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Strivers Row, a Historical Profile
by Shadai Payne
photos by Kim
Campell, Amanda King
Strivers Row is a very important part of
African American history because this location is the strivers,", or
the people with ambitions have always lived. Its residents have included
the performers Eubie Blake, Fletcher Henderson and Vertner Tandy, as well
as, many other African American who have excelled in Law, Dentistry, and
the Arts. The two rows of 1890¹s brownstones on 138th street and 139th
street in Harlem were originally built for middle class black families,
but in the 1920s and 1930s, they started attracting wealthy and
influential African Americans. Today, renovated Georgian style homes go
for half a million to 700,000 dollars. Strivers row is also very important
street because the first African American, architect David H. King who
built Madison Square Garden, and the base of the Statue of Liberty, also
built them. The Row houses on these two blocks reflect the architecture of
the period. The northern part of 139th street group expresses the
neo-Italian style of McKim, Mead and White an architecture firm that
dominated New York at the turn of the 19th century. Other designers that
contributed to the building of Strivers Row are James Brown, Bruce Price,
and Clarence S. Luce.
As my photographer and I entered the 138th
street entrance of Strivers Row we were both light awestruck. The street
was very quiet and covered with dense patches of trees. We came across a
very expensive Lexus and several Mercedes Benzes. As my photographer and I
expolored the block we came across a very interseting man Named O'Reily
Curtis.
Name: O'Reily Curtis
Occupation: retired
Age: 63
Residence: 20 year resident Strivers Row, Harlem
What sort of changes has Strivers Row
gone through within the past 20 years of living here?A whole lot. You
can name it from A to Z. Outsiders moving in, buying and selling of homes.
A town house down the street recently went for almost a half a million.
How do you feel about these outsiders
moving in? It doesn't really matter to me, but these people are
renovating the inside of the homes and are completely destroying the
originality of the building, because they cant touch the outside because
its considered a historical street from w 138th street to 143 street.
Do you know any history of Strivers Row?Not
really, but Scott Joplin an entertainer used to live here, and one point
there were sevaral doctors living in here.
Do you know where the name Strivers Row
came from? In the 1930s, when blacks were up[ and coming and began to move
in. They were doctors and lawyers, and at one point, the block was full of
professional blacks.
Do you know how much the brownstones go
for now? Yes, some of the newly renovated homes can go for a half a
million to 700,000 dollars.
Leaving O'Reily we walked toward the other
end of the block and found De Spa, a beauty salon owned by a mother and
daughter team, housed in a quiet and comfortable brownstone on Strivers
Row. Wilimina Frazier a retired social worker, owned a Brownstone down the
street and happen to win the lottery for rehabilitated homes in Strivers
Row. " I guess I'am lucky thats all. i met the requirments for the
lottery and here I'am."
Name Ms Ferminster
Age 62
Occupation: retired
Residnece 30 year resident of Strivers Row Harlem
How do you feel about your neighborhood and neighbors in general?The
block is very quiet and the neighbors are very nice. A lot has change
since the last 30 years, but it's really all the outsiders moving in and
out.
How do you feel about the outsiders
moving in?I wish the neighborhood would stay black because it has a
lot of black history behind it but the new people dont bother me much.
Do you know any history behind Strivers
Row?
Not that much, I remember a while ago Hassle Scott the pianist used to
live across the street from me she was the wife of A Philip Randolph, but
many black professionals also live in this block.
Strivers Row's residents aren't just
doctors,entertainers, and lawyers. While walking down the shady street of
139th, my photographer and I came across a Surpreme Court Justice of New
York State. All types of people live in Strivers Row and it show s how
diversified Harlem is becoming. Even when you walk by the entrance of the
homeowners parking lot you can still see a sign of Strivers Row unchanging
appreance, that reads "Private road please walk your horses".
This goes to show you, even when the whole world changes, some special
things don't. and strivers row is definitely special because it gave
headway for other Harlem landmarks such as Graham Court, Edgecomb and
Sugar Hill. 
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