Michigan Playlist: ruclips.net/video/hiS5ieFakNQ/видео.html Detroit Playlist: ruclips.net/video/OvB6YR_BcxM/видео.html American Hoods Playlist: ruclips.net/video/hiS5ieFakNQ/видео.html 0:00 - 14:10 Jefferson Chalmers 14:10 - 15:18 Chrysler Plant 15:18 - 26:29 Charlevoix and Vernor Hoods 26:29 - 33:31 Jefferson Avenue 33:31 - 48:34 More Charlevoix and Vernor Hoods ==================================================================== EVERYTHING THAT I USE IN THE FIELD: Main Camera: amzn.to/3iS4vvF Side Cameras: amzn.to/2WuCYIs Media Mod for Camera: amzn.to/3j7CMGF Lav Mic: amzn.to/3lsMkz9 Drone: amzn.to/3ITcKBV SD Cards: amzn.to/3C2co9O Camera Mounts: amzn.to/2UXVR6p Cables Required for Longer Recordings: amzn.to/3BYnr3Q Computer: amzn.to/3787b2j External Hard Drive: amzn.to/3lb23Tf WHAT I USE AT HOME: Computer: amzn.to/3rKIdiN Sound Mixer: amzn.to/3C15Ubx Microphone: amzn.to/2VaCjvo Microphone Accessories: amzn.to/3v7A35Z INTERACTIVE MAP that shows you all of the places that I've made videos on: (Doesn't always work on mobile devices. Will always work on PC.) www.google.com/maps/d/u/2/edit?hl=en&mid=1Lhzf04ocimPu-ROkg4cfXEYEvKMNnlI5&ll=43.06219876674538%2C-83.82163216337808&z=10 SOCIAL MEDIA & CONTACT INFO: Email: ChrisHardenYT@Gmail.com On Twitter: twitter.com/Chris_Harden55 On Instagram: instagram.com/c_harden7/?... On Facebook: facebook.com/ChrisHardenYT/ DISCLAIMER: Links included in this description might be affiliate links. If you purchase a product or service with the links that I provide I may receive a small commission. There is no additional charge to you. As an Amazon Associate I do earn a small commission on qualifying purchases. As always, thank you for supporting my channel!
Years ago I was industrial sales, and used to go into these areas when there was still some industrial business in Detroit. It was always a treat. We called the area “8:00AM sales”. Because you wanted to be out of the area by 9:30 AM, before the local talent rolled out of bed.
Me too!!! Mid 70's for me !!!! Manufacturer's in seedie areas of Detroit !!! Had to have eyes in back of your head as well !!!! But, I enjoyed my job!!! Met alot of great customers !!!
Great videos! Detroit - I have been roaming and photographing the more challenged neighborhoods for almost 20 years. Glad to see the massive changes with so many abandoned homes leveled.
It was a great place to grow up in. A mix of many ethnicities. Many different income levels. Great architecture. Including my grandparents house on Chalmers and Essex. The smells of dinner being cooked in every house was unbelievable. Finally moved away when I was 12 to a nice suburb south of Boston. The riots of 67 and 68 were mostly west of us. My teachers in Hingham, MA were amazed at how much I knew of their 8th grade curriculum. Shout out to Guyton School that I went to K-7. Detroit had the most prosperous middle class in the country. It all went bad with the car industry being slow to adapt. anyone who grew up there in the 50s and 60s will tell you it was a great neighborhood.
@joecampbell6844 I loved your grandparents' house! Vanessa and I were friends. Your mom took us there for lunch one day when we were 1st graders at St. Phillip's. We lived on Drexel at the time. As I recall, you lived on Coplin, not too far from the firehouse, where my dad was a firefighter. We moved to Lakewood & Freud when I was 10. I attended St. Martin's until it closed in 1970.
We also moved from Coplin. Eastlawn and Avondale right on the corner. Everyone remembers the fake old fashioned phone that was on the garage. Vanessa passed some time ago after a career as a singer in NYC. It’s a shame what happened to our neighborhood. We ended up in the Boston area in 1970.
@@joecampbell6844 Yes, I remember your family ended up moving from St. Phillip's to St. Martin's parish. Van was in my class there as well. It doesn't surprise me that she was an entertainer. On Coplin, she often put on backyard plays that she wrote, directed, and had the neighborhood kids participate in, me included. It is a shame what happened to to the neighborhood. We moved to Petoskey in 1970, after St. Martin's closed. I joined the military after graduating from HS there, settled in the Houston area after retiring, but go back each year to visit family. All of my siblings and my mother still live there. BTW, my name is Debbie Fruge' (pronounded frOO-szeh). You were probably in the same class as of one of my 7 younger siblings.
At 11:00 on the left, you drove by what was the Lawrence Fisher Mansion. Behind the estate along the Grayhaven Canal, he had a boathouse built for his 104 ft yacht. In the mid-70s, the estate was purchased by Alfred Brush Ford and Elizabeth Reuther and donated to the Hari Krishnas.
It saddens me greatly to think of the Christmas celebrations, Birthdays, Mother's and Father's Day and graduations, homecomings and dances from back in the day have long been forgotten. These were peoples lives!
Thank you very much for this fantastic ride Chris !! I think the interest of many people in Detroit is legitimate. There is no doubt that the history of Detoit contains enormous lessons for many other cities. Today it is very difficult to find cities that are not overwhelmed by ethnic or religious problems, deindustrialization, corruption, urban fragmentation, the dictatorship of cars and highways. Just like Detroit was a few years ago
@@donniematonnie9378 Don't get my wrong... There's no doubt Detoit was AND IS a Beautiful city. I'm, a Detroit admirer and I feel sad that many of old houses and industrial buildings are abandoned and collapsed ... But I see as well all the potential of a city ready for a grand come back !!!
