Amiri Baraka’s House at 33# Stirling Street was demolished to build a parking garage. Photographed on April 22, 1962.

The entirety of Stirling Street, along with all its dozens of brownstones, was cleared for the parking garage and parking lot of the Essex County Courts complex. Stirling street today runs through the middle of this super block.

#33 Stirling Street on left, #25-23 on right behind tree

“I came back to Newark the last day of 1965. Home, a few days, then I found a house on Stirling street, just above downtown Newark, where the interior neighborhoods began to unfold. It was an old three story building, now long gone. I moved in and had it painted light green, with details of red and green, like the flag of a Black nationalist movement. It was to be a site for poetry readings, a theater, a place to hold discussions formal and otherwise and a general gathering site . It soon became all those things.”

Read poet and activist’s Amiri Baraka full-length reflection about his life at Spirit House, written in 2013 >

Demolished Stirling Street

The entirety of Stirling Street, along with all its dozens of brownstones, was cleared for the parking garage and parking lot of the Essex County Courts complex. Stirling street today runs through the middle of this super block:

#10 Stirling St (April 26)

#15-11-9-7 Stirling, Star Company is #7 (April 22)

#14-16 Stirling St (April 26)

#19-17-15 Stirling St, #15 behind tree (April 22)

#31-29-27-25 Stirling St, #25 behind tree (April 22)

Stirling St, #33 on left, #25-23 on right behind tree (April 22)

#26-28-30-32-34-36 Stirling St (April 26)

#37-35A-35 Stirling St connected houses, peak in center (April 22)

#40-42 Stirling St (April 26)

#44-46-48-50-52 Stirling St (April 26)

#53-49-47 etc. Stirling St (April 22)

Stirling St, #53 on left & #45 on right (April 22)

#65-63-61-59 (right) Stirling St (April 22)