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Old Posted Apr 17, 2007, 1:14 AM
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A stylish auto hub (Historic Highland Park, MI)

How the mighty have fallen. It just shows how fickle our economic system can be. It can take you from pauper to prince and back to pauper in less than a century.


David Coates / The Detroit News
"I'm looking to see big things happen here in Highland Park," says Carl Pettway, 40, owner of Fade Away barber shop in Highland Park.


Detroit News archives photos
The Ford Highland Park Plant on Woodward produced tractors.


"With the variety of stores in place, you didn't have to travel outside Highland Park to do any shopping," says Jerome Drain, who grew up in Highland Park and returned to live there in 1989.

Woodward: A journey through 200 years

A stylish auto hub

Ford, Chrysler created bustling, urban suburb -- and brought it down

Greg Tasker | The Detroit News

HIGHLAND PARK -- In this tiny community straddling Woodward Avenue, the managers and workers of the burgeoning auto industry found an urban oasis -- small neighborhoods of tidy bungalows and tree-shaded lanes. Even the street names -- California, Pasadena, Buena Vista -- seemed to reflect their dreams of upward mobility.

As the automotive hub of the globe in the early 20th century, cranking out millions of Model T's, Highland Park could afford to nurture those dreams.

With its move up Woodward from Detroit, the Ford Motor Co. had transformed the sleepy, pastoral farm village into a bustling community. Ford opened its innovative manufacturing complex on Woodward and lured thousands a few years later with the promise of $5 a day in wages.

Bounded mostly by Detroit and a bit of Hamtramck, Highland Park also would become the seat of the Chrysler Corp.

But Highland Park was more than just a company town. It was a model American suburb, home of leafy streets with distinctive bungalows, thriving main streets and community-minded corporations.

The residential streets that fanned across Woodward and other main roads were never more than three blocks long. Never mind that the city was the home of Ford -- the company that put the world on wheels -- the city was designed as a streetcar community, with public transportation never being more than a block and a half away. Residents could hop on a streetcar to downtown and other parts of Detroit, but they could shop, work or play in their own community.

"Back then you had people living and working in Highland Park. You had people living above the main street businesses," said Harriet Saperstein, chairwoman of the Woodward Avenue Action Association and former president of HP Devco, a nonprofit economic development agency. "You talk about the new urbanism. Highland Park had it a long time ago. It truly was a city in itself, with a separate identity from Detroit."

Shops, residents pack Woodward

In its heyday, Highland Park boasted a population of more than 50,000, which swelled every day as thousands of autoworkers streamed to their jobs at the auto plants. Much of the construction -- commercial and residential -- occurred over an 11-year boom from 1914 to 1925.

This legacy includes the Albert Kahn-designed Ford factory and a significant collection of Dutch colonials, Tudor revivals and Arts and Crafts bungalows. Two neighborhoods, Medbury's-Grove Lawn and Highland Heights-Stevens -- with some 700 homes -- are on the National Register of Historic Places.

Woodward and the city's main streets were packed with mom-and-pop shops, banks, restaurants, hotels, theaters, churches and apartment buildings. Its schools boasted high academic standards and a wealth of extracurricular activities.

In 1938, Sears Roebuck and Co. opened in an expansive Art Moderne building on Woodward, across from the Ford plant, which, by then, no longer made cars. Ford continued to assemble tractors there.

"With the variety of stores in place, you didn't have to travel outside Highland Park to do any shopping," said Jerome Drain, who grew up in Highland Park and returned to live there in 1989. "You had Sears, you had major stores, you had restaurants, theaters -- anything you wanted was there. You had all the amenities of a thriving community."

For many, Sears was the Target of its day, a working man's alternative to the downtown J.L. Hudson flagship store. With its central location, Highland Park became the home base of other well-known companies, including Sanders and Highland Appliance.

"Lots of folks called Highland Park the hubcap of the wheel of Detroit," said Katherine Clarkson, a former Highland Park resident and former executive director of Preservation Wayne. "It was the shiny thing in the middle. The workers' wives would come to Sears and the Ford company stores to shop. It was really a busy, vibrant city. It was an affluent community, even though the individual folks were not."

Automotive executives, managers and workers moved into neighborhoods with street names that symbolized Highland Park's cosmopolitan sensibility: California, Colorado, Connecticut, Massachusetts, Pasadena, Rhode Island.

Automakers contributed to city's fall

The automakers put Highland Park on the map, but they also contributed to its decline.