I recently bought a house in this neighborhood to rehab. There is a movement of artists moving back into the city. Between Duggan's administration working hard to transform the city and the efforts of those of us wanting to repopulate and repair, I have high hopes for this city. It looks much better than it did years ago. I love the meadows of this area. It feels a bit more rural. We hope to buy the land around us for outdoor music and gardening. The neighbors are mostly families that have been there since the 50s and 60s who were able to hang onto their homes and pass them down to their children in spite of unfair banking practices against communities of color. They are hard working people. I am trying to stay respectful as someone new and white moving into their neighborhood. Clearing a lot of the blight has made it harder for criminal elements to squat.
I've seen one of Peter Santenello's Inside Detroit video and some parts of Detroit seem like they're making a comeback which is pretty cool, and interesting, I can't wait to see how that plays out. I also enjoyed this video too, you always give a deep look into Detroit and you do your research.
@chillwill5080 So did I. You're clearly lying and dnt know what you're talking about. Can't tell if you're a boomer who still can't get past the riots from over 50 years ago or a Millennial who doesn't know the history of the city well. Because that statement is not even remotely true
Those houses look like they use to be very nice back in the day with tree covered streets. If they were kept up, they would be fetching $350K+ at a minum. I assume they also have basements too. I can almost visualize kids walking to their neighborhood school and dads outside working on the yard.
Basements? Oh yes, that's where everyone chill's. It's safest spot so they remodel the basement first and the outside is last. If your crib looking good outside, then it's 1st to get broken into. You get inside, those homes are beautiful. Blow your mind how different they are inside.
I lived in Grosse Pointe Woods at the time, but I had a lot of friends and business in this area. That was before Coleman A Young. After him, there was no reason to visit the eastside. It was over, even then. I hated to see what happened to those beautiful neighborhoods. Left the Metro area in 1983 and only returned in 2001 to Chesterfield Twp. for 5 years to work in what was left of the auto business. I left when all the dealerships closed. I was recruited by another Detroit survivor in North Carolina. He even flew to Royal Oak to interview me. Loved that and took the job!
I grew up in the Warrendale area in the 60-70s, it's changed a lot but still exists as a neighboorhood with most of the houses being kept nice and the lawns mowed (thanks Google street view). There are many reasons why the city imploded and it's not fair to pin the blame on any one factor, they all contributed. Hopefully things are looking up and the city will shine as it has in the past.
We lived on Lenox then moved to the city airport area (Conners and Gratiot) in 1966 one year before the riots. From the Lenox area there was Sanders chocolate shop, Neisners 5 and dime, Jupiter and the Cinderella Theater movies on Saturdays.
I work at the Stellantis plant there in the video. My Trackhawk got stolen twice from there. That newer burnt up apartment at 16:00 has been that way for at least 4 years. The forest is coming back on some of those empty blocks. Many of the tire shops in the suburbs come to dump in those neighborhoods. There's a dump that Detroit residents can drop off tires and junk for free. There a weekly limit on tires I believe. I saw an aerial photo of that neighborhood from the late 40's and there wasn't a single empty lot. The houses were jam packed together.
I live in an Upstate New York city that was a boomtown, too, with headquarters namely for IBM and Endicott Johnson. IBM started moving people down to North Carolina quite vigorously in the 1970's for cheaper labor and fewer taxes, so much to the point where the phrase "I've Been Moved" was coined by their transfers. They pulled up stakes completely in the 1990's, leaving nothing behind but their empty headquarters, an EPA Superfund site.
I am from the Jefferson/Chalmers area. I lived on Jefferson and Newport. I have seen the area deteriorated so bad. I did leave the area but still have family there.
I lived on Gray and Jefferson and went to school at Carstens which is at minute 19:10 in this video. I was put into the military ( given the choice of there of Michigan State) in 71
I lived in this area from 1966-75. Eastlawn and Jefferson and then Marlborough and Kercheval. It was much nicer in the 60's it really started going down hill about 72 and then We moved into Grosse Pointe Park in 1975.
Wow, have seen prior video's of how far Detroit has gone down, but this one is the Best ever, shows the good & bad of Detroit, + your so good at information, Thankful I'm Subscribed....
big time Rock and Punk bands played at the Vanity Ballroom. These bands were MC5, Ted Nugent, Amboy Dukes, the Stooges and the Velvet Underground in June 18, 1971 and September 3, 1971. The Vanity was reopened in 1983. In 1986, the Vanity was home to the Huge Borde’s Trinidad Tripoli Band on Friday nights. The Vanity closed down in 1988 ... Great Job on all your Videos Chris I really enjoy them all
I've noticed that the vast majority of neighborhoods in Detroit look like suburban neighborhoods as far as housing stock, like there isn't much really dense high rise development at all. My mom and grandmother were both born in Newark, NJ so that city has been my main experience with intense urban blight. It has lots of menacing high rise projects more like other old east coast cities.
@@ChrisHarden I’m not sure if you are aware Chris, so forgive me if you are, but housing was always an issue in Detroit’s heyday. There never seemed to be enough housing stock, and Detroit had plans for future residential neighborhoods that they had to shelve during the depression. There are a lot of folks that believe there would have been less social stress had they built more high rises in the period when there was millions of people and not enough housing. Although it would be a moot point because those high rises would just be huge abandoned buildings at this point anyways. Also you brought up how the homes in the suburbs were cheaper and taxes lower. That is true and a huge draw, but also people did not like living so close to industry. At least that’s what I’ve been told by the older folks who moved out. There weren’t just factories near some neighborhoods but also lots of small machine shops and similar places that factories required.
16:04 Rev. Ann Johnson Elderly Apartments, senior citizens housing, burned 9.23.2019. Though there were believed to be no fatalities, six were injured and many lost everything -- all residents were displaced. Ruins stood for a while as i noticed its demolition nearing completion in early 2022.
