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There Went The Neighborhood - Studio Interview: Russell Calvert

Russell Calvert attended Jones School from kindergarten through sixth grade in the post-WWII era. He recalls the strong influence of Black business owners like his father, Burgess Calvert, and Charlie Baker. He tells the story of “The Old Neighborhood” before it became known as Kerrytown.

This interview was filmed during the making of the documentary film There Went The Neighborhood: The Closing of Jones School, produced by the Ann Arbor District Library and 7 Cylinders Studio. More interviews are available in the There Went The Neighborhood Interview Archive.

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There Went The Neighborhood - State Theatre Interview: Yael Gannett

Yael Gannett was interviewed after a preliminary screening of the documentary film There Went The Neighborhood: The Closing of Jones School at the State Theatre on April 16, 2023. She remembers attending Jones School and Wines Elementary.

More interviews are available in the There Went The Neighborhood Interview Archive.

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There Went The Neighborhood - State Theatre Interview: David Malcolm

David Malcolm was interviewed after a preliminary screening of the documentary film There Went The Neighborhood: The Closing of Jones School at the State Theatre on April 16, 2023. He speaks about his grandfather, Gilbert Pitts, who was a custodian at Jones School.

More interviews are available in the There Went The Neighborhood Interview Archive.

Maintenance Staff Wax Floors In Ann Arbor High School, August 1947 Photographer: Eck Stanger

Maintenance Staff Wax Floors In Ann Arbor High School, August 1947 image
Year:
1947
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, August 16, 1947
Caption:
WORK DAYS CONTINUE BETWEEN SCHOOL DAYS: For the maintenance staff of the city's public schools, there are plenty of work-days even between school-days. For example, Ann Arbor High School, where classes will not be resumed until Sept. 8, is now being painted and cleaned. The above picture shows a High School corridor being waxed by Clifford Bryant, Donald Moody and Gilbert Pitts (from left to right in the foreground) and Gottlob Haeberlen (in the background).

Gilbert Pitts Waxes Desks In Ann Arbor High School, August 1947 Photographer: Eck Stanger

Gilbert Pitts Waxes Desks In Ann Arbor High School, August 1947 image
Year:
1947
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, August 16, 1947
Caption:
IDLE DESKS GET ATTENTION: Some of those desks that are exposed to a lot of elbow-rubbing during classes at Ann Arbor High School get off to a fresh start as the result of being waxed by Gilbert Pitts.
Ann Arbor 200
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There Went The Neighborhood: The Closing of Jones School

As part of Ann Arbor 200, the Ann Arbor District Library and 7 Cylinders Studio (7CS) have produced a documentary film about the closing of Ann Arbor's Jones School. In 1965, the Board of Education closed the majority-Black school. Ann Arbor joined a nationwide trend of school desegregation during the Civil Rights Era. But for these young students, the loss of a neighborhood school foreshadowed changes to their close-knit community. Gentrification came to Ann Arbor on the heels of desegregation.

In the making of this film, 7CS filmmakers and AADL archivists interviewed over thirty former Jones students and Black community leaders. They shared memories of Jones School and "The Old Neighborhood"—the areas now known as Kerrytown and Water Hill. A filmed walking tour, studio interviews, and historical photos form the core of the film. Run time is approximately 40 minutes.
 

The AADL Archives has many additional materials to explore relating to these topics, including dozens of Ann Arbor News articles that appear in the film:

Albert Thomsen and Gilbert Pitts Demonstrate Woodworking to Pittsfield Elementary Students, September 1972 Photographer: Cecil Lockard

Albert Thomsen and Gilbert Pitts Demonstrate Woodworking to Pittsfield Elementary Students, September 1972 image
Year:
1972
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, September 15, 1972
Caption:
Loving and Learning: At the Conference on Aging at the University of Michigan earlier this week the seniors and the children in Carol Tice's Pittsfield Elementary School art program did their thing completely undistracted by the hubbub around them. In photo at left, senior citizens Albert Thompsen, left, and GIlbert Pitts, far right, do woodworking with students Tim Zeigler, Greg Turner and Kevin Patterson. Below, student Bernice Reddie and senior citizen Bernadine Wimpee work with yarn in a little world of their own. Some 35 senior citizens came to Pittsfield School twice a week last year to work with the children. This year, says Mrs. Tice, the seniors can hardly wait to get started and the kids came to school the first day asking, "When are the seniors coming?"