HomeMy WebLinkAboutFreedmen's Town Article
PRESERVATION PROFilE
I
I
I
I.
I
I
I
HELPING HOUSTON'S HISTORY
Group Protecting Freedmen's Town from Danger of Demolition
enty ears ago, Houston's
reedmen's Town Historic District
ntained more than 500 structures.
w, only a few dozen remain.
utherford B. H. Yates Museum
Inc., a nonprofit organization dedicated
to preserving the historic African
American neighborhood, has acquired
eight properties for use as educational
museums and urban archeology sites.
The group's goal is to preserve as many
structures as possible to continue its
mission of educating Texans about the
significance of the neighborhood's
early residents.
"We've been trying to stay one step
ahead of the bulldozers for years," says
Catherine Roberts, co-founder of the
Yates museum group. "It's been challeng-
ing to find funding, but we have a lot
of dedicated people working to preserve
this invaluable piece of our city's past."
One of those people is Debra
Blacklock-Sloan, a member of the
Harris County Historical Commission
(CHC) specializing in genealogical and
historical research. Blacklock-Sloan is
working on several historical markers
with the CHC, and in the process,
has discovered important pieces of the
neighborhood's historical puzzle.
"It's been very rewarding to be
involved with the CHC - especially
with all the research I've done on the
Freedmen's Town because I've had a
chance to see how the community
evolved," Blacklock-Sloan says.
''I've learned a lot about how African
Americans at that time built and used
their houses, schools and churches.
I'm glad I can give testament to the
people who did those things."
The CHC also recently brought
an educational component to the
TEXAS HISTORICAL COMMISSION
"11
HIS IS AN
EXTREMELY
IMPORTANT PART
OF HISTORY: AND
WE NEED PEOPLE
TO COME TO
OUR RESCUE."
- Catherine Roberts,
co-founder of Rutherford
B.H. Yates Museum, Inc.
district by helping place two histori-
cal markers through the Texas
Historical Commission's marker 'pro-
gram. Dedicated to Freedmen's
Town's origins and 20th-century
development, the markers help inter-
pret vital links to Houston's African
American past.
In 1906, African Americans owned
nearly 90 percent of the property in
Debra Blacklock-Sloan (left) and Catherine Roberts
discuss plans to preserve Houston's Preedmen's Town.
II
Freedmen's Town; by the time the
Great Depression hit, many of those
families were displaced due to out-
standing debts. According to Roberts,
this was the beginning of the end -
as the decades passed, much of
Freedmen's Town's history was lost
along with the demolished structures.
The Yates group seeks to
educate people about the Freedmen's
Town's residents. Contrary to popular
belief, its families lived relatively
affluent lifestyles, as evidenced by
artifacts discovered such as porcelain
tea sets and decorative wallpaper.
"Many African Americans at that
time were able to get good jobs and
save enough money to build new
homes with nice furnishings,"
Blacklock-Sloan says. "Despite every-
thing going on with Jim Crow laws,
they were able to forge ahead and
make a decent living for themselves
in that community."
Blacklock-Sloan and Roberts
continue to dedicate their time to
preserving the Freedmen's Town's history
for the edification of future generations.
In the meantime, they hope to keep
the demolition crews away while they
buy time and any remaining
historic structures.
"It's a burden for those of us
trying to protect these properties,
but a breeze for those wanting to tear
them down. It's just not right,"
Roberts says, referring to the city's
current preservation ordinance.
"This is an extremely important part
of history, and we need people to
come to our rescue." *
This article was wri~ten by Andy Rhodes,
managing editor of The Medallion.