Also, Jefferson Chalmers has seen incredible growth and it's one of the hottest up-and-coming areas with homes being completely renovated and sold for numbers that were unthinkable even 3-4 years ago. there's multiple community gardens in what used to be empty and abandoned lots, the neighbors are friendly and watch out for each other, they have their own snow removal in the winter and all the lawns are well kept in the summer. Yes there's vacant and eyesore homes but it's 100x better than it was 5 years ago and 5 years from now it'll be miles ahead of what this video shows. Your negative outlook and viewpoint of Detroit really shows in your videos.
Admittedly it’s hard to sound positive about every neighborhood in Detroit it’s about the city not the people and honestly the population of Detroit in its past destroyed Detroit and a certain percentage still does stripping houses and bricks and sinks and window sashes
The negative outlook is for good reason...the city has LOST population for the last 7 census calculations i.e. 70 years. Jefferson Chalmers is still a shell of its former self. The only hope for JC is its proximity to GP; downtown is too far away.
Left the Detroit area (actually Bloomfield Twp) 47 years ago and have returned several times to attend Red Wings games when they were.winning Stanley Cups. Now, all my family and friends have either left Michigan or died. Never did miss the nasty winters. The many streets with French names makes Detroit seem even more romantic ! Lol
No comments about 24:01? "Ever notice notice how you come across somebody once in a while that you shouldn't have [ __ ] with? That's me." Great videos - lived on Chalmers from '73 to '86... right off Chandler Park Drive. I remember when there were trees and a lot less vacant lots.
I know the houses in Indian Village are between 4k and 15k sq ft, are there still people that wealthy in Detroit to live in these houses? I assume most of the houses were inherited.
Back in the day, we all went to the Roostertail club off Jefferson on Marquette where it met the river. This was a disco that was every bit as nice as those in NYC including Studio 54 and the Copa. Those sparse neighborhoods were all full at the time I was there so looking at them today, I would think that Detroit in a lot of these areas is being turned into greenbelt meadows that will eventually have utilities turned off. It's a tale of two Detroits. The one with all the rehab and growth from the midtown on into downtown and the other that will eventually become clover meadows. I won't see all this in my lifetime but from what I've seen, it's on the way daily.
I remember seeing a documentary on Detroit around 10-15 years ago that stated you could fit the whole city of Vancouver Canada in the area that has been lost and that wildlife is taking over to the point that wolves are walking around downtown Detroit.
South of Jefferson at Conner is a stable lower middle-class neighborhood full of affordable housing 2 BLOCKS noryh of the Detroit River where my friend Terry took me to keep me out of trouble in my neighborhood in 1994,when he visited his girl Alicia I love this quaint neighborhood neat"Sinbads" restaurant!! ❤
I grew up close to there, used to go to the Time (9 cents) or Cinderella (25 cents) theater for the saturday kids' shows. I had friends that grew up there as well. It's shameful what has happened - thanks to Coleman Young and his gang.
Do any of you know (including you Chris) Detroit is a French word meaning "The Straight." Detroit is actually pronounced "Day-Twah." The Detroit River is actually a straight and not a river. A straight is a body of water that connects two larger bodies of water. In this case, the Detroit River connects Lake St Clair and Lake Erie.
NO it's pronounced Detroit. just like it's written - thanks Oh.. and put this phrase in your translator since vou don't speak French. "une rivière droite" Can you spot your grammatical dysfunction?
The legendary,deadly undercurrent in the Detroit River isn't so potent,as in 2010,while scouting the bottom of the beach 20 yards from the shore,I found the SAND is very"clean"with no refuse,rocks,pebbles or seashells only FINE,soft sand about the consistency of"Gold Medal" FLOUR!! Resurfacing to get some air,I saw that I was parallel to the orange buoys,as I thought:"Hell,I'm right HERE;I might AS well go on PAST them for once in my life!!😐 Unfortunately,my uncle sitting 50 yards from the water we ithbis wife SAW where I was,and started screaming like he'd lost his mind,which alerted my mother to where I was and she almost had a STROKE screaming for me to return to the beach!! I would've swam mid-river,but had she suffered a stroke I would've gotten BLAMED for it!! I didn't see what the big deal,was although I did notice the water was ICE-cold that close to the shipping channel!! I've been prohibited by family from the Belle Isle Beach for FOURTEEN years now,because of that incident!! 😮
Cause ppl wanna see the hood brodie I live in VA and wanna come buy a house there once of those cheap houses and fix it up this is the season im watching your Detroit series. Keep up the good work mate!
At one point while lived n Detroit, the Jefferson assembly plant had as many vehicles in the failed inspection lot as those streaming off the assembly line; thank you UAW.
it’s not just UAW. it’s management even more so. chrysler designs crappy cars. Design is a big part of quality. After all, the cars produced by Fiat are not known for quality either. And now that Peugeot is part of the dysfunctional family….bad American +bad Italian+ bad French does not equal Toyota.
My only regrets is that there is no content out there for a true depiction of how beautiful the city was in the 70s/80s before the blight. It slowly eroded and descended into this ruin. It's the saddest thing to see.
Housing crisis in 08, to 2011 didn't help along with 67 rebellion and auto jobs going. It's coming back downtown, midtown, still alot of solid, historical neighborhoods still thriving. Empty land is like a blank canvas for development. Detroit is coming back
People watch the “Hood” videos on “RUclips” because that’s the closest they’ll ever get to visiting it. They like to watch comment and criticize us from the safety of their bubbles in the middle of nowhere. I was born and raised in Detroit, EastSide to be exact. It made me fearless and mentally strong. I can stand up and walk tall with confidence anywhere i go… ANYWHERE!!! It also taught us about getting RESPECT and giving RESPECT. Because if you didn’t, you got your head knocked off. My they all Rest In Peace ✌🏾
Job loss wasn’t just corporate greed. Affirmative Action changed the work force drastically, and not for the better. The automakers could not hire who they wanted. The employees suddenly couldn’t do the jobs or understand the directions. Finally Chrysler started printing animated employee handbooks. This helped get the cars assembled but the final product was truly crap for a couple decades. This both opened the floodgates for a wave of imported cars and a wave of exported jobs.
