The Chicago Reporter- April 2003
Riches to rags and back again - Herb Kent talks
about Bronzeville
By Jocelyn Prince
Chicago radio personality Herb Kent was elected mayor of Bronzeville
by an informal ballot vote in the South Side neighborhood in August
1999.
Since the 1930s, the honor has been bestowed upon prominent residents,
who have contributed to the neighborhood. After his election, Kent
promised to use his influence to bring citywide attention to events
in Bronzeville.
Born and raised in the Ida B. Wells public housing development,
Kent has lived in the neighborhood most of his life. "I'm very
proud of [the title]," said Kent, a 74-year-old DJ who still
spins contemporary R&B and "dusties" on Saturday and
Sunday mornings on WVAZ-FM, a black-oriented radio station known
as V-103.
"I've been so indigenous to music and people, and so many
folks have grown up listening to me," said Kent. "I guess
I was just kind of a poor guy from Ida B. Wells that really didn't
go too far from Bronzeville. I ended back up here and I'm part of
it."
Kent spoke with The Chicago Reporter about the history of Bronzeville
and how the recent revitalization has affected its legacy.
What is Bronzeville's cultural significance?
A lot of entertainers came out of Bronzeville, like Nat King Cole.
Some blues artists came out. Some noted educators. It was just the
heart of everything. The Regal [Theater], the Metropolitan Theater,
[and] Cern's Palm Tavem. All around 35th [Street] and Cottage [Grove
Avenue] were blues clubs that are all gone now. The place was just
alive at one time.
47th Street was really just flowing with merchants like the South
Center Department Store, Max Taylor and just many, many, many places.
All of that began to fade. In the I 960s. a lot of the merchants
left because it was getting poor.
How has the recent revitalization changed the area?
It's changed for the better. When I grew up in it, it was just
another neighborhood. It was very poor. I think that, if anybody
really knew, you could probably have picked up a greystone or a
brownstone for $10,000. They were just kitchenette apartments. For
an investment of $100,000, you could have been a millionaire today
because these greystones and brownstones are selling for $500,000
or $600,000 now. It's really been updated and rehabbed since I was
younger. It went from riches to rags and has gone from rags to riches
again.
You know how growth is--you don't see anything, and then you look
up and say, 'Wow. It's all changed.'
What about low-income Bronzeville residents who have been scattered
because of the teardowns of public housing units?
That is indeed unfortunate. If you continue to let them proliferate,
you still have the drugs and the gangs. There was no way out from
that. Then again, there were' some very nice people who had to be
relocated in order to effect this change. I don't know any other
way to build this area up and to clean it up.
When the projects first came out, I used to live in them--Ida B.
Wells. They were two-story things. People were really screened before
they got in there. And, in my particular block, [which included]
about six buildings and maybe 18 families, [we had] a jazz trumpeter,
one gentleman became a doctor, and then, of course, I went into
radio. And that all happened in that small area there. I'm sure
that was multiplied many times all over, because it was exactly
what it was designed to be: a place where single mothers could maybe
bring their families, or families with low income could live and
prosper.
What about the controversy surrounding Second City opening a venue
in Bronzeville?
I'd love to see Second City in [Bronzeville] because perhaps we
can discover some more great artists who would go on to stage and
screen. So many things have been taken away from us. The Metropolitan
[Theater] is gone. And we need the spirit to keep going. The Supreme
Liberty Life Building has been granted landmark status. There are
a lot of things left, and I don't think that the addition of Second
City will hurt us. I think it can only help us. It would be just
another place for black people to get a foothold in this world.
COPYRIGHT 2003 Community Renewal Society
COPYRIGHT 2003 Gale Group
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