Detroit Free Press Packard Plant Update
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Quite a regular
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Posted on: 2012/12/13 10:46
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1948 Station Sedan
1948 Custom 2 Door Club Sedan 1953 Convertible |
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Re: Detroit Free Press Packard Plant Update
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Home away from home
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Hello Big Kev:
Maybe you could merge this thread with the one I started on Sunday, December 2 here: packardinfo.com/xoops/html/modules/newbb/viewtopic.php?topic_id=10852&forum=4 Also this thread got a little off track about the "Last Days in the Bunker" and there was a posting of the same Free Press article around post #7. Important that no one misses this video: freep.com/article/20121202/NEWS01/120814070 Thanks, --Roger--
Posted on: 2012/12/13 11:33
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Re: Detroit Free Press Packard Plant Update
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Home away from home
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Very interesting pictures. Not only the demise of the plant, but look at how many houses used to be in that area that are now gone.
Posted on: 2012/12/13 12:37
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Re: Detroit Free Press Packard Plant Update
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Home away from home
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Hello 51Packard:
Yes, Big Kev asked much the same question in the thread, "Last Days in the Bunker"packardinfo.com/xoops/html/modules/newbb ... um=4&post_id=114083#forumpost114083 See his post #11. I responded in post #13: "Yes the PMCC did fare somewhat better than the homes in the neighborhood. You see is was occupied with about 95 rent-paying tenants up until about 1998. At that time, the City of Detroit illegally tried to seize the property. They physically removed the rent-paying tenants and began to tear some of the building down. Meanwhile, the City of Detroit was losing population. In 1956 when Packard left for South Bend, IN the population was 1,800,000. From the 2000 census to the 2010 census Detroit lost 25% of its population. The 2012 population estimate is less than 700,000 people - so over 1,100,000 left the confines of the city. Attached is a Google Earth photo of the neighborhood of the PMCC. The RED line is for East Grand Boulevard- it runs East/West until it turns south toward Belle Isle Park in the Detroit River. The BLUE line is Concord Avenue that runs North/South. Notice how only a handful of homes dot the blocks east of the plant. My boyhood home is 3.5 miles to the south, southeast and NO homes exist on my block anymore."
Posted on: 2012/12/13 13:40
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