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Project lead: Myles Zhang
Research method, credits,
and notes on naming conventionsBrowse by significant street
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All photos were manually referenced to their contemporary locations. Contemporary street views correspond to camera angles of former photos, even though address naming conventions and house numbers may have changed.
If a photo is misplaced, contact mylesz@umich.edu with a link to the photo and description of the error.
Category: .
Who benefited and who lost in Newark?
The motivation for urban renewal…
And its effect on millions of Americans, according to James Baldwin
“A boy last week who was 16 in San Francisco told me on television – thank god we got him to talk maybe somebody will start to listen – he said I got no country I’ve got no flag. He’s only 16 years old, and I couldn’t say you do. I don’t have any evidence to prove that he does. They were tearing down his house because San Francisco is engaging as all most northern cities now are engaged; it is something called urban renewal, which means moving the negroes out. Getting it means negro removal; that is what it means. And the federal government is is an accomplice to this fact. Now we’re talking about human beings.”
– TV interview for Perspectives: Negro and the American Promise
May 24, 1963 (full recording)
Above: Time-lapse photo series of New and Newark Streets by Camilo José Vergara illustrates the transformation of 19th-century homes into a multinational corporation’s biomedical research lab.