Irene
Shwachman and other professional photographers
helped promote Freedom House in the media. In doing so, they created
lasting evidence of times and tenor of 1950s and 1960s Roxbury and
the early programs of the Freedom House.
Freedom House
served as the focal point for encouraging a growing sense of community
responsibility among Upper Roxbury residents. Programs were designed
to inspire neighborhood morale and pride. Operating until 1962,
the Play School was one of the only integrated pre-schools in the
city. Teenagers met and socialized in after school and evening programs
at Freedom House. They learned from each other by sponsoring discussion
groups, forums, and seminars on issues of brotherhood and juvenile
delinquency. A Community Coffee Hour provided and opportunity for
participants to meet speakers from all over the world and keep abreast
of current events. Often these Coffee Hour meetings lead to new
activities like the Urban-Suburban Garden Club Project for beautifying
the community.
In a letter
to the Urban League that accompanied a series of photographs, Irene
Shwachman wrote: |


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Cold,
cruel, impersonal, detached -- these are the words constantly used
to describe life as it is lived in American cities. That urban living
can be warm, friendly, and productive is that story that this series
of photographs purports to show.
The
activities pictured are those of the Freedom House Civic Center
Association, an organization of people of varying racial and religious
backgrounds, who came together originally in 1949 in an attempt
to stem the spread of blight in the Roxbury section of Boston, Mass.
May
31, 1960.


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