Anchoring the block faces eastern end is another 1890s building, a solid three-story storefront building housing Fleetwood and Son's. Behind the sleek modern vitrolite facade is one of the north side's coolest bars. (Warning: Fleetwood's is a 30-and-over establishment, so young punks should hang elsewhere.)
A 1909 Sanborn fire insurance map shows eight buildings on this (north) side of the 1900 block of St. Louis Avenue. Three of these, long gone, were large buildings. Just west of Fleetwood's stood the North Branch of the Young Men's Christian Association. Between the house at the other corner and that Italianate house were St. Paul's Methodist Episcopal Church and a large mansion enjoying a generous side yard between it and the church.
The 1964 Sanborn fire insurance map shows that the North Branch and the mansion were gone. The Romanesque Revival St. Paul's, which had been built in 1902 and designed by Matthews & Clarke, survived until 1998 when it was senselessly demolished by its owner (LRA).
Last year, all of the remaining buildings on the north side of this block (across the alley) were decimated by brick thieves operating with rapacious precision. This spring, those damaged buildings came down. What does the future hold for this block?
The Italianate house seems destined for demolition next. (May that not be the case.) The apartment building and Fleetwood's, though, are going to be around for a long time to come. What fills in around them is anyone's guess. Will it be new homes or shops that express the sense of place that the fallen buildings did? That depends on what our sense of this place is when we building -- or, more likely, the sense of who does the building and who delivers a vision for rebuilding St. Louis Place to that builder.
It's easy to shudder at the prospect. After all, the current sense of St. Louis Place held by many is confused and beneath the dignity of the neighborhood's generations of residents, past and present. Once a certain sense emerges, rebuilding will lead to a block face as engaged in the values of its age as this block face once was. Although we have seen tragic loss of this block, let us not neglect to lay out the blueprints for a rebuilding that will honor our heritage.
1 comment:
1913 St. Louis Ave seems it might have been forclosed on and is missing its gutter and a few back windows.
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