Evansville's Racially Divided History

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  • čas přidán 3. 07. 2024
  • "If they do not know each other’s stories, how can they know whether or not to trust each other? People who do not trust each other do not help each other, and moreover they fear each other.” - Wendell Berry
    In this short film, we tell two stories - each one a pivotal event in Evansville’s history that you most likely haven’t heard. Telling these stories helps us understand the division and mistrust we’ve inherited as a community, and work towards building a better future together.
    Take action:
    Check out our podcast episodes on Racial Unity: www.forevansville.org/podcast
    Take the Racial Unity Challenge:
    www.forevansville.org/challenges

Komentáře • 60

  • @rbb152
    @rbb152 Před 3 lety +17

    I grew up in Evansville and when I was in junior high school we moved from the Melody Hills neighborhood by the old airport (the Evansville Aces plane crashed less than a half mile from where I lived) to live on Bayard Park Dr. right on the park. This was in the late 1970s. My parents deliberately moved us into an integrated neighborhood - both racially and economically - so that we could meet people who had different lived experiences than we did.

  • @lisamariehale8116
    @lisamariehale8116 Před 3 lety +15

    Kelly Coures is a walking history book. Appreciate his knowledge of Evansville’s past.

    • @allabored4443
      @allabored4443 Před 3 lety +2

      I disagree he downplayed murder and torture by a racist mob.

    • @natebullock6555
      @natebullock6555 Před 11 měsíci

      ​@@allabored4443no he didn't

  • @NikiRiat
    @NikiRiat Před 3 lety +8

    Hoping for more of these incredibly insightful videos. Thank you! Praying for diversity + unity in our city.

  • @markbeck8384
    @markbeck8384 Před rokem +3

    I grew up in Evansville: about 3-14 years old. Since then, I have lived elsewhere; but always remembered most of my Evansville growing up as good. I came from a more wealthy family. We had a black maid. I knew she lived in a row of shotgun houses in a segregated neighborhood. I don't think there were any black kids in my grade school. I'm in my mid-70s now, about to retire. I didn't realize, growing up, that Evansville was quite as Southern as it was, although I think my grandma's meals were all deep South, and I was told we spoke with a "twang". I wish Evansville well, as I remember it's Beauty; but I hope it has moved on to be more multi-cultural. Thanks for your posting. I grew up at 601 College Highway, went to Washington Grade School, danced at Hodgini's, used to skate in the Courier-Press sponsered New Blades ice show at the old Roberts Municipal Stadium, took piano lessons at Evansville college, attended Redeemer Lutheran Church, swam at Rolling Hills Country Club.

  • @MikeInIN
    @MikeInIN Před 3 lety

    My first time landing on this CZcams. Thank you for the work you've put into these! Kelly is so knowledgeable in history. I'll definitely be sharing!

  • @myrelynch
    @myrelynch Před 3 lety +3

    Love this!!!!!

  • @redgr81
    @redgr81 Před rokem

    very well done, i learned a lot

  • @DevinNixonDavis
    @DevinNixonDavis Před 3 lety +1

    This is great.

  • @Christian.Nation
    @Christian.Nation Před 2 lety +2

    Also a lot of folks don't know how deep the history of Evansville really goes and the history of some of the buildings and businesses. There's some pretty cool stuff/stories if your into history!

  • @CoachatCole
    @CoachatCole Před rokem

    👏🏽 Great job

  • @markryan7879
    @markryan7879 Před 3 lety +6

    As a pre-teen, my family lived at 961 S Morton. That is where Morton meets Washington Ave, In the mid to late 1960's the area north of there was a neighborhood becoming racially integrated Stanley Hall Elementary was integrated. The effects of the oppression of blacks could be seen in the kids at that school at that time.

  • @laffilmfest3759
    @laffilmfest3759 Před 3 lety +1

    Very interesting...

  • @Christian.Nation
    @Christian.Nation Před 2 lety +3

    I found this video very...refreshing. I live in Evansville. I was born here and grew up here for awhile. I am only 24 currently. Sadly, Evansville is still VERY decided from my experience and point of view. I wasn't raised in the nicer areas. I was always living in the rough. There's still neighborhoods here if your the wrong color of skin, people will watch your every move and maybe even try doing something. Down town is the safest area in my opinion, because there's cameras and police officers literally everywhere. If anyone harasses you there's not a whole lot they can do to you without it being video taped or the police on scene within maybe 1 minute or 2.
    Personally the worst I've been bothered down town was maybe someone yelling out their vehicle because they blew a red or a stop sign and I went to cross the street. Which happens anywhere.
    Now. Another thing about Evansville is the gang culture. It's heavy in some areas still, and if you wear the wrong colored clothing or say the wrong wording of something they'll for sure try pressing your buttons. Even if your minding your own business. It's all for a reaction though. If you ignore them and show them no fear, they'll yell more but probably won't bother you. Because they'll assume your crazy.
    That's generally in the rough areas. Over the last 5 years Evansville has gotten better though. The gang task force has cleaned the streets up a lot and some of the worst neighborhoods back then are now cleaned up or gated. So. Just be mindful and careful. Should be fine. Evansville can be enjoyable! Especially down town area. The river is a real highlight of the city.

