The BronzeTone Center for Music & History
The BronzeTone Center for Music & History
"bringin' the mix"
Mission Driven, Music Inspired, History Centered
Legacy and the Black Experience
Posted on December 12, 2015 at 11:01 AM |
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Posted on December 11, 2015 at 3:17 PM |
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Preserving the Historical Legacy of
Tindall Heights Housing Development: A Community Issue In October 2015,
the Macon Committee on Urban Affairs was established to address poverty, poor
educational systems, and sub-standard housing patterns in Macon. Comprised of individuals from Macon’s
professional and civic communities, our number one priority is the approaching
demolition of the Tindall Heights Housing Development, the oldest and most
historically significant public housing development in Macon. Prior to 1940, many blacks lived in what the
Macon Telegraph described as “Negro shanties,” with only “an outside privy and
water tap,” located in what was then Tindall Field. The Field was converted into a “low-cost
housing project.” The Macon Housing
Authority was created for this purpose. The shanties were
inhabited by former slaves, many of whom migrated from the plantations of
Byron/Centerville, Georgia. Now,
seventy-five years later, the MHA is positioned to make it all “disappear,”
even though the property is within a Nationally Registered Historic District,
even though a protected pre-1942 section of it, green buildings, are the former
homes of black educators and entertainers who made unparalleled contributions
to Macon and Georgia history. Demolition
of all the buildings appear inevitable, but what is not inevitable, and worth
taking a stand for is the destruction of the history, and the people’s
acceptance of such. As President and
Professor of History, I invite you to a community conversation,"Preserving
the Historical Legacy of Tindall Heights," Friday, January 15, 4p.m., Buck
Melton Community Center. (Macon Telegraph, Dec. 9, 2015, Viewpoints) |