Love the videos. I would like to see a video specific to the great neiborhood that I grew up in and the middle school I went to. It’s between 7 mile and outer drive and between Van dyke and Sherwood. It was a great place to live but it quickly declined after busing was introduced in the mid 70s. As you now kno it’s one of the worst neiborhoods in Detroit.
Several California counties say “Hold my beer”. When a city spends all its money on services for decrepit aged hippies, independent minded mentally ill unhoused by Saint Reagan (pbhn) and Fentanyl Phil, no money left for roads (Berkeley)
It would be interesting to see an interview with residents of those homes that remain. I wonder if they have seen the decline of their neighbourhood, or if they have moved in, hoping others will follow.
Your videos are a real perspective of the decadence of cities due to economical crisis...it's what happens when lack of opportunities and education exist....
I had to go to the Windsor Star news paper to fix something... and on the way back to Detroit the border guard thought my Simpson voltage meter was a bomb and he made me take it apart to see it was just a bunch of wires inside. true story... you can't make this stuff up,
I lived right downtown Detroit in the ''Holland Hotel'' i believe? in the smallest room they had. lol they had a rent protest flush out where everyone flushed the toilets at a certain time.
Keep up the good work.thats my old hood. Just west of Chalmers at 13375 Longview. I had to çlear out to Warren. I was the last white boy there 😮 they called me the omàga man 😜
Mother Nature definitely plays the long game, doesn't she? She'll patiently wait while we have our empires of concrete and steel, but as soon as we abandon them? "Thank you very much, I'll have that back."
I literally just moved to JC from suburbs ( where neighbors don’t even talk to each other and a lot of entitled angry behavior rules ) because it’s amazing here - the people - the location - the nature . You def didn’t do your research if you think JC is in decline . But by all means - please keep making your hood videos to continue the negative narrative about Detroit and get your click bait fix - because it will keep all of the a..holes out in the suburbs . Also I Walk everywhere - and feel way more safe than I do in Clinton Township . Wow you say nice things about Downtown Detroit - your research also notably lacks actually talking to any residents .
You’re right about that. I live in Eastpointe and the neighbors don’t even know each other. I’ve been living here since 1972 and I still cannot seem to find any connection to these people.
look at all the new development while he yammers on "what happened to Detroit".. wow! I'm impressed with all the new shopping plazas, housing developments roads and infrastructure. Barely recognizable to someone who lived there in the 90's.
Michigan Playlist: ruclips.net/video/hiS5ieFakNQ/видео.html
Detroit Playlist: ruclips.net/video/OvB6YR_BcxM/видео.html
American Hoods Playlist: ruclips.net/video/hiS5ieFakNQ/видео.html
0:00 - 14:10 Jefferson Chalmers
14:10 - 15:18 Chrysler Plant
15:18 - 26:29 Charlevoix and Vernor Hoods
26:29 - 33:31 Jefferson Avenue
33:31 - 48:34 More Charlevoix and Vernor Hoods
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Thank you. You Rock
I'm glad there are other hosts for other cities. They don't hate Detroit like you do. What are you trying to accomplish?
Years ago I was industrial sales, and used to go into these areas when there was still some industrial business in Detroit. It was always a treat. We called the area “8:00AM sales”. Because you wanted to be out of the area by 9:30 AM, before the local talent rolled out of bed.
Same here. 1975 I was hitting alot of Mfg. area's, including Zug Island.
GHOST TOWN.
Me too!!! Mid 70's for me !!!! Manufacturer's in seedie areas of Detroit !!! Had to have eyes in back of your head as well !!!! But, I enjoyed my job!!! Met alot of great customers !!!
Lots of code words here.
Talent =Black criminals.
Treat=living dangerously in a violent crime zone.
Those lazy gang members sleeping late after a night of drinking and druggin'
Great videos! Detroit - I have been roaming and photographing the more challenged neighborhoods for almost 20 years. Glad to see the massive changes with so many abandoned homes leveled.
I was at the supermarket earlier and remembered your video about the Faygo plant, so I grabbed me some Redpop. Thanks for the videos Chris.
I love your detroit series I moved here back in August and I love you talk about the history!
It was a great place to grow up in. A mix of many ethnicities. Many different income levels. Great architecture. Including my grandparents house on Chalmers and Essex. The smells of dinner being cooked in every house was unbelievable. Finally moved away when I was 12 to a nice suburb south of Boston. The riots of 67 and 68 were mostly west of us. My teachers in Hingham, MA were amazed at how much I knew of their 8th grade curriculum. Shout out to Guyton School that I went to K-7. Detroit had the most prosperous middle class in the country. It all went bad with the car industry being slow to adapt. anyone who grew up there in the 50s and 60s will tell you it was a great neighborhood.
The car companies and the government were also too generous with the Japanese car companies (WWII guilt?) and have them too much.
@joecampbell6844 I loved your grandparents' house! Vanessa and I were friends. Your mom took us there for lunch one day when we were 1st graders at St. Phillip's. We lived on Drexel at the time. As I recall, you lived on Coplin, not too far from the firehouse, where my dad was a firefighter. We moved to Lakewood & Freud when I was 10. I attended St. Martin's until it closed in 1970.
We also moved from Coplin. Eastlawn and Avondale right on the corner. Everyone remembers the fake old fashioned phone that was on the garage. Vanessa passed some time ago after a career as a singer in NYC. It’s a shame what happened to our neighborhood. We ended up in the Boston area in 1970.