  • @WhistlinDixie
    @WhistlinDixie Před 2 lety +1

    Outstanding video. Well made. Very disheartening time in history....I can only hope that we will continue to move away from such narrow minded thinking and eventually make this seemingly ongoing issue eventually obsolete.
    On an ending note, I'd be interested in seeing videos being made about the war history in Evansville. Just a thought.

  • @anthonyjackson4213
    @anthonyjackson4213 Před 3 lety

    Dude what a beautiful and awesome video of downtown Evansville , was loving the skyline scenery stuff and listening to what you were speaking about at the same time which is unfortunate, a lot of that existed in many cities and places across America, but that’s humans for ya” it’s like the animal kingdom, where as animals for the most part are suspicious of each other and attack each other for dominant control or when they are hungry, humans should know better, and i liken this to the fall of Adam and Eve rather people believe in that fall or not... But again great video and hopefully you will do some downtown stuff showcasing your city especially the downtown and Indiana’s 3rd largest city on a different note, and always thanks for sharing...👍🙌🏼👌🏾👊👏🏼😃

  • @bruceweir9931
    @bruceweir9931 Před 3 lety +4

    Evansville was known as the "northernmost southern city." In 1935, thousands of Klansmen marched down Main Street. During the Civil War, Southern forces rode through Evansville, similar to a parade.

  • @curtisholbert
    @curtisholbert Před rokem +1

    So how is it now?

  • @funkycacahuete2933
    @funkycacahuete2933 Před 3 lety +3

    This is a great video shedding the light on an important yet forgotten historical event that continues to shape our town. However, I feel the video missed an opportunity to highlight local black voices to further through-line our past history with current day.

    • @ForEvansville
      @ForEvansville  Před 3 lety +1

      Thanks for watching and the feedback! We agree it's important to highlight local black voices as well - and hope to do more videos in the future. Have you checked out our podcast? In our first two episodes, we cover these same stories as well as others. We have Dr. Rob Shelby, Chief Diversity Officer at the University of Evansville join Kelley in Episode 1, and in Episode 2, we take a more "now what?" / current day approach with Tanisha Carothers, Principal Attorney at T. Carothers Law Office, Owner of Her Space Co., President of Evansville's Black Chamber of Commerce & Logan Miller, Director & Producer of Love: Undivided, Owner and Filmmaker at Kriss Films.
      You can listen to those at forevansville.org/podcast

  • @patriciaclay6631
    @patriciaclay6631 Před rokem

    @ CURTIS HOLBERT NOTHING MUCH HAS CHANGED

  • @davidlester8379
    @davidlester8379 Před 3 lety +9

    Not sure who you are, but do you really believe this is an Evansville problem? You could do this exact same thing on about any city in America.

    • @ForEvansville
      @ForEvansville  Před 3 lety +7

      Hey David! If you're in the Evansville area, we'd love for you to check out our website, forevansville.org so you can get to know us and our heart for our city! Great question though - and the answer is yes and you're right! Like the illustration we used in the beginning of the film, if your neighbors were having a problem and you wanted to help solve it, you'd have to ask, "What happened here?" A lot of neighbors can have problems, but not for the same reasons, just like cities all over America are dealing with racial (dis)unity, but for different reasons. Since we are specifically working to make Evansville a place where everyone can flourish, we want to find out what happened here so we can work to solve its problems.

    • @scottschnell851
      @scottschnell851 Před 2 lety

      @@ForEvansville well said

  • @MidwesternPsycho
    @MidwesternPsycho Před 2 lety

    Yep...

  • @bryceword1768
    @bryceword1768 Před rokem +2

    And this is why they hate Bosse High School. Evansville, Evil-ville, Evans-hell!!! 🤢🤮

  • @Sexton_Hardcastle
    @Sexton_Hardcastle Před 3 lety

    👍

  • @jonm4501
    @jonm4501 Před 2 lety +2

    Well done, delivered in a non-political way.

  • @lesterhansford8726
    @lesterhansford8726 Před 2 lety

    This is Everywhere we are having BlackFlight and WhiteFlight today in many states.

  • @benhurt896
    @benhurt896 Před 2 lety +2

    Are u sure?

