SoTier Posted May 19, 2022 Share Posted May 19, 2022 2 hours ago, djp14150 said: You have many inaccuracies…. there was redlining and black zones. The Kensington expressway split a black neighborhood. This has happened in many other cities when expressways were built. They avoided white neighborhoods and cut thru black ones. the post WW2 GI bill benefited white veteran dips only allowing them to buy homes in the suburbs. The highways were built along when suburbs were built. https://ppgbuffalo.org/files/documents/data-demographics-history/a_city_divided__a_brief_history_of_segregation_in_the_city_of_buffalo.pdf The cities history was Irish south, Italians north, Polish on the east, Delaware park area was wealthy, Rest was black. erie canal did not enter Niagara in buffalo but used tonawanda creek into Niagara river I did not address how Buffalo became segregated, which was the topic of the article above. Nothing in that article contradicts what I wrote previously. I described where Blacks were living when the Kensington Expressway was conceived and designed. The map from 1937 in the article showed that most Blacks lived in the old Ellicott District which was just east of Downtown, which is exactly where I said they were living until the later 1950s and 1960s. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
djp14150 Posted May 19, 2022 Share Posted May 19, 2022 16 hours ago, SoTier said: I did not address how Buffalo became segregated, which was the topic of the article above. Nothing in that article contradicts what I wrote previously. I described where Blacks were living when the Kensington Expressway was conceived and designed. The map from 1937 in the article showed that most Blacks lived in the old Ellicott District which was just east of Downtown, which is exactly where I said they were living until the later 1950s and 1960s. the krngsington cut through and divided a black neighborhood. This is something that was commonly done throughout citues building expressways thru cities. About every one was racially motivated. Whites were more powerful and had control so they didn’t want it in their neighborhood. The wanted it thrus poor and minority neighborhoods. suburban built up also discriminated against blacks. Homr loans discriminated against blacks. Ever hear of “redlining”? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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