This collection of 79 oral histories offers a remarkable window
into public housing's past in Chicago through the voices of its
former residents and staff. Public housing was once a paradise of
good housing, positive community, and careful management--a past
that offers a blueprint for public housing's future. As John Hope
Franklin suggested, Fuerst has given us something about which to
ponder quite seriously.
Fuerst offers a collection of 79 oral histories of former public
housing residents and staff in Chicago. The voices remember a time
between 1938 and 1960 when public housing offered low-income
families desirable and attractive housing, a strong sense of
community, and a supportive environment for children and families.
Public housing also served as an engine of upward mobility into the
middle class and beyond, particularly for African Americans.
Repeatedly and emphatically, former residents describe positive
experiences, communal feeling, and real gain from project life.
They attribute much of this success to careful management by the
prograM's early administrators, several of whom are
interviewed.
The remarkable and surprising stories told--about project life,
about family and work, about race and community--offer a window
into a time that has largely been forgotten, as the more recent
decline of public housing has overshadowed the history of success
documented here. Yet this past must be remembered, because the
policies in place when public housing was paradise offer a path for
revitalizing a much-needed program. As John Hope Franklin points
out, Fuerst has given us someting about which to ponder quite
seriously. Or, as Studs Terkel notes, Fuerst, who was there from
the moment of creation, has put together a marvelous book. It is a
collage of memories from those who recall the beauty that was there
and the something bleak that has been manufactured. This work is
full of heroes, the tenants of public housing today. It should be
must-reading, especially for young journalists who would seek the
truth of what we patronizingly call 'the inner city.' An important
resource for scholars, students, professionals, and interested
readers concerned with urban life in America.
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