Elmwood, Berkeley, California

Coordinates: 37°51′25″N 122°15′11″W / 37.85694°N 122.25306°W / 37.85694; -122.25306
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

37°51′25″N 122°15′11″W / 37.85694°N 122.25306°W / 37.85694; -122.25306

Ashby Avenue

The Elmwood District is a neighborhood of the City of

single-family residential zoning.[2]

It has a small commercial corridor on College Avenue, centered on the intersection of Ashby and College Avenues, that spans College Avenue about one to two blocks in each direction. The commercial corridor consists of small shops and restaurants that cater to local residents. There is also a small movie theater and a bank near the intersection. There are also a handful of businesses near the intersection of College Avenue and Derby Street.

Elmwood was developed as a de facto segregated neighborhood, reinforced by Federal Housing Administration–guaranteed mortgages, which were not issued to African Americans. Homes purchased with FHA-guaranteed mortgages were closely scrutinized to ensure segregation was maintained. In one noted 1958 incident, a white San Francisco schoolteacher, Gerald Cohn, purchased a house with an FHA-guaranteed mortgage in Elmwood. By the closing date, Cohn was not ready to inhabit the property; while continuing to pay the mortgage, Cohn rented the house to a fellow teacher, Alfred Simmons, who was African American. The Berkeley Police Department asked the Federal Bureau of Investigation to investigate Simmons moving in to an all-white neighborhood. Cohn was not prosecuted, but the FHA blacklisted Cohn and prevented him from ever obtaining another government-backed mortgage.[2][3] Such policies ensured the ongoing segregation of the Elmwood district. As of the 2010 census, census tracts 4237[4] and 4238,[5] which encompass the Elmwood district, have the highest percentage white residents of any Alameda County census tract, hovering at 63% and 77% respectively.

The housing stock in Elmwood is similar to surrounding areas of

Arts and Crafts and Colonial Revival homes, sometimes one or two stories, that are usually landscaped with gardens and generally well-kept. The apartment buildings tend to be newer, usually built between the 1950s and 1970s, and become more numerous towards the adjacent Southside
neighborhood.

, and Willard Park are also located within a few blocks of the center of the neighborhood.

See also

References

  1. .
  2. ^ a b Moore, Eli; Montojo, Nicole; Mauri, Nicole (October 2019). Roots, Race, & Place: A History of Racially Exclusionary Housing in the San Francisco Bay Area (Report). Haas Institute for a Fair and Inclusive Society, University of California, Berkeley. pp. 22, 33.
  3. .
  4. ^ "Census profile: Census Tract 4237, Alameda, CA". Census Reporter. Retrieved 2020-09-04.
  5. ^ "Census profile: Census Tract 4238, Alameda, CA". Census Reporter. Retrieved 2020-09-04.

External links