@@joecampbell6844 Yes, I remember your family ended up moving from St. Phillip's to St. Martin's parish. Van was in my class there as well. It doesn't surprise me that she was an entertainer. On Coplin, she often put on backyard plays that she wrote, directed, and had the neighborhood kids participate in, me included. It is a shame what happened to to the neighborhood. We moved to Petoskey in 1970, after St. Martin's closed. I joined the military after graduating from HS there, settled in the Houston area after retiring, but go back each year to visit family. All of my siblings and my mother still live there. BTW, my name is Debbie Fruge' (pronounded frOO-szeh). You were probably in the same class as of one of my 7 younger siblings.
Gotta❤the architecture of those old homes. Thank you for the driving tour!
At 11:00 on the left, you drove by what was the Lawrence Fisher Mansion. Behind the estate along the Grayhaven Canal, he had a boathouse built for his 104 ft yacht. In the mid-70s, the estate was purchased by Alfred Brush Ford and Elizabeth Reuther and donated to the Hari Krishnas.
It saddens me greatly to think of the Christmas celebrations, Birthdays, Mother's and Father's Day and graduations, homecomings and dances from back in the day have long been forgotten. These were peoples lives!
This is what happens when unions and other corrupt entities, including and especially Democrats run private and public institutions
Pretty soon no one will remember.
i worked in Detroit for almost 40 years. It was sad to watch it's decline.
At 24:00 in the video. The building with the clock above the door sitting on the corner of Drexel and Charlevoix can be seen in the movie Gran Torino.
ruclips.net/video/OLdIKlXl3ZA/видео.html
I appreciate your comment on the clock was that a bank back in it's hay day.....
Thank you very much for this fantastic ride Chris !! I think the interest of many people in Detroit is legitimate. There is no doubt that the history of Detoit contains enormous lessons for many other cities. Today it is very difficult to find cities that are not overwhelmed by ethnic or religious problems, deindustrialization, corruption, urban fragmentation, the dictatorship of cars and highways. Just like Detroit was a few years ago
@@donniematonnie9378 Don't get my wrong... There's no doubt Detoit was AND IS a Beautiful city. I'm, a Detroit admirer and I feel sad that many of old houses and industrial buildings are abandoned and collapsed ... But I see as well all the potential of a city ready for a grand come back !!!
I recently bought a house in this neighborhood to rehab. There is a movement of artists moving back into the city. Between Duggan's administration working hard to transform the city and the efforts of those of us wanting to repopulate and repair, I have high hopes for this city. It looks much better than it did years ago. I love the meadows of this area. It feels a bit more rural. We hope to buy the land around us for outdoor music and gardening. The neighbors are mostly families that have been there since the 50s and 60s who were able to hang onto their homes and pass them down to their children in spite of unfair banking practices against communities of color. They are hard working people. I am trying to stay respectful as someone new and white moving into their neighborhood. Clearing a lot of the blight has made it harder for criminal elements to squat.
I've seen one of Peter Santenello's Inside Detroit video and some parts of Detroit seem like they're making a comeback which is pretty cool, and interesting, I can't wait to see how that plays out. I also enjoyed this video too, you always give a deep look into Detroit and you do your research.
Detroit is on some of the most fertile land in the world i wish it was built up i love the great lakes
@chillwill5080 No it fing ist....outside of a few industrial areas....
@chillwill5080 So did I. You're clearly lying and dnt know what you're talking about. Can't tell if you're a boomer who still can't get past the riots from over 50 years ago or a Millennial who doesn't know the history of the city well. Because that statement is not even remotely true
That street at 20:00 looks like a nice drive through the countryside!
Thanks for doing this video--lots of effort went into this and your other
Thank you, didn’t see this until now.
Much appreciated!
Those houses look like they use to be very nice back in the day with tree covered streets. If they were kept up, they would be fetching $350K+ at a minum. I assume they also have basements too.
I can almost visualize kids walking to their neighborhood school and dads outside working on the yard.
I thought the same while driving through!
Basements? Oh yes, that's where everyone chill's. It's safest spot so they remodel the basement first and the outside is last. If your crib looking good outside, then it's 1st to get broken into. You get inside, those homes are beautiful. Blow your mind how different they are inside.
That's the way it was till the ghetto trash started moved in.
Great job, Chris! Love your informative commentary, as usual!
I lived in Grosse Pointe Woods at the time, but I had a lot of friends and business in this area. That was before Coleman A Young. After him, there was no reason to visit the eastside. It was over, even then. I hated to see what happened to those beautiful neighborhoods. Left the Metro area in 1983 and only returned in 2001 to Chesterfield Twp. for 5 years to work in what was left of the auto business. I left when all the dealerships closed. I was recruited by another Detroit survivor in North Carolina. He even flew to Royal Oak to interview me. Loved that and took the job!
Stay there
Better to be a checkerboard of houses and vacant lots than half occupied, half abandoned houses.
Nah
Your commentary is exceptional. Well done.
I went to Detroit in November 2021, enjoyed an ice hockey match and the Henry Ford Museum.
ice hockey?? where are you from?? in canada (no capital c because of justin trudeau) it's HOCKEY!
Beautiful neighborhood at one time , fond memories. Go figure !
Alter Rd. inspired the name of the band Alter Bridge. Mark Tremonti spent some of his childhood in the Detroit area.
I grew up in the Warrendale area in the 60-70s, it's changed a lot but still exists as a neighboorhood with most of the houses being kept nice and the lawns mowed (thanks Google street view). There are many reasons why the city imploded and it's not fair to pin the blame on any one factor, they all contributed. Hopefully things are looking up and the city will shine as it has in the past.
and it's not fair to pin the blame on any one factor
I can name one color that is the only factor.
@@fraternitas5117 Spoken like a true racist.
Wish full thinking
We lived on Lenox then moved to the city airport area (Conners and Gratiot) in 1966 one year before the riots. From the Lenox area there was Sanders chocolate shop, Neisners 5 and dime, Jupiter and the Cinderella Theater movies on Saturdays.
Thanks Chris i enjoy all your videos
Woodward Ave heading up towards Pontiac I believe... White Castle hamburgers on the way. yum yum. I'll take a dozen to go. Haven't eaten in 18 hours.
