I decided before we get too far away from Detroit, that I must share about our Motown experience. I highly recommend a visit to the Motown Museum, the former home of Berry Gordy, founder and legend behind Motown Records. Actually, Motown Records bought 7 houses in a row and one across the street for the business as it grew.
The studio was open 24/7 and bursted with energy and creativity. Many of the artists, including Smokey Robinson and Diana Ross, lived in the neighborhood. If they got inspired at 2am, they could come over and work on a song.
Motown Records was a family operation. Berry Gordy’s parents instilled a work ethic in their children. All adults were expected to work (many were entrepreneurs) and to contribute weekly to the Ber-Berry Co-op, a family savings fund. Berry borrowed $800 from the fund to start Motown records with his sister Esther Gordy Edwards. Photo from Berry Gordy’s autobiography, Berry Gordy: To Be Loved. This is Studio A where many a record were recorded. Stevie Wonder, Marvin Gaye, the Funk Brothers snd countless others made hits on this Steinway piano. Stevie Wonder recording in Studio A As times changed, the music changed too. Black Forum, 1970-1973., was a label used for “the presentation of the ideas and voices of the worldwide struggle of Black People to create a new era.”
Imagine a world without the Supremes, Smokey Robinson,Marvin Gaye, Stevie Wonder, Diana Ross, Michael Jackson, Lionel Richie, the Temptations and the Four Tops. You’ve just imagined a world without Berry Gordy and Motown Records.
We arrived in Detroit yesterday, the ancestral homelands of three Anishinaabe nations of the Council of Three Fires: the Ojibwe, Ottawa, and Potawatomi. Detroit drew immigrants of many nationalities including Italians, English, Germans, Polish, Irish, Mexicans, Middle Easterners, Africans, and Greeks. Our downtown hotel is near the Corktown neighborhood, named after County Cork, Ireland the oldest existing neighborhood in the city.[2][3] Many Irish folk immigrated to the United States during the Irish Potato Famine in the 1840’s and at that time the Irish were the largest ethnic group settling in Detroit. By the Civil War, German immigrants had begun making inroads into the Corktown neighborhood.[5] By the turn of the century, the original Irish population had diffused through the city, and new immigrants, notably Mexican and Maltese, moved into this older housing.[5] As the century progressed, migrants from the American South and Appalachia, both Black and white, came to the city for good paying jobs in the automobile industry.[5] As these jobs were shipped overseas, the people left also. For the past 40 years, Detroit has been the largest Black majority city in the U.S. with 76% Black population, but due to the drastic loss of population in Detroit, Memphis may now the largest Black majority city. As jobs left the city, poverty increased and the city went bankrupt.
There are still many parts of Detroit that are abandoned still, but there is revitalization happening. An example of that is the Detroit Riverwalk, built through a public-private partnership to clean-up a five mile abandoned industrial area along the Detroit river. The strip right along the river is very nice walkway now, where we enjoyed seeing people biking, walking dogs and children playing. Right behind the walk way are miles of abandoned GM parking lots.
View right behind the Detroit Riverwalk
The fact that Detroit has so many vacant sites is a blight on the city, but also an opportunity. They may be a step ahead of other cities in building a new green infrastructure. For example, the City of Detroit Office of Sustainability is seeking block clubs and community groups to host solar fields on large parcels of vacant land to power city buildings. The Solar Company incentivizes it by giving back to the community – for a 10 acre site, the neighborhood group gets to decide what to do with $250,000. You can listen to the Mayor’s speech about it here.
According to an interesting National Geographic article, multibillionaire Dan Gilbert is Detroit’s sugar daddy. Gilbert, who founded Quicken Loans, bought more than 70 properties (mostly downtown and ripe for rehab), seeded dozens of start-ups, and employs an estimated 12,500 people.
Keep Growing Detroit is an organization with a mission “to cultivate a food sovereign city where the majority of fruits and vegetables consumed by Detroiters are grown by residents within the city’s limits”.
It will be interesting to watch Detroit’s evolution. It could be a good place for the young and adventurous to land.