 Birwood Wall/Eight Mile-Wyoming Neighborhood - Detroit, MI
N 42° 26.522 W 083° 09.961
17T E 321858 N 4701129
Historical Marker about a segregational wall built to divide two communities in Detroit, Michigan in 1941. This marker is located in the west portion of Alfonso Wells Memorial Playground at 20159 Griggs Ave, Detroit, MI 48221.
Waymark Code: WM16VR7
Location: Michigan, United States
Date Posted: 10/12/2022
Views: 2
The Detroit Eight Mile Wall, also referred to as Detroit's Wailing Wall, Berlin Wall or The Birwood Wall, is a one-foot-thick (0.30 m), six-foot-high (1.8 m) separation wall that stretches about 1/2 mile (0.80 km) in length. 1 foot (0.30 m) is buried in the ground and the remaining 5 feet (1.5 m) is visible to the community. It was constructed in 1941 to physically separate black and white homeowners on the sole basis of race. The wall no longer serves to racially segregate homeowners and, as of 1971, both sides of the barrier have been predominantly black.
The wall begins across the street from the northern boundary of Van Antwerp Park, on Pembroke Avenue between Birwood and Mendota streets. It extends north until just south of 8 Mile Road. An exposed stretch of the wall with no homes to the east runs through Alfonso Wells Memorial Playground, between Chippewa Avenue and Norfolk Street. Community activists and Detroit residents collaborated in 2006 to turn this portion of the wall into a mural. Paintings have depicted, for example, neighborhood children blowing bubbles, a group of a cappella singers, Rosa Parks's boarding the bus signifying her contribution to the Civil Rights Movement, and citizens protesting for equitable housing policy. - Detroit Wall
Historical Date: 01/01/1941
 Description: Birwood Wall
Constructed in 1941, the Birwood Wall
divided the existing Black community
in the Eight Mile-Wyoming area from
Blackstone Park. a newly built White
subdivision. The wall is a reminder of
institutionalized racial segregation in
the United States. For example the 1936
Federal Housing Administration under-
writing manual stated that artificial
barriers could protect a neighborhood's
value from "adverse influences.” such
as "inharmonious racial groups.” Maps
provided by the Home Owners' Loan
Corporation labeled Black neighbor-
hoods and other ethnic or low-income
communities as "hazardous” for home
loans, a process known as redlining.
The Reverend Horace White, the first
Black member of the Detroit Housing
Commission. denounced the wall and
led protests against its construction.
By the 1950s Black families lived on
both sides of the wall.
Eight Mile-Wyoming Neighborhood
After World War I the Great Migration
brought thousands of southern Blacks
to northern industrial cities including
Detroit. Black Bottom and Paradise
Valley, the city's segregated Black
neighborhoods, became severely over-
crowded. The Detroit Urban League
responded by helping settle Black
families on land near the edge of the
city, one of the few places in Detroit
where Blacks could buy and build their
own homes in the 1920s. During World
War II the city tried to build temporary
defense housing in the area. Burniece
Avery, the Carver Progressive Club,
and the Eight Mile Road Improvement
Association persuaded the Federal
Housing Administration to limit war
housing and, a rarity for the time, offer
home loans in the area. Their success
reinforced Black homeownership here.
 Parking nearby?: yes
 D/T ratings: 
 website: [Web Link]
 Registered Site #: S762
 Historical Name: Not listed

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