Yummy with a roll of toilet paper
I work at the Stellantis plant there in the video. My Trackhawk got stolen twice from there. That newer burnt up apartment at 16:00 has been that way for at least 4 years. The forest is coming back on some of those empty blocks. Many of the tire shops in the suburbs come to dump in those neighborhoods. There's a dump that Detroit residents can drop off tires and junk for free. There a weekly limit on tires I believe. I saw an aerial photo of that neighborhood from the late 40's and there wasn't a single empty lot. The houses were jam packed together.
The sheer vastness of The D never ceases to amaze me
Thats the problem. Too much sprawl amd with no taxbase to support it. Hate to say it but half the city should be razed and given back to nature.
I live in an Upstate New York city that was a boomtown, too, with headquarters namely for IBM and Endicott Johnson. IBM started moving people down to North Carolina quite vigorously in the 1970's for cheaper labor and fewer taxes, so much to the point where the phrase "I've Been Moved" was coined by their transfers. They pulled up stakes completely in the 1990's, leaving nothing behind but their empty headquarters, an EPA Superfund site.
On a side note, the Vanity Ballroom has a spring-loaded dance floor which was/is a rarity.
did you know the Vanity Ballroom opened on the eve of the stock market crash in 1929 on Detroit's far east side at Newport and Jefferson
@@dopeytripod yep......and I saw Lou Reed play there.....the Cinderella theater a couple blocks away was another former gem
People who worked at Ford plants who did not drive a Ford had to park in the far parking lot... much appreciated in the rain and snows.
I am from the Jefferson/Chalmers area. I lived on Jefferson and Newport. I have seen the area deteriorated so bad. I did leave the area but still have family there.
I lived on Gray and Jefferson and went to school at Carstens which is at minute 19:10 in this video. I was put into the military ( given the choice of there of Michigan State) in 71
Lots of drugs and alcohol
I lived in this area from 1966-75. Eastlawn and Jefferson and then Marlborough and Kercheval. It was much nicer in the 60's it really started going down hill about 72 and then We moved into Grosse Pointe Park in 1975.
@@danerogers9058 it was white then now you live in rich White hood
Wow, have seen prior video's of how far Detroit has gone down, but this one is the Best ever, shows the good & bad of Detroit, + your so good at information, Thankful I'm Subscribed....
big time Rock and Punk bands played at the Vanity Ballroom. These bands were MC5, Ted Nugent, Amboy Dukes, the Stooges and the Velvet Underground in June 18, 1971 and September 3, 1971. The Vanity was reopened in 1983. In 1986, the Vanity was home to the Huge Borde’s Trinidad Tripoli Band on Friday nights. The Vanity closed down in 1988 ... Great Job on all your Videos Chris I really enjoy them all
I've noticed that the vast majority of neighborhoods in Detroit look like suburban neighborhoods as far as housing stock, like there isn't much really dense high rise development at all. My mom and grandmother were both born in Newark, NJ so that city has been my main experience with intense urban blight. It has lots of menacing high rise projects more like other old east coast cities.
Yup. Detroit was the 1st major city to be built this way. The central area of the city used to be pretty dense during the peak years.
Thats the problem. Its soooo many square miles thats so hardly populated its impossible to support with the current tax base.
@@ChrisHarden I’m not sure if you are aware Chris, so forgive me if you are, but housing was always an issue in Detroit’s heyday. There never seemed to be enough housing stock, and Detroit had plans for future residential neighborhoods that they had to shelve during the depression. There are a lot of folks that believe there would have been less social stress had they built more high rises in the period when there was millions of people and not enough housing. Although it would be a moot point because those high rises would just be huge abandoned buildings at this point anyways. Also you brought up how the homes in the suburbs were cheaper and taxes lower. That is true and a huge draw, but also people did not like living so close to industry. At least that’s what I’ve been told by the older folks who moved out. There weren’t just factories near some neighborhoods but also lots of small machine shops and similar places that factories required.
That looks like Indian Mounds Dr. near Walker/Grand Rapids Michigan... with all the piles of trash.
16:04 Rev. Ann Johnson Elderly Apartments, senior citizens housing, burned 9.23.2019. Though there were believed to be no fatalities, six were injured and many lost everything -- all residents were displaced. Ruins stood for a while as i noticed its demolition nearing completion in early 2022.
You are the Detroit master
Also, Jefferson Chalmers has seen incredible growth and it's one of the hottest up-and-coming areas with homes being completely renovated and sold for numbers that were unthinkable even 3-4 years ago. there's multiple community gardens in what used to be empty and abandoned lots, the neighbors are friendly and watch out for each other, they have their own snow removal in the winter and all the lawns are well kept in the summer. Yes there's vacant and eyesore homes but it's 100x better than it was 5 years ago and 5 years from now it'll be miles ahead of what this video shows. Your negative outlook and viewpoint of Detroit really shows in your videos.
Ok.
Admittedly it’s hard to sound positive about every neighborhood in Detroit it’s about the city not the people and honestly the population of Detroit in its past destroyed Detroit and a certain percentage still does stripping houses and bricks and sinks and window sashes
The negative outlook is for good reason...the city has LOST population for the last 7 census calculations i.e. 70 years. Jefferson Chalmers is still a shell of its former self. The only hope for JC is its proximity to GP; downtown is too far away.
Thanks for the work dude! Good content.
As a metro Detroiter I am loving this tour of my greater city area
Ditto
Left the Detroit area (actually Bloomfield Twp) 47 years ago and have returned several times to attend Red Wings games when they were.winning Stanley Cups. Now, all my family and friends have either left Michigan or died. Never did miss the nasty winters.
The many streets with French names makes Detroit seem even more romantic ! Lol
No comments about 24:01? "Ever notice notice how you come across somebody once in a while that you shouldn't have [ __ ] with? That's me."