The ever-growing Ford Motor Co. moved its car operations to its sprawling Rouge complex in Dearborn in the late 1920s. Decades later, Chrysler left.

In between, this once highly integrated community lost thousands of residents. Businesses left or relocated, further eroding its tax base. After more than a half century, Sears closed shop in 1992. The city gained a reputation for blight, crime and poverty.


The human and tax drain contributed to the city's well-publicized money woes, and the state took over its finances in 2002. The state still manages the city's fiscal affairs.Even so, many in this community of 16,000 are optimistic about Highland Park's future.

While vacant lots and abandoned buildings remain, new shopping centers have been built along Woodward. Coca-Cola Co. opened a distribution center in 2006, and Visteon Corp. recently announced plans to build a factory on the former Chrysler site. Efforts continue to preserve and redevelop the Ford plant, a National Historic Landmark, as well as the city's McGregor Library.

"I definitely see positive signs now," said Carl Pettway, who grew up in Highland Park but lives in Detroit. He opened a barber shop, Fade Away, on Woodward several years ago. "People my age who graduated in the 1980s still have relatives here. I hear a lot of people talking about moving back. I'm looking to see big things happen here in Highland Park."

Even an outsider like Mark Hackshaw sees potential.

Hackshaw, a real estate developer and entrepreneur, initially came to the Detroit area from the East Coast to run a car dealership. Instead, he bought the eight-story Medical Arts Building on Woodward and restored it.


"If you look back on the history of Highland Park, it's always had the ability to create things here," said Hackshaw.

"We can't look for someone else to come to Highland Park and save it. We need to do it, and I see it happening. Coca-Cola is here. Visteon Corp. is coming, and new stores are opening. It's going to happen."

http://www.detnews.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070416/METRO/704160318&theme=Metro-Woodward

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I have to say, I'm not so sure I share the optimism of those that were quoted near the end of the article, but I sure wish Highland Park all the best. In my opinion, the future of Highland Park, like no other enclave and surrounding community, absolutely hinges on Detroit's inner-city revitalization.

Aerial of Highland Park for perspective:

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Last edited by LMich; Apr 17, 2007 at 1:31 AM.
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Old Posted Apr 17, 2007, 1:45 AM
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Thanks for posting this, LMich. I really wish I had "after" photos of some of the places listed in pictures in this article. It's pretty amazing how descimated we've let our societies become. I think I saw the Sears store once in my life, but don't really even remember on what occassion. So, for the most part, have only known that site to be weeds.

The saving grace of HP is mass transit investment bisecting the city and connecting it to other regional nodes of importance (which mass transit is intended to do). The Woodward line would service the core of HP.

Also, the enclave borders some of Detroit's nicest neighborhoods to the north and west. Even inside HP in those areas, there are well maintained streets, but they don't last very long. On the southeast side there are also some stable neighborhoods with a diverse population. The most destroyed part of the city is on the southwest and along the Davison Fwy, particularly along Hamilton and into the gulches of the freeway interchanges. Their rights of ways completely disregarded the human life that once had a reason to populate a very nice city.
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Old Posted Apr 17, 2007, 2:10 AM
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Speaking of mass transit, check out this photo and blurb I thought I'd never read:


Detroit News archive
An electric rail car passes the original Highland Park Presbyterian Church on Woodward in 1905. Real estate investors, finding it almost impossible to sell their platted areas, promoted the extension of rail transportation from Detroit to the village to encourage land sales.

I can think of few other cities that would be so transformed by a Woodward rapid transit line as Highland Park, connecting people better to now far-flung/displaced jobs outside the city, Detroit, and inner-ring.

More photos to go with the story courtesy of the Detroit News Archives and other paper photographers:


The new Highland Park High School building on Woodward. Circa 1918.


Built with city bonds on land donated by the McGregor family, the new McGregor Public Library opened in 1926. W. Hawkins Ferry, Detroit's leading architectural critic, described the McGregor Library as one of the most important classically inspired buildings in metropolitan Detroit. A landmark on Woodward for nearly 80 years, in 2003 it was closed and its contents put into storage because the roof leaked and the city lacked money to make repairs.


Workers outside the Ford Model T assembly plant in Highland Park, Oct. 20, 1922.


In the 1930s Highland Park was the model American suburb with more 50,000 residents who lived in the handsome neighborhoods on each side of Woodward. The city prospered because of Ford and Chrysler plants.

