Query For Ohio Members - Olde Towne East/Near Eastside

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launderess

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Quiet Please, There´s a Lady on Stage
At the risk of sucking up more bandwith, can someone from Ohio please explain what is going on with the Olde Towne East/Near Eastside neighborhood? Merely require information as one just finished watching a very long PBS program about some poor sickly woman who seemed to have been hounded into her grave over her home.

TIA

L
 
Sorry, my dear

Laundress...but there is more than one neighbourhood here in Ohio. I have lived in the northeastern corner all my life (so far,) and have not heard of this. Could be a downstate thing.

Sorry I can't be more informative at the moment.

Lawrence/Maytagbear
 
Ok, Found My Answer

Name of the film was "Flag Wars" and it seems it documented the gentrification of what some called a "run down" area, mainly inhabited by African-Americans by wealthy white gay Americans.

Linda Mitchell lived in a rather large but old and falling apart Queen Anne style Victorian home, and refused to sell as the house was her inheritance.

http://209.85.165.104/search?q=cach...Mitchell+house+ohio&hl=en&gl=us&ct=clnk&cd=10
 
So she was "house poor," but refused to liquidate the wealth in the house to obtain the care that she needed. Selling the place where you have lived for many years and moving is traumatic no matter what your age. Almost everyone with an elderly parent has had to go through some of this grief. If she was the last to sell, her house would have brought top dollar for a house in original condition in a gentrified neighborhood where the gay urban pioneers had worked for years to restore houses from blight to beauty, reduce crime and make another part of the decaying inner city a desirable place to live.
 
Sounds like an interesting program. I'll have to find out if'n when PBS Detroit will be running it if the haven't already. Not having seen the program the general theme of what I read isn't anything new and has been happening in a lot of cities everywhere and certainly not always by "wealthy gays". Each and every time there is always one if not more sad cases such as that poor woman.
 
Well, that explains it....

I am about 3.5 hours northeast of Columbus.
(I am in the Cleveland-Akron-Youngstown region.)

Haven't watched the program, but I am very sad for the woman, and somewhat annoyed that the semi-mythical (in my opinion) "wealthy gays" are mentioned again as part of rehabilitation/gentrification.

Oh, and there is a culturally observed (by some,not all) demarcation between Northern Ohio and Southern Ohio.
The line is "drawn" around Mansfield, which is approximately in the middle of the state.

Lawrence/Maytagbear
 
Reading up on the situation, it seems (sadly) that there was a lesbian real estate broker (featured in the film), who was leading the "gay" gentrification of the area. This broker also got on local, state and even federal authorites to enforce various code violations which previously had not been addressed for ages (20 years or longer in some cases). This was part of the "rage" felt by long time residents, and the back drop for filiming Miss. Mitchell's plight. Her home did not become that way overnight, and like others had sit sitting going to ract and ruin for quite some time. Once the real estate agent began making phone calls, and threatening lawsuits a flood of inspectors began siting homes, forcing residents to spend funds many didn't have to repair their homes. Those who could not afford said repairs faced the same choice as Miss. Mitchell, sell the home or risk having it condemed.

The same person began the effort with other "outsiders" to have the area declared a "historic area". Once a area is landmarked in such a way, home owners are faced with limits on what they can and cannot do to their property. This upsets people all over the United States, and for poor minorites in this area, was seen as an effort by the "outsiders" to have the government "take" their homes.

What bothered some people in the area was the same old story, they being "poor" did not have the access to credit/financing or other funds, while the "wealthy outsiders" could rely on banks, friends or other forms of credit to come up with tens of thousands of dollars to buy homes in the area. One man bought his home for only $35,000 that his parents lent him for 60 days. Generally it is not easy to get a mortgage on a home that is not livable, so one needs to either make a large downpayment or come up with the money some other way.

Oh yes, the title of the flim "Flag Wars", came about because after the gay people began to fly flags from their homes, the local African-American residents began to fly their's in response.

L.
 
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