Showing posts with label Mesa Arts Center. Regeneration of New Urban Downtown Mesa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mesa Arts Center. Regeneration of New Urban Downtown Mesa. Show all posts

Saturday, June 13, 2015

Still A Long Way To Go Mesa: Segregation, Civil Rights, Discrimination + Social Justice

Movie Poster from IMDb
Arizona, once part of The Confederacy in its early history was the Cotton capital of the World, and Mesa was a major producer. The cotton workers and their families lived downtown in segregated housing, just a short distance north of Main Street. Black pilots training at Falcon Field were also housed there in for World War II.


The documentary "North Town", made in 2011 by Bruce Nelson who was born and lived here, explores the once segregated black community in Mesa from in the early 1900's to the 1980's. North Town has become known as Washington -Escobedo Park Neighborhood. 
[See below to see City of Mesa Heritage Wall story about this]

It's now the ground area for Phase 2 of Escobedo @ Verde Vista that's rising where some of the original buildings are part of an office and cultural history exhibit.
[Readers can scroll down to an earlier posting on this blog from March 2, 2015 to see details]

Here is a link to a preview trailer for this documentary where Bruce Nelson examines this small community and visits with some of the residents past and present to discover their experiences and connection to the national Civil Rights Movement, local politics, church life, segregation, discrimination, prejudice, bias and racism in Mesa, Arizona and America.  
Written & Directed by Bruce Nelson
Hit this link to see the trailer >>> http://www.imdb.com/video/wab/vi617719577/


"North Town" was shown @ The Nile Theater back on February 11, 2012 and at the Tempe History Museum on February 26 of this year.
On Wednesday, June 17th the 65-minute documentary returns to downtown Mesa with a screening that will be shown at Mesa Arts Center. Admission is free and open to the public.

6:00 pm
Film screening and panel discussion with Q&A
Dobson Lecture Hall

Go to this link for details from City Of Mesa Office of Diversity http://www.mesaaz.gov/residents/diversity-office/community-cinema-series

Community Cinema is a national documentary screening series sponsored locally by The City of Mesa Office of Diversity, City of Mesa Human Relations Advisory Board, Mesa Public Library, Eight Arizona PBS and the Independent Television Service (ITVS).  
 
Historian Jay Mark wrote a special report on the showing of this documentary that was published in The Arizona Republic on June 11th. As he writes, " It's a subject people still don't want to talk about these days . . . "
You can link to the article here >>> When Mesa faced discrimination and segregation

The City of Mesa has for a long time tried to "white-wash" its questionable history of discrimination that continues to this day. 
It's an issue that certain people still don't want to face by putting consideration of a city-approved nondiscrimination ordinance "on hold", instead of demonstrating the needed leadership that the private sector has long supported. The City Council has been dodging this issue for months.

Here's some information from the City Hall Plaza Heritage Wall
Land in the original Mormon townsite could not be purchased by either Mexican-Americans until 1916, and not until 1920 by African-Americans - looks like there weren't any Civil Rights Acts or Fair Housing Laws back then.

1916: Escobedo Neighborhood
In 1916, the Verde Vista subdivision was created, offering Mexican Americans their first real opportunity to buy homes in the Mesa area. Located north of University between Sirrine and Pasadena, Verde Vista grew rapidly in the 1920s. The center of Mesa’s Mexican-American community, it was home to a mixture of residences and small businesses. Later it was called the Escobedo neighborhood, after a local housing project of the same name built in the 1940s.



1920: Washington Community 
African Americans came to Mesa starting in the early 1900s, but discrimination kept them from owning homes in the original townsite. The first housing subdivision to welcome them as buyers and residents was the Mitchell Addition, created in 1920 on land north of University and east of Center. Together with another subdivision, Tuskegee Place, it soon became known as the Washington neighborhood, after the school of the same name.



Thursday, June 11, 2015

Sesame Street Live Arrives Downtown + Salsa in Mesa Urban Garden on Friday night

Hello Downtown Mesa! Let's Dance!
There's a lot of advanced planning and logistics that goes into putting on shows for public performances. Last night an equipment truck arrived brilliantly and boldly illustrated, as you can see in the images to the left and right.A staff/talent bus this morning.

Sesame Street Live goes on-stage in The Ikeda Theater @ Mesa Arts Center with performances on Saturday and Sunday.

According to a MAC online posting https://www.mesaartscenter.com/index.php/shows/performing-live/sesamestreetlive Sesame Street Live “Let’s Dance!” has revised the show schedule at the Mesa Arts Center due to routing issues.
 
Happy to see you ... We arrived!
. . whatever those issues might be, as of today it looks like the show has arrived in town, two days ahead of the scheduled performances.


It’s Sesame Street Live 
like you’ve never experienced it before!




On Friday night who knows what you might experience in the rhythms of salsa inside the Mesa Urban Garden @ 212 E First Avenue.
[thanks to Ryan Winkle for the heads-up]

Friday, March 27, 2015

UN-Covering Mesa: Light Rail Milestone

This blog doesn't attempt to cover Mesa - it's a dedicated initiative to discover the progress on The Regeneration of The New Urban Downtown Mesa.

To be clear, your blogger is not "an old root". 
He's a Latter Day transplant, somewhat like the pioneer Mormons who arrived here laying claim to the territory in the 19th Century in the original "One-Square Mile". 
Mesa today in the 21st Century is a multi-generational community evolving to become a Micropolitan area whose future will include mass public transportation.
Three articles on the extension of Valley Metro's Lightrail have already been posted here.  You can read them following this new entry. 
MesaZona blog connects with and features all different and local media that report news and information on the New Urban Downtown Mesa... here's a 1:16 minute video done by Mesa's one and only television station Channel 11 that was uploaded to You Tube on Wednesday March 25, 2015.
Channel 11's crew was on-location at the same time as your MesaZona guy on Monday from 1:00-2:00 for the Valley Metro Celebration for progress on the Central Mesa Light Rail Extension Project.
This video follows through on the theme of Old Roots New Growth - or Regeneration - as was done here in three different entries, and has live interviews with the Steve Banta, president of Valley Metro, together with Vice Mayor Dennis Kavanaugh, and Mesa Mayor John Giles who states  "The economic salvation of downtown Mesa is riding on this train" 
SAY WHAT?. . . the light rail trains are good people-movers for sure, with the Mesa Arts Center likely the biggest and best downtown attraction to bring people downtown for a few hours and then they leave

Pay attention since this video goes quickly ... and you might want to turn down your volume at the start.
                                              

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