In the first half of the 20th century,
Springfield’s South Town, a neighborhood defined by the intersection
of 11th Street and South Grand Avenue, was a prominent neighborhood
shopping center. Boasting restaurants and stores for fine jewelry and
furniture, it was prime commercial real estate. South Town was “a
city within a city,” according to the State
Journal-Register in 1937, “with stores
and shops to suit every need.”
But the spread of the suburbs hurt urban
neighborhoods, and places such as South Town began to slowly deteriorate.
In 1937 South Town had 26 stores; today there are eight.
In October 2004, the city of Springfield formed the
Old South Town Redevelopment Program, which includes more than a half-dozen
city blocks. The focus is primarily on providing assistance to the
commercial and residential area to bring it back to the thriving,
distinctive neighborhood it once was.
“While we cannot re-create the past, we can
work to return economic vitality to this area and refashion it into a
thriving and vibrant neighborhood,” says Springfield Mayor Tim
Davlin.
The mostly residential and somewhat rough
neighborhood, a mix of white and black residents, is one block east of the
railroad tracks that seem to divide Springfield into two communities.
“This is the crossroads,” says resident
Doug Delong.
This article appears in Sep 8-14, 2005.
