[milwaukee-electric] Milwaukee slums during the 1940s and afterward
Gary Schnabl
gSchnabl at SWDetroit.com
Sat Nov 6 18:10:52 EDT 2010
1936 slum photo (from the Wikipedia files)
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Slums_in_milwaukee_1936.png>
Reading some old archival information about the earliest freeway
commission during the middle to late 1940s, I learned that Milwaukee's
E-W freeway was to be centered along Highland, which they considered to
be a slum or such. However, as soon as Hibernia became available in the
early 1950s, the commission quickly labeled that street as a slum too
(probably to condemn its land much easier).
I only started driving around 1960, and living at 42nd and Capitol (or
157th and Burleigh), before that time I did not frequent the Highland
Street area much because of having few reasons to go near or through
there. During my two years attending Marquette during 1961 to 1963, I
would often park my car in or nearby the Hibernia area (or wherever I
might locate an available spot...) and never considered Hibernia to be
slummy--just older houses and such. My only concept of a real Milwaukee
slum then was the short rat-infested area along or near Winnebago (a
couple blocks north of Highland), especially when I made pickups and
deliveries there for our family business as a teenager.
I assume that the freeway commission in the 1940s chose the
worst-housing area for their proposed E-W freeway. Was Highland really
that bad (or Hibernia too, for that matter)? Was Wikipedia's stock photo
representative of that area? Or was Highland chosen so that the freeway
would take advantage of other terrain features without endangering
nearby business, before the rapid-transit ROW became available?
Gary
--
Gary Schnabl
Southwest Detroit, two miles NORTH! of Canada--Windsor, that is...
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