  • @christiemadden7366
    @christiemadden7366 Před 2 lety

    I never understood the whole East vs West issue in Evansville. Was it racially-motivated as well? I grew up on the East side {Lorraine Park area} and I have aunts who all were born and raised and lived on the West Side. When I was growing up, my aunts absolutely REFUSED to visit because we lived on the East side. It's like you're from another country if you lived on the other side of HWY 41

    • @lonewolf9724
      @lonewolf9724 Před 2 lety

      Its not a race issue, but more of a fuck you issue. I lived in Newburgh, East and and now West. West is like your rich people and east is your everyday person.
      Not 100% accurate, but I like West because it's quite when it needs to be and there's fun at the bars on west.
      East got cool shit like the mall and famous restaurants, but west got the good times.
      They even throw events on west...

  • @waynemuehlenbein2281
    @waynemuehlenbein2281 Před 2 lety +3

    They’re walking down Lynwood Ave. My grandmother’s house was at 1159 South. I can tell you, growing up in Evansville in the 50’s and 60’s, Evansville was racist as it gets. Probably still is . . .

  • @johnniepegues305
    @johnniepegues305 Před rokem +3

    So sad the same story told all over the world racial issues indifferences and if race is a test from God many have failed

  • @remo1wodmnetwork9605
    @remo1wodmnetwork9605 Před 11 měsíci

    There's no denying the racism and actions in our past, but I disagree on the current status you suggest. What you call racially separated today is actually the areas black families have taken as part of their heritage, former generations growing up there. The great houses on Washington , Blackford, Linwood, Bayard park were all white only neighborhoods of old now fully immersed in colors & cultures today. My grandfather built our family house on a dirt road of farmland with four neighbors. By my birth 60 yrs ago we were 1 of only 3 white families in a 2 block range. That's within 10 years of the Tuxedo park incident. The part you're leaving out : it was the wealthy whites who refused to be open & adapt, not the everyday white people. I went to Glenwood & Bosse and still live in a black neighborhood, know, respect & protect my neighbors as they do me. Perhaps the young man and you still see still think this distrust and separation exists because you never lived in one of them; the fear may be yours.

  • @johnniepegues305
    @johnniepegues305 Před rokem +2

    Evansville is still very divided and very racist it's not a lot to do here for African-Americans is not any great restaurants here Evansville was really not inclusive and not very transparent

    • @natebullock6555
      @natebullock6555 Před 11 měsíci

      No it's not

    • @johnniepegues305
      @johnniepegues305 Před 11 měsíci

      @@natebullock6555 as usual in denial don't want to face the truth but I got called a Niger right on Washington Street by the fire station and my son got called in Niger on Michigan I seen somebody in the projects riding arund in a red truck with a truck Trump flag and a Confederate flag Evansville still racist and divided there's a few exceptions many don't want to be inclusive or have equality

    • @johnniepegues305
      @johnniepegues305 Před 11 měsíci

      Let me give you another example I work in the school system and I work summer school this summer and it was a white kid who didn't want to do what the black instructor told him to do because she was black so been taught that racism at home you're not born racist you become one by teaching by example social media influences

  • @johnniepegues305
    @johnniepegues305 Před rokem

    Arrogance and ignorance you cannot buy good health or common sense

  • @violajohnson3726
    @violajohnson3726 Před 6 měsíci

    Interesting that you are trying to learn Black Evansville stories from someone who is not Black. If you *really* wanted to hear those stories you should have asked someone who lived them while walking through Baptist Town.

    • @ForEvansville
      @ForEvansville  Před 6 měsíci

      Fair point Viola. Although Kelley brings an extensive historical knowledge to this conversation, there's nothing like hearing someone's firsthand experience. We'd love the opportunity to share such stories. If you have someone specific in mind we should connect with, please send me an email (jonathanboettcher@forevansville.org).
      Thanks for watching and for sharing your perspective.
      -Jonathan

  • @dandwun562
    @dandwun562 Před 3 lety +5

    Lynch photography = early selfie. Haha! Seems like this Canadian is really digging to find racial divide in Evansville.

    • @mackjuan2232
      @mackjuan2232 Před 2 lety +2

      I'm from Memphis and my family roots are in Mississippi,I spent time growing up in both, I've lived in Memphis, Atlanta, Dallas and North Carolina, I've lived here in Evansville for about 4yrs and I have to say this place is more prejudice, segregated and has more racist people than anywhere I've ever been and lots of the people talk that"color blind"sh.t but like the person who referred to "OTW"(other than white) as"colored is a perfect example how it really is here but the rent is cheap and is fairly safe....but that's it.

  • @bobskelton9432
    @bobskelton9432 Před 3 lety +1

    I have a lot Colored friends ..I definitely dont feel that way...Not all Caucasian are racist ! 😳😠

    • @Brook1392
      @Brook1392 Před 2 lety

      @David Lightman The leadership of the organization desires to keep the name to honor the original founders and to maintain a lasting reminder of the conditions that necessitated its founding.
      It pays to think. You should try it.