Detroit - geography.
Publié le 04/05/2013
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of German and Irish immigrants.
In the first half of the 20th century, the percentage of foreign-born residents declined, even though many immigrants arrived fromeastern Europe.
During World War II (1939-1945), both whites and blacks were attracted from the South to work in the city’s defense industries.
In 1950 foreign-bornand black residents each made up about 16 percent of the total population.
In the five decades after 1950, the city lost almost half of its population, as many white residents moved to adjacent counties.
As businesses and industries graduallyspread to the suburbs, much of the white population followed.
Detroit’s outlying areas grew much faster than the inner city and by the mid-1960s had twice thepopulation of Detroit proper.
Two other factors also contributed to white flight from the inner city.
Blacks moved into inner city neighborhoods, and governmentprograms were established to provide housing loans.
Mortgage and insurance companies actively encouraged white flight by refusing to guarantee housing mortgages in predominately black areas.
This policy, known asredlining, made it much easier and cheaper for a white family to buy a new house in the suburbs than to buy or repair an existing house in a black inner-cityneighborhood.
The attraction of jobs and cheap land, together with concerns about crime, the quality of schools, and declining property values, made the suburbsattractive throughout the 1950s and 1960s.
During the same decades that whites left the city, Detroit’s black population grew.
The substantial number of factory jobs that still remained in the city attracted AfricanAmericans.
Many blacks successfully found higher paying jobs, but their success was often short-lived, as the auto plants and their related industries either closed ormoved in partial response to foreign competition.
At the same time, blacks were often denied housing loans, which effectively prevented them from following whites outof the city.
The Detroit area is home to a large number of religious groups, including a large Catholic population that dates back to the first French families; a large Jewishcommunity; Muslims (both Arabs and members of the Nation of Islam); Chaldeans (Christian Arabs primarily from Iraq); a small number of Buddhist and other Asiandenominations; and a broad range of black and white Protestant denominations.
IV EDUCATION AND CULTURE
Detroit underwent a multimillion dollar renewal of its cultural resources in the late 20th century.
The 1980s saw renewed investment in the Detroit Historical Museum,most notably in its acclaimed Motor City Exhibition that interprets the influence of the automobile industry on the city’s life and development.
During the same period, agroup of volunteers renovated Orchestra Hall on Woodward Avenue, which was slated for demolition.
This acoustical masterpiece, once again home to the DetroitSymphony Orchestra, is the centerpiece for the Max M.
Fisher Music Center, a performing arts complex that opened in 2003.
The city’s center includes the world-class collections of the Detroit Institute of Arts, in particular its signature murals by Diego Rivera, titled Detroit Industry (1932- 1933).
The nearby Detroit Science Museum with its IMAX theater and hands-on exhibits cooperates with area schools to promote science.
The Museum of AfricanAmerican History, also located near the Institute of Arts, is devoted to African American history, art, and culture.
Slightly to the north, in the New Center area, is theMotown Museum, formerly the headquarters of Motown Records.
Motown Records became famous in the 1960s as the world headquarters and recording studios for anarray of popular black soloists and musical groups, including Stevie Wonder, Temptations, and the Supremes.
Ethnic festivals at Hart Plaza on the waterfront draw crowds each summer weekend.
In addition, Detroit has two traditional events that bring more than one millionpeople downtown.
One is the Thanksgiving Day Parade; the other is the fireworks display in early July cosponsored by the United States and Canada.
Outside the city limits, two key cultural institutions consistently attract international attention to the metropolitan area: Dearborn's Henry Ford Museum and GreenfieldVillage, which house a vast assemblage of technological and historical artifacts and buildings, and Bloomfield Hills’ Cranbrook Academy.
Founded in the 1920s andprincipally designed by Finnish architect Eliel Saarinen, Cranbrook is a unique cultural center composed of five separate educational institutions.
Outstanding collectionsare housed in the library and galleries of the Cranbrook Academy of Art and in the museum of the Cranbrook Institute of Science.
The metropolitan area is home to over a dozen institutions of higher learning, from two-year programs to major research institutions.
These include Wayne StateUniversity, the University of Detroit Mercy, and Marygrove College in the city, and Madonna University, Oakland University, and the University of Michigan’s Ann Arborand Dearborn campuses in the surrounding area.
V RECREATION
The Detroit River, besides providing lanes for freighters and speedboat races, is home to the city's largest park, Belle Isle.
Designed by Frederick Law Olmsted, who alsocreated New York’s Central Park, Belle Isle is a 19th-century landmark that offers vistas of Detroit and Windsor, Canada.
The park's approximately 400 hectares (1,000acres) provide areas for picnicking and swimming as well as a marine museum, conservatory, children’s zoo, aquarium, riding stable, and the Detroit Yacht Club.
Other large city parks include Rouge Park, Palmer Park, and Chandler Park.
One of the most popular parks in the city is Hart Plaza, adjacent to Jefferson Avenue on thewaterfront.
It is the site of Detroit’s ethnic weekend festivals and features an ice-skating rink and areas for concerts and plays.
Metropolitan Beach on Lake Saint Clair isone of the largest freshwater beaches in the world.
The Detroit Zoo, which lies just north of the city, has an impressive wildlife collection that draws visitors from theUnited States and Canada.
The metropolitan area also benefits from a series of spacious Metroparks located beyond the northern and western suburbs, which offerbiking and walking trails, swimming, and boating.
The Detroit area is home to several professional sports franchises.
The Detroit Lions football team plays at Ford Field, an indoor stadium that opened in 2002, replacingthe Silverdome, the Lions’ previous home in nearby Pontiac, Michigan.
The Detroit Tigers baseball team moved from its former home Tiger Stadium to Comerica Park, astadium near Ford Field, in 2000.
The Detroit Red Wings of the National Hockey League play at the Joe Louis Arena downtown on the Detroit River.
The Detroit Pistonsprofessional basketball team plays in The Palace of Auburn Hills on the metro region’s northern rim.
Division I college teams also call the area home, most notably theWolverines of the University of Michigan.
VI ECONOMY
Great Lakes shipping played an enormous role in shaping the city.
Its economy benefited from the large amount of shipping that passed through the Sault Sainte MarieCanals that link Lake Superior and Lake Huron.
During most of the 20th century, more freight tonnage was shipped through these canals than through the Panama andSuez canals combined.
Not surprisingly, nearby Detroit became a transportation hub for the Midwest's industrial heartland and developed a strong industrial base.
By 1900 Detroit had evolved from a small fur trade outpost into a regional trade center for southern Michigan.
It was also a notable center for metalworkingmanufactures, particularly railroad cars and iron stoves.
The construction of railroads by Canada and the United States enhanced the city’s key position on the GreatLakes waterway.
The rail and water transport systems worked together bringing raw materials to the city and taking its products—especially lumber, salt, and Detroit’sown manufactured goods—to the Atlantic Coast and markets in the Great Lakes basin..
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