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The Byrd Park blog has info on the Byrd Park civic assoc meeting Saturday http://bit.ly/bsC4vL, that's all I've heard about.
Is there some sort of bus barn meeting this Saturday?

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Oakwood-Chimborazo Association
Tue Feb 9 6:00 pm
At the Boys and Girls Club - 3701 R Street
Open Mic @ Poe's
Tue Feb 9 8:15 pm
Weekly Open Mic every Tuesday at Poe's Pub, hosted by Jim Daab. Sign up at 8:15, music at 9PM
VCU Libraries Black History Month Lecture
Tue Feb 9 7:30 pm
VCU Libraries Lecture Sponsored by the VCU Friends of the Library Tuesday, February 9, 2010 7:30 p.m. W.E. Singleton...
Veggie Bus
Tue Feb 9 10:00 am
The veggie bus will be parked at 25th and Broad on Tuesdays from 10AM untill 2:30PM and then the NRC on Williamsburg Ro...
Adult Latin Ballroom Class
Wed Feb 10 7:00 pm
Basic steps to salsa, cha cha, rumba and more! Location: Robinson Theater $15/individual; $25/couple for 6 weeks Ins...
Beginner's Yoga
Wed Feb 10 7:00 pm
@ Neighborhood Resource Center - 1519 Williamsburg Road - Relax, renew and do something great for the community! All pro...
CAPS Meeting
Wed Feb 10 6:00 pm
Every 2nd Wed - 701 N 25th St. 2nd Floor
Veggie Bus
Wed Feb 10 11:00 am
The veggie bus will be parked at 25th and Broad on Wednesdays from 11am till 7pm starting Jan 6th. We will always be...
Drawing, Painting, and Sketchbooking class
Thu Feb 11 4:30 pm
Location: Robinson Theater Community Arts Center Middle-High School Instructor: Kristin Polich $10 6-week session
Hip Hop Dance Class
Thu Feb 11 4:30 pm
Location: Robinson Theater Community Arts Center Ages 7-17 Instructor: Gillian Harvey $10 for 6-week session
Unity Civic League
Thu Feb 11 6:30 pm
@ St. Peter's Development Center 22nd and X Street Call 643-9353 or willieand@aol.com for more information.
Happy Birthday, George Washington
Mon Feb 15 11:00 am
!Did George Washington really have wooden teeth? Did he throw a silver dollar across the mighty Potomac River? This Pres...
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CLASSIFIEDS
looking for rental house w/yard at least 2br 2bath preferably monthly rent $500-$600 .minumal deposit
For Sale: 614 1/2 N 23rd Street--Beautiful Historic Renovation! This 3 BR, 2.5 ba home with just over 2,500 sq ft boasts a huge $175k tax abatement good for 10 yrs. Call Matt Jarreau for more details at 804-306-9019 or email at mattj@htrsi.com.
Beautiful house with side lot has 4 bedrooms & 2.5 bath house off Chimborazo Rd. Newly renovated with plumbing, electrical, insulation roof & hard-pine floors - a must see. Call 804-247-0566
Monthly payments as low as $895. Move into 976 Pink St.! BHC offers a 3-BD, 2 ½ BH, Italianate style home with Hardi-plank siding; 1509 s.f., 9-foot ceilings, energy efficiency. Available to 1st-time Homebuyers. Call 644-0546x14
1211 N. 27th St., $149,500, 1361 s.f.—Pay $900 per month to own a new home! BHC offers a newly renovated 3-bed, 1.5-bath detached single family home. NOW OFFERING $5,000 IN DOWN PAYMENT AND/OR CLOSINGS COSTS! visit www.bhchomes.org, call 644-0546x14
The ClothesLine spring consignment sales are March 11-13 (children's) and March 18-20 (women's). Bon Air Comm. Ctr. 8725 Quaker Ln. 23235. www.theclothesline.biz for more info.
WANTED: Treadmill in good condition...no mechanical issues. Also, upright exercise bike needed. Let's talk about the price.
15-inch Earthquake Magma Series Subwoofer in sealed box for sale. MSRP - $600. Selling for $300. 1500 watt max! jdwager@gmail.com
Fun and friends instead of loneliness and depression for your older loved ones. Respected and certified non-profit center for adult day services. Near Willow Lawn shopping center. Mon-Sat. 804-355-5717
TWO SISTERS PAINTING - Looking for a professional and top quality job for your painting project? We offer Interior, Exterior & Faux Finish Painting. Visit our webpage @ http://home.comcast.net/~twosisterspainting/ Call for a FREE ESTIMATE! 503-0515
Sewer Backed Up? Water Main Leak? Call S.A. Toler Construction, Inc. 233-6170 Trenchless and Open Trench technologies available.www.satoler.com
Helping seniors downsize and move since 1998, More Than Moving For Seniors is a full-service senior move management company. We sort, pack, move, unpack, set up the new home and clear out houses. Call 232-6480 or Susan@MoreThanMovingInc.com
Need estate sale services? Have items to consign? Since 1999, Susan's Selections has conducted in-home estate sales. Our consignment store at 8008 Staples Mill Rd is open Mon to Fri 10am-6pm, Sat 10am-4pm, Sun 1-4pm. 232-6480 or Roy@SusansSelections.com.
Kidtopia Now will hold our Women's Sale March 19-21 & March 26-29, 2010 at 3701 Old Hillard Rd Richmond, VA 23228. Come find 1000s of bargains on gently used and new women's clothing (petite to plus sizes & maternity) and accessories! www.kidtopianow.com
I believe that there's no better place in the world for kids on the edge to be than on the edge--of a mountaintop. Please donate on my behalf and help to alter the lives of many at-risk youth. http://www.summitforsomeone.org/main.php?page=4&climber=6728
Basic home lighting fixtures offered by type, finish or price. So easy! 100% CUSTOMER SATISFACTION! www.lightinglampstore.com




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February 5, 2006

Mary Wingfield Scott’s Old Richmond Neighborhoods

I picked up Paul Clemens’ Made in Detroit and Mary Wingfield Scott’s Houses of Old Richmond at the library on 25th street yesterday. I’d heard an interview with Clemens on NPR a while back and his story of growing up in Detroit during the demographic and economic changes of the 1970s and 1980s is interesting. Scott’s book is beautiful, but not as beautiful and weird as her Old Richmond Neighborhoods.



