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NEWSLETTER | Oct. 14, 2021


IN THIS ISSUE:  Infrastructure spending in the headlights. Plus guideposts to Hawaii's origin story, a Disney anniversary and other surprises from history.
ARCHIVES
LATE 1950s A completed interstate (I-495) connected New York City and suburbs on Long Island, slicing through low-income neighborhoods.


A Highway System That Linked – and Divided  – Americans May Be Rerouted
By ANNY OBERLINK | Retro Report

Built into President Biden’s trillion-dollar infrastructure plan, now stalled in Congress, is a small program dedicated to reconnecting communities — particularly communities of color — that were separated and destroyed during construction of the nation’s sprawling transportation network: the Interstate Highway System. A daily fixture for 115 million commuters, the highway system is coming under increased scrutiny for its legacy of racial injustice. 

In 1956, President Eisenhower signed the Federal Highway Act, a massive infrastructure project that authorized the building of 41,000 miles of highway. Postwar automobile manufacturing was booming, but the nation’s roads were in poor condition. Eisenhower saw the need to modernize, and used Germany’s efficient autobahn as the inspiration for a four-lane design. The wide lanes were planned to mitigate congestion and to create evacuation routes in case of nuclear disaster, a looming threat that persisted through the Cold War era.

1956 The national Interstate system was designed to connect communities and speed transportation. (Image: National Archives)

These high-speed highways connected many rural communities, increased transportation of fuel, and set a path for suburban expansion. But their construction became a twofold initiative: To connect primarily white commuters from suburbs to downtowns, and to remove “urban blight,”  a coded designation for low-income Black and brown neighborhoods. Urban planners sent highways straight through these neighborhoods just as racial integration was taking hold.

Residents near the new highways were often forcibly removed by eminent domain, and the damaging effects of the plan are still being felt today. Recent studies have shown that people who live close to a highway are at heightened risk of serious physical and psychological harm.  

Areas that were razed to make way for highways often lacked the political influence to fight back, but by the 1960s, freeway revolts erupted around the country, which put a stop to some construction. The revolts started in San Francisco, and prevented construction in places like Boston, Memphis, Baltimore and New York, (notably in Little Italy and the Lower East Side).

1951 The Edsel Ford Expressway now known as I-94, divided Detroit. Over 2,800 buildings were demolished during its construction, which disproportionately affected Black neighborhoods. (Photo: National Archives)

More than half a century after the Interstate system was born, many of its highways are nearing the end of their lifespans. Cities are grappling with expensive decisions on whether to rebuild or remove their aging infrastructure.  

“We're entering into the phase that is the legacy of the original freeway revolts,” said Ben Crowther, project manager for Congress for the New Urbanism and the Freeways Without Futures report. “We've been able to see that the places where freeways were stopped have been better off. We've learned that lesson.”

Momentum for removing highways is once again increasing, with racial justice movements amplifying the issue. But while the president’s infrastructure plan has made headlines, the Reconnecting Communities initiative has already faced setbacks: It was cut from $20 billion to $1 billion when the bill passed the Senate. Some proposed highway removal projects have hefty price tags, like Syracuse’s I-81, which is estimated at $2.2 billion.

 Crowther is encouraged by the administration’s Build Back Better agenda, which includes $4 billion for Neighborhood Access and Equity Grants that can be used for projects like C.N.U.’s effort to convert highways into boulevards. “It makes sure that the people who are living around highways right now are the ones who directly benefit from this highway removal,” Crowther said.

Despite setbacks to the infrastructure plan and the Build Back Better Act, the Reconnecting Communities program is the first federal funding initiative to address inequitable transportation infrastructure, perhaps signaling the end of an era for these concrete and asphalt barriers.

ANNY OBERLINK, an intern at Retro Report, is a degree candidate in documentary filmmaking at CUNY’s Craig Newmark Graduate School of Journalism. 

FOR BACKGROUND A bridge collapse in Florida in 2018 echoed a similar catastrophe in Minnesota in 2007, an early sign of America’s growing infrastructure problem. For years, updating infrastructure has been placed on a back burner.
CURATED
1971 A Walt Disney World brochure.

Retro Report Recommends . . .


The Retro Report team suggests articles, podcasts and videos that interest, impress and inspire us. Do you have a pick you'd like to share? Let us know: news@retroreport.com
. . . A view of the future
History has shown that it's difficult to declare the end of a pandemic. “We tend to think of pandemics and epidemics as episodic,” Allan Brandt, a historian of science and medicine at Harvard, told Gina Kolata of The New York Times. “But we are living in the Covid-19 era, not the Covid-19 crisis. There will be a lot of changes that are substantial and persistent." [The New York Times]

. . . A new way to trace migration
Genomes from modern Pacific Islanders have enabled researchers to reconstruct ancient trans-Pacific voyages to explain how Hawaii and other islands were settled. Keolu Fox, an assistant professor of anthropology at the University of California, San Diego, and a native Hawaiian, explores how his ancestors' genomes were shaped by evolution, migration and colonialism. [Scientific American]

. . . A reckoning at Disney World
Walt Disney World's Magic Kingdom, described in the brochure above, opened 50 years ago this month. The much-anticipated amusement park promised "a whole new vacation way of life,” where visitors could “leave the world of today behind.” Disneyland’s creators were working from their lived white middle-class experience, writes BethaneeBemis, a museum specialist at the National Museum of American History, but they left out the stories of many others. [Smithsonian]
LAST WORD

 “If you don’t know history, then you don’t know anything. You are a leaf that doesn’t know it is part of a tree.”

― Michael Crichton (1942-2008)

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