99% Invisible   /     480- Broken Heart Park

Summary

How eminent domain was used to enforce segregation in a suburb in St. Louis and beyond

Subtitle
How eminent domain was used to enforce segregation in a suburb in St. Louis and beyond
Duration
00:37:09
Publishing date
2022-03-08 22:32
Link
https://99percentinvisible.org
Contributors
  sofie kodner
author  
Enclosures
https://dts.podtrac.com/redirect.mp3/stitcher.simplecastaudio.com/3bb687b0-04af-4257-90f1-39eef4e631b6/episodes/ef927b19-0abe-4bcb-80ba-a4032bccc440/audio/128/default.mp3?aid=rss_feed&awCollectionId=3bb687b0-04af-4257-90f1-39eef4e631b6&awEpisodeId=ef927
audio/mpeg

Shownotes

In the 1990s Dave Davis worked as the groundskeeper at a small neighborhood park in a suburb of St. Louis called Creve Coeur. It was an unpaid position, but it came with a strange perk: as part of the job, he got to live in a house on the grounds. On the outside, it looks like an ordinary ranch-style house, but once you got inside, something seemed a little off: it looked like someone had completed it in a hurry. It turns out that this house wasn’t supposed to be the home for the groundskeeper, and the park was never supposed to be a park.  It was private property that belonged to a prominent Black doctor back in the 1950s. But the land was taken from him before he could even finish building his home.

Broken Heart Park