![]() But the barrier, and the policies that led to its existence, would have far-reaching repercussions for the people, both Black and white, who lived in its shadow. The divider - called the “Birwood Wall,” the “Eight Mile Wall” or the “Wailing Wall” - can’t be blamed for inventing segregation. It is one of a number of segregation walls built in the mid-20th century for this purpose and one of a few still standing. The wall in Watson’s backyard was built by white real estate developers who struggled to secure financing for their white neighborhood until they cut it off from a Black one. ![]() “Detroit has been segregated all my life.” “I mean, I lived in Detroit all my life,” Watson said. “I don’t remember feeling any way about it except it was the same old, same old,” said Watson, now 93, who still lives in that house and recalled being excluded from certain restaurants and stores growing up. If white people were moving in, she reasoned, they’d need a way to keep her out. ![]() She knew the new streets had to be for white families - not Black ones like hers - so she wasn’t particularly surprised when, in the spring of 1941, a 6-foot-high, 4-inch-thick, half-mile-long concrete fortification suddenly appeared in her backyard. She’d roller-skated down those newly paved lanes at speeds that would have been impossible on the dirt roads that ran in front of her house. This article was published in partnership with BridgeDetroit, a nonprofit community news, information and engagement media service.ĭETROIT - When they started building the wall behind Margaret Watson’s house in northwest Detroit, she knew the reason without having to ask.Īs a child in the late 1930s, Watson had seen the new streets laid down like a tic-tac-toe board in the open fields where her father once planted a garden the size of a city block. By Erin Einhorn, NBC News, and Olivia Lewis, BridgeDetroit ![]()
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