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Detroit: The Black Bottom Community
Date: Thursday, February 11, 2010
Time: 7:00 pm
Location: Meeting Room

Between 1914 and 1951, Black Bottom’s black community emerged out of the need for black migrants to find a place for themselves. Because of the stringent racism and discrimination in housing, blacks migrating from the South seeking employment in Detroit’s burgeoning industrial metropolis were forced to live in Black Bottom. During World War I through World War II, Black Bottom became a social, cultural and economic center of struggle and triumph, as well as a testament to the tradition of black self-help and community-building strategies that have been the benchmark of black struggle. Black Bottom also had its troubles and woes.

However, it would be these types of challenges confronting Black Bottom residents that would become part of the cohesive element that turned Black Bottom into a strong and viable community.

Local historian Jeremy Williams combines careful research with archived photographs for an insightful look at Black Bottom’s early beginnings, its racial transformation, the building of a socioeconomically solvent community through various processes of institution building and networking and its ultimate demise and the dislocation of its residents.

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