Great videos - lived on Chalmers from '73 to '86... right off Chandler Park Drive. I remember when there were trees and a lot less vacant lots.
Charlevoix = shar- le-voy.
Thank you. This is the Michigander pronunciation.
I know the houses in Indian Village are between 4k and 15k sq ft, are there still people that wealthy in Detroit to live in these houses? I assume most of the houses were inherited.
There was a time when you could get those houses for almost nothing. Of course it would cost a small fortune to keep them up.
Back in the day, we all went to the Roostertail club off Jefferson on Marquette where it met the river. This was a disco that was every bit as nice as those in NYC including Studio 54 and the Copa. Those sparse neighborhoods were all full at the time I was there so looking at them today, I would think that Detroit in a lot of these areas is being turned into greenbelt meadows that will eventually have utilities turned off. It's a tale of two Detroits. The one with all the rehab and growth from the midtown on into downtown and the other that will eventually become clover meadows. I won't see all this in my lifetime but from what I've seen, it's on the way daily.
I went to studio 54 and the roostertail regularly...both were great...but don't compare studio to the roostertail
I remember seeing a documentary on Detroit around 10-15 years ago that stated you could fit the whole city of Vancouver Canada in the area that has been lost and that wildlife is taking over to the point that wolves are walking around downtown Detroit.
South of Jefferson at Conner is a stable lower middle-class neighborhood full of affordable housing 2 BLOCKS noryh of the Detroit River where my friend Terry took me to keep me out of trouble in my neighborhood in 1994,when he visited his girl Alicia
I love this quaint neighborhood neat"Sinbads" restaurant!! ❤
I grew up close to there, used to go to the Time (9 cents) or Cinderella (25 cents) theater for the saturday kids' shows. I had friends that grew up there as well. It's shameful what has happened - thanks to Coleman Young and his gang.
Ah the Vanity ballroom. I was in there once in 2007 and yeah there isn't much of anything to explore. Very damp inside.
Do any of you know (including you Chris) Detroit is a French word meaning "The Straight." Detroit is actually pronounced "Day-Twah." The Detroit River is actually a straight and not a river. A straight is a body of water that connects two larger bodies of water. In this case, the Detroit River connects Lake St Clair and Lake Erie.
NO it's pronounced Detroit. just like it's written - thanks
Oh.. and put this phrase in your translator since vou don't speak French.
"une rivière droite" Can you spot your grammatical dysfunction?
richbrake9910; it's actually:"The Strait" 😅
The legendary,deadly undercurrent in the Detroit River isn't so potent,as in 2010,while scouting the bottom of the beach 20 yards from the shore,I found the SAND is very"clean"with no refuse,rocks,pebbles or seashells only FINE,soft sand about the consistency of"Gold Medal" FLOUR!! Resurfacing to get some air,I saw that I was parallel to the orange buoys,as I thought:"Hell,I'm right HERE;I might AS well go on PAST them for once in my life!!😐 Unfortunately,my uncle sitting 50 yards from the water we ithbis wife SAW where I was,and started screaming like he'd lost his mind,which alerted my mother to where I was and she almost had a STROKE screaming for me to return to the beach!! I would've swam mid-river,but had she suffered a stroke I would've gotten BLAMED for it!! I didn't see what the big deal,was although I did notice the water was ICE-cold that close to the shipping channel!! I've been prohibited by family from the Belle Isle Beach for FOURTEEN years now,because of that incident!! 😮
We pronounce it Shar-La-Voy...
👍🏻 noted. I knew that but it slipped my mind when I edited the video.
As a kid we used to walk here to the park in the late 60's. After the riots, that all started to change.
The Arden Park and Boston Edison district is like Indian Village.
Cause ppl wanna see the hood brodie I live in VA and wanna come buy a house there once of those cheap houses and fix it up this is the season im watching your Detroit series. Keep up the good work mate!
Lol, let us know how that went. People aren't exactly paying rent.
Hell naw
@@duckie0892Closing in a couple days lol
@@brandonbell5357Hell yea
Also curious about zoning, seems residential and industrial mixed together.
Have you ever done a saginaw michigan video? I love your videos and content!
At one point while lived n Detroit, the Jefferson assembly plant had as many vehicles in the failed inspection lot as those streaming off the assembly line; thank you UAW.
it’s not just UAW. it’s management even more so. chrysler designs crappy cars. Design is a big part of quality. After all, the cars produced by Fiat are not known for quality either. And now that Peugeot is part of the dysfunctional family….bad American +bad Italian+ bad French does not equal Toyota.
Chris, it's Charlevoix, rhymes with boy, same as the tourist city in northern Michigan.
My only regrets is that there is no content out there for a true depiction of how beautiful the city was in the 70s/80s before the blight. It slowly eroded and descended into this ruin. It's the saddest thing to see.
I think a lot about what it would be like if there was 5k footage like this back in the day to see what everything used to look like.
@@ChrisHarden Actually it looked a lot like what Grosse Pointe Park looks like now From Wayburn to Sommerset between Mack and Jefferson.
Hey. For the algorithm. And ya Detroit. Thanks Chris. New sub. 🙏🏼💜
HA! I like to see you shoot some videos in say July or August. Some nighttime videos for local color would be most interesting, LOL !
I love the piano track you use at the beginning it's like a trademark
The area south of Jefferson looks really nice, actually.
I grew up in Detroit and I enjoy seeing your videos.I moved to Alabama because I wanted my kids to grow up in a better/safer environment.
