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Harlem : An Emerging Slum

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When someone mentions the neighborhood Harlem, it usually has negative comments and thoughts accompanied with it. High crime rates and violence have plagued the neighborhood for years. Not until gentrification began to occur, did the streets of Harlem began to see less culture and more wealth. Gentrification brings about great controversy as to whether it is beneficial or detrimental. The emotions are and will continue to be mixed, as many are seeing great change while others are forced out of their homes as developers reap profits. The article, “Harlem Tragedy: An Emerging Slum” by Gilbert Osofksy and Figure 1.1 of the 3 buildings on W 127th St, will explain how Harlem transitioned from a prosperous neighborhood into a disadvantaged “ghetto.” As discussed in the article, there once existed a great Harlem before it emerged into the ghetto it’s seen as today. The image will then show the effects of gentrification in Harlem, transferring the “ghetto” back into a prosperous neighborhood. Osofsky begins by discussing the early stages of Harlem as a negro community. By the 1920s, aside from a small amount of scattered white families, Harlem had become predominantly black. It was slowly becoming recognized as the Black Mecca. Osofsky explains that Harlem began to change rapidly after the Great Depression and the First World War. “The Russian-Jewish and Italian sections of Harlem, founded a short generation earlier, were rapidly being depopulated; and Negro Harlem, within the

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