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The ward became the center of Houston's African-American community. Third Ward is nicknamed "The Tre". [1] [2] Robert D. Bullard, a sociologist teaching at Texas Southern University, stated that Third Ward is "the city's most diverse black neighborhood and a microcosm of the larger black Houston community." [3]
Pleasantville’s history dates to the 1940s, when Black real estate agent Judson Robinson Sr. helped develop a community for African […] The post Historic Houston neighborhood defaced with ...
The Pleasantville neighborhood was established in 1948 by two land developers, Melvin Silverman and H.M. Cohen, who partnered with real estate agent and mortgage broker, Robinson Judson Robinson Sr.. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Silverman, owned property to the north of the Houston Ship Channel.
African-American and civil rights figures backed the "not for sale" campaign. In 1963 the community had 175 African American families. The South Macgregor group, which had no black members in 1963, and African-American leaders met and decided that a ratio of between 65-85% White and 15-35% Black would be beneficial to members of both racial groups.
Brown won 90% or more in African-American neighborhoods. [51] As of 2005 Sheila Jackson Lee, a Houstonian, is one of two black Texan U.S. House of Representatives members. [52] Al Green (Texas 9th district), also from Houston, is the other. On December 13, 2015, Houston elected its second African-American mayor, Sylvester Turner. [53]
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African Americans started to settle in the community and it was founded by H. H. Holmes. Sunnyside, the oldest African-American community in southern Houston, was first platted in 1912. [5] When the community opened in the 1910s, H. H. Holmes, the founder, gave the land the name Sunny Side. [6]
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