Ah yes, the Deep South, the bastion of wealth and safety 🤣
@SU1C1D3xPR4D4 Education too. 😀
Poor kids
Housing crisis in 08, to 2011 didn't help along with 67 rebellion and auto jobs going. It's coming back downtown, midtown, still alot of solid, historical neighborhoods still thriving. Empty land is like a blank canvas for development. Detroit is coming back
People watch the “Hood” videos on “RUclips” because that’s the closest they’ll ever get to visiting it. They like to watch comment and criticize us from the safety of their bubbles in the middle of nowhere. I was born and raised in Detroit, EastSide to be exact. It made me fearless and mentally strong. I can stand up and walk tall with confidence anywhere i go… ANYWHERE!!! It also taught us about getting RESPECT and giving RESPECT. Because if you didn’t, you got your head knocked off. My they all Rest In Peace ✌🏾
People are just Ignorant on RUclips like these types of demeaning videos and for what?🤷♀️
I was living in the hood and still be in the hood.
Job loss wasn’t just corporate greed.
Affirmative Action changed the work force drastically, and not for the better. The automakers could not hire who they wanted. The employees suddenly couldn’t do the jobs or understand the directions.
Finally Chrysler started printing animated employee handbooks. This helped get the cars assembled but the final product was truly crap for a couple decades.
This both opened the floodgates for a wave of imported cars and a wave of exported jobs.
Chrysler started printing animated employee handbooks eh?
Detroit uma cidade muito linda deve ser o máximo em conhece-la ainda mais com estas neves aí é também gosto muito destes seus vídeos ok
Love the videos. I would like to see a video specific to the great neiborhood that I grew up in and the middle school I went to. It’s between 7 mile and outer drive and between Van dyke and Sherwood. It was a great place to live but it quickly declined after busing was introduced in the mid 70s. As you now kno it’s one of the worst neiborhoods in Detroit.
Enjoyed it.
That chrysler plant also builds the dodge durango.
You should drive through Fairfield, Iowa. It has a cult complete with golden domes that people claim to fly in.
Several California counties say “Hold my beer”. When a city spends all its money on services for decrepit aged hippies, independent minded mentally ill unhoused by Saint Reagan (pbhn) and Fentanyl Phil, no money left for roads (Berkeley)
You should visit lordstown ohio which had a gm plant close recently.
One day
Charlevoix is "shar la voy"
did he say CHAR- le'vay? eeks.. 😱 that's SO wrong.
like saying GRATT eeyot.
actually "shar le vwa"
It would be interesting to see an interview with residents of those homes that remain. I wonder if they have seen the decline of their neighbourhood, or if they have moved in, hoping others will follow.
Why aren't YOU moving in?? Virtue signaling again??
Yes, the drugs and addicts, crime , poverty started while the factories were up and running.
Your videos are a real perspective of the decadence of cities due to economical crisis...it's what happens when lack of opportunities and education exist....
I had to go to the Windsor Star news paper to fix something... and on the way back to Detroit the border guard thought my Simpson voltage meter was a bomb and he made me take it apart to see it was just a bunch of wires inside. true story... you can't make this stuff up,
I lived right downtown Detroit in the ''Holland Hotel'' i believe? in the smallest room they had. lol they had a rent protest flush out where everyone flushed the toilets at a certain time.
I worked in this area for about a year and a half, used to go to that nice park by the water to walk my dog
Is the banner beneath the video from the GoPro? Where from?
Chris Harden... you are just waking up my memories... so i must make comments as i go through your video. Hope that is alright.
I went to Remus! Lakewood 💪🏾🔥
You went south of Jefferson Ave? That’s pretty good as Jefferson is a north-south street.
It's more-so an east and west street in this part of town.
What happened to all the houses?Were the blocks full of homes before and have been all torn down?Who pId for all the demolition and debris removal?
I'm digging the driving music...
Dig the music. Reminds me of "Ghost Dog".
Show us the other side of the river, in canada. Is it all urban blight?
Haven’t been able to go over there yet, and no it’s not
This video is great; Detroit used to be so Grand . Thanks for posting it . Cities live and they Die .
Detroit will never die!!!
A lot of Detroit is gone still some parts live But My Detroit is gone what I once lived and knew
Your music sounds like a “MASSIVE CONUNDRUM “ it fitting. Live in 48215 zip
Keep up the good work.thats my old hood. Just west of Chalmers at 13375 Longview. I had to çlear out to Warren. I was the last white boy there 😮 they called me the omàga man 😜
we watched your St. Ignace video as we were contemplating the UP, and we are going to go this August, i'm so excited 🙂
Awesome! Happy for ya. You'll like what you see. Hopefully you'll get some good weather.
thanks Chris...
Are you related to Rev. Wayne Foote in St Iggy?
But, could you at least mention more often various intersections and the roads you are traveling? Thanks.
Mother Nature definitely plays the long game, doesn't she? She'll patiently wait while we have our empires of concrete and steel, but as soon as we abandon them? "Thank you very much, I'll have that back."
All those empty lots hold the promise of Detroit once again becoming a beautiful city.
People would need a reason to move there and there isn’t any reason to move there, which is why people are leaving there.
this will not happen again for 300 years.
No. No one really wants to invest in Detroit, and why would they. 😒. Downtown town is profitable as long as the quit robbing folks.
Charlevoix is pronounced char-la-voy in southeast Michigan.
I literally just moved to JC from suburbs ( where neighbors don’t even talk to each other and a lot of entitled angry behavior rules ) because it’s amazing here - the people - the location - the nature . You def didn’t do your research if you think JC is in decline . But by all means - please keep making your hood videos to continue the negative narrative about Detroit and get your click bait fix - because it will keep all of the a..holes out in the suburbs . Also I Walk everywhere - and feel way more safe than I do in Clinton Township . Wow you say nice things about Downtown Detroit - your research also notably lacks actually talking to any residents .
You’re right about that. I live in Eastpointe and the neighbors don’t even know each other. I’ve been living here since 1972 and I still cannot seem to find any connection to these people.
Most of us love hood videos. I don't remember if I watched this video yet or if I've already commented on it yet, either🤣🤣🤣
It's trying to get better!
look at all the new development while he yammers on "what happened to Detroit".. wow!
I'm impressed with all the new shopping plazas, housing developments roads and infrastructure.
Barely recognizable to someone who lived there in the 90's.