The remains of the day
I only glanced at the Sunday paper and some other articles relating to the anniversary of the 1968 riots and noticed something. Furniture stores, drug stores, and liquor stores were looted and burned. It seems the only thing to bounce back from the riots quickly were the liquor stores. Correct me if I am wrong, but between 1970 and 2000 wasn't the easiest thing to buy in Shaw was something, anything, that could get you smashed quickly?When I first moved to Shaw (after bouncing around the metro area), beer and wine, or read 40ozs and MD 20/20, was available every two blocks. Now, sorta yes, sorta no. The Bates market, has been shuttered for a while, but it is no longer selling anything. The liquor store on 4th and Florida is transitioning and sells a selection of wines you can cook with.** G&G on New Jersey sells no alcohol. But there are still several old style liquor stores in the hood with the scratched up Plexiglas and 90-100% of the merchandise behind it.
So 10-20-30 and 40 years after the riots, you still have liquor stores. I can't remember if it was DC or some other post riot city where a black businessman was interviewed. To bring business back to the black community he.... opened a liquor store. I could only shake my head. So though very flammable, liquor is what remains when the fire has died down.
**I don't believe you can cook with Boone's Farm. Actually, I don't think anyone in their right mind should drink Boone's Farm.
Labels: business, neighborhood history
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