801 north 24th street richmond.jpg

801 North 24th Street (built 1855)

Old Richmond Neighborhoods, published in 1950, is a wonderful history and photographic tour of a number of the city’s oldest neighborhoods. Moving from east to west, the beginnings and histories of areas such as Church Hill, Union Hill, Court End, Oregon Hill, Sydney, Catherine Street and many more are given a run down and some photographic examples.

2239 venable street richmond

2239 Venable Street (built 1850)

The pictures in the two Mary Wingfield Scott books are fantastic. Each is accompanied by the address and the year built, and all too often by the year that it was demolished. The section on Union Hill has pictures of a few houses that are still standing, most of which are occupied and in good shape. There is a breathtaking picture, though, of the empty house at 801 North 24th Street from back when it was solid and viable home (then
/now). The moments of recognition brought on by these pictures is a rush. Poignent, too, is the overlapping second between almost recognizing the building in photo and then realizing that it was demolished 60 or 80 years ago. The East End and Jackson Ward have a number of photographed houses still standing, while Oregon Hill and Sydney are not recognizable.

mary_wingfield_scott.jpg

Mary Wingfield Scott

As fantastic and as enduring as the photographs are, Scott’s writing is surreally dated. The text is super race conscious and seems to observe whenever an area became occupied by “Negroes”. Writing about the 2300 block of East Franklin, Scott notes that few groups of houses this old exist in the city and that these particular houses were built in a time when very few (“hardly a dozen”) new houses were being built in Richmond each year. This interesting observation is followed by her lament that such fine houses had come to be “rented to a low grade of negro tenant” (Old Richmond Neighborhoods, p.39). She goes on to refer to Gilpin Court as a “Negro housing project”.

Scott’s books are unique and provide more than just the documentation of some old buildings and neighborhoods. If you like old houses and/or Richmond, they will be fascinating. I can only wonder at what Scott would’ve done with the ease of a digital camera and a blog.

Posted by john_m at 10:10AM under Church Hill, Union Hill, history | Tags: ,

12 Responses to “Mary Wingfield Scott’s Old Richmond Neighborhoods”

  1. posted by ann at February 15, 2006 6:54 am [#]:

    Just looking at my poor old house and mentally reviewing the damage that car did. I’m working with the insurance company and hope to start putting it all back together in a few weeks. Got a bit of tape to cut through…not that yellow kind that’s still there but the red stuff.

  2. posted by John at February 18, 2006 9:45 pm [#]:
  3. posted by BillConkle at January 13, 2008 1:35 pm [#]:

    The links from this post are simply amazing. I found my house (1965) and the one next to it in the Richmond Esthetic Survey. It is worth a gander.

    How would one go about securing a copy of the book?

  4. posted by john_m at January 13, 2008 1:41 pm [#]:

    I’ve seen copies at Black Swan on Main Street (they have *great* Richmond/Virginia stuff) and at the Valentine Museum gift shop.

  5. posted by BillConkle at January 13, 2008 2:18 pm [#]:

    Thanks. I just picked up the Third (1984) Edition at the Valentine Gift Shop for $19.95 – I thought it would be much more for a hardback with all those amazing photos and history.

  6. posted by Celeste at January 13, 2008 7:00 pm [#]:

    Another book worthy of finding a copy of is The Architecture of Historic Richmond, by Paul S. Dulaney. Published by The University Press of Virginia. My copy says it was published in 1968, it is my understanding that it is out of print but perhaps you can find a copy at a used bookstore (or maybe the Valentine has it, I haven’t looked). It’s smaller than Ms. Scott’s books, and my copy at least is paperback, and it doesn’t list as many houses as Scott did, but it’s still pretty interesting from the architectural, historical and photographic standpoints. It covers several areas (Church Hill, Shockoe Valley, etc.). Little photos and blurbs on different buildings.

  7. posted by BillConkle at January 13, 2008 10:36 pm [#]:

    thanks Celeste. I am on the hunt.

  8. posted by Bill Conkle at May 30, 2008 10:58 am [#]:

    The top house is very nice.

  9. posted by Eric S. Huffstutler at May 30, 2008 3:47 pm [#]:

    Re: The Architecture of Historic Richmond, by Paul S. Dulaney… you can also pick up used and sometimes old-new books on Amazon.com. I got a new copy of the above title that way for about $15 last year.

    Eric

  10. posted by ann at May 30, 2008 9:15 pm [#]:

    bill, the top house IS very nice.

  11. posted by Lisa at May 30, 2008 11:11 pm [#]:

    Keep in mind in her day the word ‘negro’ was word used. Not considered racist at the time.

  12. posted by john_m at May 30, 2008 11:22 pm [#]:

    I get the context for her vocabulary, her references to and emphasis on race is of her era. This text is a solid example of how much has changed in the past 50+ years.

    With usage, her vocabulary illustrates the attitudes of the day. Would any modern equivalent not sound off in the phrase “rented to a low grade of negro tenant”?


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