickoff symposium, NPHM’s team unearthed images this legal celebrity might use to illustrate the political and cultural arc of the Businesspeople for the Public Interest’s landmark case, Gautreaux vs. Chicago Housing Authority and HUD. This instrumental case toppled segregation in public housing and forever changed the tenor of public housing policy discussions.

Illustrative stories from three diverse families living in public housing at our own heritage site  peppered my own remarks at the KYC tour luncheon down the street from the Jane Addams building.  With our Board Chair Sunny Fischer, CHA advocate and Board Member Crystal Palmer and poverty scholar Paul Fischer, NPHM shared our story as part of the fabric of public housing in the city with 220 Chicagoland residents, many of them women. Issues of poverty, racism and cultural disconnection came alive as these newcomers to the questions visited our site as well as Lathrop and Legends on a two-day bus tour.

Programs, exhibits, talks and images capture the stories of public housing, but our stories aren’t possible without the efforts of staff, interns and volunteers that happens every day unseen at our upstart museum’s offices on Kingsbury Street. I’d like to make sure you know how valuable this work is. 

On September 18 we bade farewell to University of Chicago’s undergraduate program second-year Ayelet Pinnolis from Boston.  You’ll be hearing a lot more about letters she delved into the UIC archives to unearth that reveal the depth of connection between our namesake site, America’s “most dangerous women” Jane Addams and her progressive friend in Washington Sec. Harold Ickes.

Richard Anderson brings perspective on the intersection of the Hull House neighborhood and Chicago’s infamous history of machine politics, the focus of his dissertation at Princeton University. We’re delighted he’ll be with us through the beginning of 2015.

Robin Bartram returned to NPHM (after facilitating staff curatorial discussions last summer) through September as well. She’s a student of our advisor Mary Patillo, and has completed insightful comparative work on representations of domesticity and dwelling at cultural sites like the Tenement Museum as a Northwestern PhD candidate.

Together Ayelet, Richard and Robin worked to make our archives of oral history, photographic and secondary sources more accessible. The unglamorous work of sorting, filing and indexing led to the more exciting possibilities of uncovering stories, laying the groundwork for us to expose latent themes in more detail this winter and next spring.

We now also return to our oral history subjects (the Medor family along with the Rizzis and Hatches), bringing in scholarly partners to frame our work in context, and most importantly engaging current public housing residents (especially youth) in ensuring that the stories of 1322 Taylor Street connect all the way south to Altgeld, around the corner to Cabrini and from Coast to Coast.

by Todd Palmer, Interim Executive Director and Curator at the NPHM

NPHM at Festa Italiana

The National Public Housing Museum was delighted to have been invited by host organization University Village Association (of which NPHM is now a member) to participate in the annual Festa Italiana along Taylor Street this past Thursday - Sunday August 14-17. 

 

With a booth located directly in front of our future museum home, it was a great opportunity to share our story and progress with neighbors and passers-by.  We were most delighted by the many visitors who had their own stories to tell.  

 

We were reminded of how preserving this authentic place can inspire community conversations. One woman from Little Italy excitedly exclaimed: "I was born here!"  We met a young man from ABLA with a smartphone "archive" of pictures of families in the 1990s. A family of Mexican-American descent paused to photograph themselves in front of our banner and buildings. Even though they didn't live at 1322 Taylor, they took evident pride in this place just a few buildings away from their own, as they shared stories of a diverse community living here in the 1950s with their daughters. 

 

And in a series of snapshots, ensured that their piece of history would be celebrated for generations to come. 

Thanks For Supporting Greening The Grounds

The National Public Housing Museum would like to thank everyone who came out to support Greening the Grounds, which was and amazing outcome. We appreciate everyone’s   contribution of time and energy, this shows us working as a people to make things better in our neighborhoods and communities. Special thanks to ABLA, the University Village Association, and the Taylor Street Farms for helping put this event together. We would also like to invite you all to Festa this week http://starevents.com/festivals/festa-italiana/ Come out and get to know the neighborhood with the NPHM.  

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Greening the Grounds

Greening the GroundsWednesday, August 6th – A Gathering of Neighbors
 

 
Time – 4:30 pm to 6:30 pmLocation – the future National Public Housing Museum, 1322 W. Taylor St. Come join staff and supporters on the site of the future National …

Greening the Grounds

Wednesday, August 6th – A Gathering of Neighbors

Time – 4:30 pm to 6:30 pm

Location – the future National Public Housing Museum, 1322 W. Taylor St.

 

Come join staff and supporters on the site of the future National Public Housing Museum as we spruce up the grounds for the Festa Italiana street fair! Be sure to RSVP below!

 

Want to help us more? Can't make it? We need plants, potting soil, two large planter pots, as well as garden tools and gloves for the event. You can also help water our plants!

 

Can you help us in any of these ways? Please let Daniel know by email, or give him a call at (773) 257-7241(773) 257-7241

 

Still want to show your support? Donate to help us put on this event.

 

By working together, we can all make the neighborhood look even more beautiful!