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Housing
Project
President Franklin D. Roosevelt's
"New Deal" administration sought to stave off the worst effects
of the Depression. The U.S. government created many large-scale public
programs. One of these, authorized in the Housing Act of 1937, established
a public works program to provide federally funded residences.
| In 1939, the Lowell Housing Authority broke
ground for an urban renewal project that forever changed the culture
of the city's Greek Americans. Plans for the North Common Village
called for hundreds of modern apartments for low-income families
and individuals. The Lowell Housing Authority (LHA) did not disclose
the location of the new project through most of 1938 and 1939.
By June of 1939, when the location was announced, the LHA had
already acquired options on property not owned by Greeks. The
selection of the area for development meant the demolition of
almost 150 structures and the eviction of more than 2000 residents
from the heart of the Greek community. With the completion of
the North Common Village in 1940, the tight weave of the Greek
community enclave in the Acre neighborhood had unraveled. |
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When neighborhood leaders like
Constantine Dukakis and James Karelas learned of the plan to evict Acre
residents, they formed the Lowell Anti-Housing Committee. The Committee
filed papers in Middlesex Superior Court to prevent the project from destroying
their businesses and homes.
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Before the case was heard, the Federal Housing
Authority awarded $629,000 to the LHA and the LHA began to finalize
property purchases.
By the time the case was decided, in favor of the LHA, eviction
of Greek families was well underway. On December 29,1939, the
last family of tenants finally abandoned the core of the Greek
Acre. When the new housing was completed in 1940, few people
from the Greek community returned to the area. While the housing
project provided benefits to the city as a whole, the North
Common Village project is remembered for its impact in displacing
a cohesive ethnic community.
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