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| As
the exodus of white residents from Roxbury became a reality, Freedom
House shifted much of its focus to the issue of urban renewal. Landlords
stopped maintaining their properties, and the city failed to provide
basic services such as trash collection, snow removal, and street
repair. Abandoned cars were everywhere, and empty lots became hazardous.
Black homeowners, saddled with two mortgages, found it difficult to
manage the upkeep on their properties. |
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To
overcome these forces and revitalize the community's physical and
social structure, Freedom House became a center for "citizen
participation" to clean up, beautify, and rebuild the neighborhood. |
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In
this 1960 telegram to newly elected Mayor John F. Collins, Otto Snowden
expressed his anger at the exclusion of Washington Park from the City's
plans for urban renewal. |
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| This
communication led to a series of contracts between Freedom House and
the Boston Redevelopment Authority (BRA) to work with Roxbury residents
on the implementation of the Washington Park Urban Renewal Plan. |
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Although
over 500 units of moderate-income housing, tow housing projects for
the elderly, a new YMCA, the Roxbury Boys Club, the Melnea A. Cass
MEDC Swimming Pool and Skating Rink, the Washington Park shopping
center, and the William Monroe Trotter School were built between 1961
and 1968, the plan was never completed. |
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Planning with People story:
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