(Get the f%ck outta' here! Quote below.)

Highland Park won a national cleanliness award for five consecutive years. Homes on Eason near Second Avenue on Dec. 17, 1957.

(So THIS is why HP's so broke. Quote below.)

Business and industry paid about 75% of Highland Park's taxes in 1957 but the tax base had begun to erode in the decade. Population drop continued. Woodward bisects the 2.96 square-mile Detroit enclave.


Chrysler Highland Park plant and general offices, circa 1966. The city's largest employer, Chrysler moved its corporate headquarters to Auburn Hills in 1994, taking with it an annual $8 million tax payment, a third of Highland Park's tax revenues.


Gale Calhoun, U.S. Housing and Urban Development official, accepts a $1 check from Highland Park Mayor Robert Blackwell, right, on March 19, 1975 for a repossessed four-story 24-unit building. The apartments at 13816 Hamilton, near Pasadena, were rehabilitated for families with low incomes. The purchase marked the beginning of a $14.2 million three-year HUD Community Development fund project aimed at rebuilding most sections of the city. The grant amounted to $395 for each of the 35,000 persons living in Highland Park and was the largest per capita community development grant made by the federal government to any city in the country.


Student leaders at Highland Park High School urged 2,000 students on Sept. 24, 1975 to stay away from classes to protest a $1.6-million district budget cutback that resulted in fewer teachers and larger class sizes.


Wives of Highland Park police officers and fire fighters on June 27, 1977 protest fire department layoffs. Mayor Jesse Miller said the layoffs were part of a series of budget cuts.


Highland Park students on Sept 21, 1982 had been crossing busy streets like Hamilton and Davison on their own for three weeks because 14 part-time crossing guards were laid off to save $43,000. Mayor Robert Blackwell, responding to angry parents, said some of the guards would be restored the following week.


The Sears store and Ford assembly plant on Woodward were important to the past successes of their parent corporations. Like Highland Park, now they are having financial problems.


UAW members march outside Chrysler headquarters in Highland Park on Feb. 25, 1988 protesting the possible sale of Acustar, a parts subsidiary of Chrysler. The workers are concerned that they will lose job security if Acustar is sold.


Ann Dandron-Duke, right, and Rebecca Binno, both members of the Detroit Area Art Deco Society, stand in front of the old Sears store in Highland Park on April 24, 1994. Binno put the building on her list of the five most endangered Art Deco buildings in the Detroit area. The structure was demolished about a year ago and the land is vacant.


Linda Fortenberry, holding baby Janae, with Jessica, 3, look at their tree-damaged car after a tornado ripped through Highland Park on July 2, 1997. The storm destroyed and damaged hundreds of homes and businesses in Highland Park, Hamtramck and Detroit. It was the most destructive storm in Wayne County history.


Woodward Avenue, bisecting Highland Park, has been the only constant in the city -- from its farm community beginning, to an industrial powerhouse, and now a struggling, troubled urban center.
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Old Posted Apr 17, 2007, 2:26 AM
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One of the worst areas hit is on the north side just east of Woodward.

Last edited by Exodus; Apr 17, 2007 at 2:44 AM.
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Old Posted Apr 17, 2007, 3:05 AM
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What a moving article. What a cool little city. So Detroiters, would you say Highland Park is stagnant, declining or on the upswing?
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Old Posted Apr 17, 2007, 4:14 AM
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It really can't decline any more than it already has, so I'd say its stagnanted. Much like Detroit you see glimers or hope here and there, but not enough to say say with any comfort that the city has turned the corner.
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Old Posted Apr 17, 2007, 11:22 AM
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It's still declining. Maybe not as much as in previous years but still declining. If it isn't the numbers that will back it up, I have a ton of photos from over the past few years which show the continuing physical decay of the community (once occupied buildings a few years ago now abandoned). Any development is in the form of strip retail, dollar, and liquor stores... the type of development that only occurs when a city is becoming poorer.
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Old Posted Apr 17, 2007, 12:54 PM
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The city at least has some infill homes going in, they could be better but they are not too bad.



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Old Posted Apr 17, 2007, 3:03 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by STLgasm View Post
What a moving article. What a cool little city. So Detroiters, would you say Highland Park is stagnant, declining or on the upswing?
The term I'd use is devastated. It may still be in some decline, some sustainability, and little poops of development, but the bottom line in Highland Park is that really, it doesn't need to exist anymore.

