Stetson Project Reclaims “Invisible” Heroes
by Allan Appel | February 5, 2009 12:10 PM | Permalink | Comments (11)
“When I was growing up on Dixwell,” Diane Brown-Petteway recalled, “I didn’t need someone like Obama. Back then we had doctors, dentists, architects, African-American business owners. They were my role models.”
Brown-Petteway (at right in photo) wants to be sure that such local heroes will remain visible to today’s kids in Dixwell. As manager of the neighborhood’s Stetson Branch Library, she’s part of a group putting together a public mural for the front of the Stetson Branch Library.
She expressed these sentiments during a planning meeting at Stetson Wednesday night presided over by her co-partners in the enterprise, Margaret Bodell of the city’s Office of Cultural Affairs and Mindy Lu, a Yale University paintings-and-politics-majoring senior.
Lu initiated the idea and has secured partial funding from the New Haven Action project at Yale.
Brown-Petteway and another longtime Dixwell activist, Ruth Henderson, played a kind of Dixwell nostalgia geography game, summoning up and prodding each other for the names of stores and people, sights and sounds of a Dixwell Avenue that was thriving in the immediate post-World War II years and is now long gone.
“There was Dr. Robert Taylor, and then the dentist, Dr. [Harold] Ince,” said Brown-Petteway. “You’d see him in the store buying a quart of milk and if you told him your tooth hurt, he’d whisk you to his office, give you some Novocain, and fix you up for five bucks.”
“What else should we have on this mural?” asked Lu, who got the initial idea for a mural as she jogged in the area, first by the Q House with immense and empty walls, then Wexler Grant School, and then, was finally directed to the library.
“There’s the Monterey Jazz Club,” said Henderson. “The biggest stars of the jazz worldwide came to perform there. Everyone! And you got dressed up back then. Formal wear, women with gloves. Not like today.”
“Right,” said Brown-Petteway, “but I don’t think the mural should have, you know, so many music things. People think that’s all black people did. We should include John Daniels, New Haven’s first African-American mayor, who grew up in the Elm Haven Projects. And there’s Mr. Twyman, New Haven’s first black school principal. You remember, Ruth, that so many of the city’s finest school teachers lived within a short walk from this library.”
“What about Ed Cherry, the architect?” said Henderson. “There are so many invisible, invincible people, from this neighborhood.”
“That’s right,” said Brown-Petteway. “How many kids today know this library was renovated by a black architect. He must be 70 years old. We’ve got to get him in to show his pictures and to talk.”
Brown-Petteway texted her 91-year-old mom on Shelton Avenue to get name of the movie theater that stood where C-Town is now. Mom’s response: The Lyric.
“And don’t forget Unique Boutique.”
Ruing that too many people leave the neighborhood, Brown-Petteway, who has not, said, “After I show people the school and Monterey Place, then what?”
Lou Cox (he grew up on Dixwell, and is pictured with Brown-Petteway) and area artist Katro Storm (who lived near Admiral Street) will team up with neighborhood kids to help paint the actual mural.
Cox, who runs the “outsider art” boutique Channel One, and Storm recently led a group of area kids in creation of the “Experience” mural on the Acme Furniture building in the Ninth Square opposite CafĂ© Nine.
“We really see this as the beginning of a whole trend of involving the community in mural-making,” said Bodell.
Assignments were made Wednesday to solicit photographs and perhaps, as a corollary project, to bring in people to give their oral histories of the neighborhood.
Another $2,000 is needed for the project, which is set to have final design in the spring. Those interested in contributing suggestions or funds should email Margaret Bodell here.
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Comments
Posted by: Really? | February 5, 2009 12:18 PM
Isn't this library going to be closed this year due to budget cuts? Can't people walk a few blocks to the downtown library?
Posted by: Bill | February 5, 2009 1:23 PM
Shusssh. You let the cat out of the bag. The democrat party does not want blacks to know you can succeed without handouts. Being a professional or owning a business, well that's acting white.
Posted by: DIANE | February 5, 2009 2:21 PM
A FEW OF MY COMMENTS WERE MISREPRESENTED BUT IT HAPPENS S0 HERE ARE THE CORRECTIONS..THE STETSON BRANCH LIBRARY WAS RENOVATED UNDER ARCHITECT, ED CHERRY IN 1999. MY MOTHERS RESPONSE TO THE NAME OF THE THEATRE ON DIXWELL WAS THE LYRIC THEATRE.
[Editor's note: Thank you. Corrections made above.]
Posted by: Ivory | February 6, 2009 8:44 AM
Having spent many years in both Dixwell and Downtown let me explain to 'Really?' that a few short blocks might as well be a few short miles. Both neighborhoods and both library branches maintain their own uniqueness and character in good times as well as bad. Keep on, Miss Diane, and don't let Stetson end up on the cutting room floor!
Posted by: Steve Ross | February 6, 2009 9:04 AM
The project sounds fantastic; I hope that NHI readers are able to follow its progress and realization. Wouldn't that be great, Bill?
Posted by: ajay | February 6, 2009 9:17 AM
Dont forget the Bowen Peters cultural arts center that kept so many kids off the streets for yrs!!!!!!
Posted by: rik johnson | February 6, 2009 10:10 AM
As a resource for the Dixwell Ave area prior to the "Model City" days, one can search Connecticut History Online for some fantastic photos. Growing up on Goffee Street in the 50's I can remember many of the old places and going to the original Stetson Library from Baldwin School. I would think that George Clark at the NHBPA would also be a valuable resource if no a picture on the walll.
Posted by: Alfreda J Edwards | February 6, 2009 11:23 AM
This is a great idea and you should get the group that has been working with Diane Streater and Geoge Clark .Diane you and your group on the right track.
Posted by: DIANE | February 9, 2009 12:03 PM
Any information or suggestions are welcome. Please stop by Stetson to share or email me at urbanlibrarian@aol.com. Oh by the way I did not forget Bowen-Peters..I was a piece of that great history!
Peace and Blessings!
Diane Brown-Petteway, MLS
Branch Manager
Posted by: DIANE | February 9, 2009 12:06 PM
This comment is for "REALLY"..please stop by the Stetson Branch Library!
Posted by: Dannieka | February 10, 2009 12:26 AM
My auntie Veronica (Douglas) Givan should be highlighted and remembered for the thousands of lives she touched through her career as a journalist and the countless hours she spent giving back to the New Haven Community, especially to the youth.
She helped me, infact, she saved my life and I know there are many out there who appreciate her work on and off the TV screen. She is a local role model and hero who should be recognized.
She will always be in my life but, I know she is missed.
Please honor and pay tribute to Veronica Douglas for her life's work which is continuing in her new endeavors.
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