Day Eight, Nine and Ten (Detroit)
This entire trip started two years ago
when my good friend, Linda Frazho, decided to return to her ancestral
land of Detroit. I told her if she moved, I would come visit in
2019, and here I am! Her great-great--great-grandfather
immigrated here in the 1800s and, hell, he has a fairly big street
named after him. Here is Linda and her daughter at one of their
street signs.
Linda at his grave. The grave could
work for her, too! Other relatives are in this small cemetery on Twelve Mile road.
Her daughter, Jessica, and her wife
Sandra (a Canadian) also decided to make the move. Too damn expensive
in coastal California, as we all know, and it brought Sandra closer
to her original home. Plus they could afford to buy a house. (Pay attention
Californians - move east!)
Jessica planned a tour of Detroit to
show me the good, bad and ugly - all of which it has. Key thing to
keep in mind: the population of Detroit in the 1950s was 1.8
million. It is now has 677,000. For the whys of the decline, you
can read this.
However, the Metropolitan population of the area is over 4 million.
I expected to find that the downtown
area was screwed up, but it wasn't at all. Instead, there is a whole
lot of beauty and positive energy. I was particularly enamored with
the Detroit Tigers stadium - but there are a whole host of great
things downtown. We got on the people mover which loops around the
whole area - lots of beautiful old buildings mixed with some nice new
ones. While there is some blight in the downtown area - really
not that much at all.
The blight is between the downtown and
Eight mile road. Buildings like this:
| All the windows are broken out. |
And houses as bad as this:
Now tens of thousands of houses have
been cleared so blocks that used to have a house on every lot now
look like this:
Thus, a lot of Detroit has a semi-rural
feel. Much of the money to clear the homes came from Federal funds
during the Obama administration (from TARP funds). That said, there
are still something like 32,000 abandoned houses (called bandos in slang
parlance) still standing in Detroit proper. However, there is only
enough money to demolish 6,000 more. For more information about this massive, on-going problem, read this interesting report.
Moving on to nature. Detroit, like much
of the eastern USA, has fireflies. So jealous. And it has cicadas!
They are so trippy. The ones at Linda's house haven't sounded
continuously like the ones that I have heard to New Jersey. Instead
they just sound in little cycles. Below you can listen to one one of
those cycles. I realize now that I have been describing my
chemo-generated tinnitus as sort of like a weed-whacker sound, when
really it is just like cicadas - just fairly distance ones.
Yesterday, another friend, Lynn, who was raised
in Detroit came into town to give me a tour of her Detroit. Some of her past was
difficult to show me in that the road she lived on no longer exists,
nor does her school.
But her favorite park of her childhood
at Belle Isle does exist and is looking great. The centerpiece of the
park is a really cool fountain (plus lots of side fountains next to
stairways) with lots of fun turtle, lions, horns and other water
spouts.
Here is Lynn with the lake in which her
family spread their parent's ashes in the background, and one of the
step fountains.
The City skyline taken from the isle.
As we left the isle, we passed my
favorite thing! I didn't get a photo of it but two women were sitting
at the side of the road at a card table with this message: "STOP
for prayer and popcorn." Lynn offered to double back which I declined, but it
will always be in my mind's eye.
We went to the Detroit Institute of
Art, which was one of her two sanctuaries in Detroit. (The other
being a neighborhood library that was part of our tour.) It's great -
so easy to see masterpieces close up! The only thing preventing you
from going nose to nose on van Gogh's self-portrait is that an
auto-voice comes on: "You are standing too close." That
voice feature is only on the more famous pieces of art.
I just loved this portion of what was a much longer video loop with
planes flying around an older house. I could have watched it for a
very long time.
The most famous exhibit is the Diego Rivera "Detroit Industry" fresco-style room. It has natural light coming in it, which adds a cool element.
We went up Lake Shore Blvd, and I found
out about this practice:
Hundreds of boats were in the water on the lake,
all near shore. Hanging out. It's a thing in Chicago, too, I have
learned. Chicago Tribune had an article about this boat culture.
So much more to say about Detroit but I
must head off to Ohio. I will be back though. I love it, blight
and all...
Thank you Lynn, Linda, Sandra, and
Jessica for the great time.
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| In the back, Lynn, Jessica, Sandra. Me and Linda in the front. |

Great blog!!! I'm so, so happy that we had this time together. And it was wonderful to see everyone.
ReplyDeleteI am a little behind, and very slow. But thank you!
DeleteMy very first baseball game was at Tiger Stadium, when I was six. And I was a Tigers fan till we moved to LA from Columbus, Ohio, in 1965.
ReplyDeleteThat stadium was across from my high school. Both torn down years ago.
DeleteI hold the vision that Motown is making a strong comeback and that it is becoming a happening and great city again!
ReplyDeleteMe too!
Delete