ideastream's Living History: From Outhwaite to Advocate-Public Housing & the Stokes Legacy
Panel to focus on Cleveland's public housing history and where it stands today
Living History-From Outhwaite to Advocate: Public Housing & the Stokes Legacy
May 4, 2017
6-7:30 pm
Outhwaite Community Center, 2452 East 46th Street, Cleveland, OH 44104
Cleveland is home to some of the first public housing projects in the nation. Outhwaite Homes, Cedar Apartments and Lakeview Terrace--all built in the late 1930s--were the first public housing projects to receive funding from the federal government's newly-created Public Works Administration. This public housing was conceived as a way to help struggling, but upwardly mobile families out of slums and tenements. More than simply shelter, these “estates” included green space, murals and playgrounds designed to produce positive American values and strong children.
Brothers Carl and Louis Stokes moved into Outhwaite Homes Estates with their mother in 1938. Carl became the first African-American mayor of a major U.S. city when he was elected mayor of Cleveland in 1967. Louis was the first black congressman elected in the state of Ohio, and served 15 terms in the United States House of Representatives. Both Carl and Louis credited moving to Outhwaite as a key to their eventual success. Both advocated for public housing and worked to improve its effectiveness throughout their political careers.
As part of its ongoing Living History series, which looks to Cleveland’s past to inform its future, ideastream will host a community conversation on the history of the Outhwaite Homes and public housing in Cleveland, on the Stokes brothers’ public housing advocacy, and a look at where public housing stands today.
Our panelists will include:
Robert Madison
Architect, robert P. Madison International, Inc. Madison lived in the Outhwaite Homes with his family after returning from the military.
Norm Krumholz
Emeritus Professor of Urban Planning at Cleveland State University’s Maxine Levin College of Urban Affairs. A City Planner in Carl Stokes’ mayoral administration (and for subsequent mayoral administrations). Krumholz was also on the board of CMHA in the 1980s.
Dr. Mittie Davis Jones
Emeritus Professor at Cleveland State University’s Maxine Levin College of Urban Affairs. Dr. Jones is a public housing researcher who grew up in Detroit public housing herself.
Moderated by ideastream reporter Nick Castele
This event is free and open to the public. Please register via http://www.ideastream.org/livinghistory
Light refreshments will be served.