I did some windshield survey work in the city about a year and a half ago and whenever me or my partners had to use the restroom, we would go to the only place we knew, the government "building". It was sad. Everything was falling apart, nothing worked, sidewalks cracked, just destroyed with an image that there's no reason to repair it since nobody is going to come back.

The little nodes of life in HP are fascinating too. When you see them, it makes you wonder how on earth such places can even strive to exist in such deplorable city conditions.

Mass transit, I believe will bring HP back to sustainability, at least to the point of Hamtramck. There doesn't have to be a particularly wealthy demographic, but there can be community pride once again. It's almost as if the Lodge Fwy, Chrysler Fwy, and Davison Fwy intentionally "slashed" the city to cease it from existance.
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Old Posted Apr 17, 2007, 5:26 PM
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I don't think there was some sinister plan to destroy Highland Park, Detroit, or any city anywhere by way of freeways lol. With the invention of the automobile came the invention of roadways to carry them.
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Old Posted Apr 17, 2007, 7:46 PM
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Yes and no. The intent was to streamline Manhattan Island with a cross cut of an elevated freeway which was intended to be the transportation wave of the future (see Robert Moses: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Moses). Thank goodness this never happened, but it was intended for the greater good.

On the other hand, Black Bottom and Paradise Valley were deliberately destroyed by the building of the freeways. It was an easy form of urban renewal, but was obvious to pretty much everyone that it was intended to get rid of the dirty, urban ghetto and just displace inner city blacks to other parts of the city. This was the case in many other instances too.
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Old Posted Apr 17, 2007, 7:57 PM
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So they had it in for Chinatown, and Corktown(which was cut into three slices)? I've always heard people say that trying to heard minorities into one particular area was racist, not trying to disperse them into the general population. So in a way, freeways are a sinister attempt to destroy ethnic neighborhoods ???
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Old Posted Apr 17, 2007, 11:16 PM
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I think you're missing the point, Exodus. No one is saying that city leaders were plotting to destroy areas out of sheer will to destroy particular areas, but they did see them as the path of least resistence in pushing the freeways through the city, which they viewed as necessary infastructure to save the cities. Nothing could have been further from the truth.

Michi, I was thinking the same thing. The Davison split the city in half, the other two hem the city in. It really does make you wonder and conjecture what would have happened if say neighboring Hamtramck would have been split down its middle by and/or hemmed in by freeways? I feel comfortable in saying it probably wouldn't be the tight community it is, today. I can't chalk it all up to that, though. Hamtramck is not just a tight community in a social sense, it's literally a tight community, with smaller blocks than the surrounding neighborhoods in Detroit and Hamtramck.

Hayward, no more structures are being abandoned than there are structures being built. It is a model stagnation. Again, it really can't decline much further. Population loss has slowed significantly. I don't see it growing until it gets a rapid transit line up Woodward, but for just about every one of the few residential units being left, new ones are being built or filled back in. Areas of Detroit around or near HP are still declining faster than HP for the simple fact that HP has hit rock bottom first.
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Old Posted Apr 20, 2007, 1:41 AM
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I don't think Hamtramck would have been any different. Hamtramck was an immigration-haven long before the decline of Detroit, while Highland Park was a more middle-class city. And while people in Hamtramck were capable of moving on to "greener pastures" alongside their Highland Park counterparts, the housing in Hamtramck (cheap flats and apartments) always welcomed new immigrants. Highland Park, on the other hand was built for a wealthier (though still middle-class) population and wasn't necessarily a "starter city". When Detroit's decline swept north along Woodward, Highland Park fell because the housing wasn't so cheap that it was a "starting point" for new immigrants, but it wasn't so wealthy that it could sustain the decline in the same way Boston-Edison and Palmer Woods were able to do.
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Old Posted Apr 20, 2007, 1:59 AM
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Yeah, they are two differently structured cities, but you drive a freeway through any city, and, at the very least, you're going to add insult to injury, and at the most, send a community (weak or strong to begin with) into a downward spiral.
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Old Posted Apr 20, 2007, 2:16 AM
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I don't think a freeway means instant death. The reason Highland Park died was because Chrysler moved to Auburn Hills. The Davison ran through the city for 50+ years before the bottom fell out. Granted, once the bottom fell out the areas nearest the freeways become the least desirable in the city, but they aren't the reason people leave cities.

Look at suburban expressways. I-696 wasn't the death of Royal Oak. I-275 didn't kill Plymouth or Northville.
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