Mid-Town Neighborhood Association (Milwaukee, Wis.) Records, 1961-1980


Summary Information
Title: Mid-Town Neighborhood Association (Milwaukee, Wis.) Records
Inclusive Dates: 1961-1980

Creator:
  • Mid-Town Neighborhood Association (Milwaukee, Wis.)
Call Number: Milwaukee Mss 13

Quantity: 2.5 c.f. (6 archives boxes and 1 oversize folder)

Repository:
Archival Locations:
UW-Milwaukee Libraries, Archives / Milwaukee Area Research Ctr. (Map)

Abstract:
Records of a group of Milwaukee residents and businessmen interested in rehabilitation and preservation of older neighborhoods, together with incomplete papers on several organizations with which MTNA cooperated. Administrative records include articles of incorporation and by-laws; minutes, memoranda, and membership records of the executive board; minutes of the general membership meetings; and lists of members. Extensive correspondence, primarily of MTNA official Father John Baumgartner, is present, but committee files and financial records are fragmentary. An interrupted run of MTNA's two newsletters is also included. Records of other organizations and programs represent the Midtown Conservation Project, a controversial urban renewal program; Milwaukee Alliance of Concerned Citizens; Westside Action Coalition; and Midtown Clergy.

Language: English

URL to cite for this finding aid: http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1711.dl/wiarchives.uw-whs-mil00013
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Biography/History

The Mid-Town Neighborhood Association (MTNA) was organized in 1960 by a small group of area residents and businessmen led by Rudolph Witte, the group's first president. Initial efforts of the group concentrated on persuading property owners within the boundaries of North 20th and North 35th Streets and West State and West Brown Streets, to clean up yards and alleys and to refurbish homes and businesses. The founders believed that rehabilitation of area dwellings in order to preserve the original neighborhood atmosphere was preferable to widespread razing of structures. This philosophy was carried on by later presidents, Virginia Slaughter, Fr. John Baumgartner, and Frances Krueger.

MTNA projects such as clean-up campaigns, dwelling inspections, and free lawn and flower seeds, remained on the neighborhood level until mid-1964, when the City of Milwaukee and the federal government became involved by funding an urban renewal plan called the Midtown Conservation Project. Immediate disagreement arose between the city and the Association over the number of houses to rehabilitate, the city preferring to raze many more than the local group felt was desirable. Another area of concern was rooted in the city's efforts to increase the number of apartments in the neighborhood at the expense of single-family dwellings. Thus, from 1964, the efforts of the Association were directed toward modifying the decisions of the city's Department of Redevelopment and forcing the city to be responsive to input from MTNA. The dispute reached a peak in 1968 when the city proposed a plan for a community organization under federal Model Cities guidelines, to which MTNA objected because all decision-and policy-making power remained vested in the Department of Redevelopment. The city rebuffed the objections but did agree to designate MTNA as the channel for citizen participation in the area and provided funds for an office and MTNA's own community organizer. This action preserved MTNA's official role as the community's representative, but did not end MTNA's opposition to city policy.

Throughout the 1970s MTNA opposition continued to focus on city plans to raze large sections of older neighborhoods. Specific controversies revolved around playgrounds, traffic control, and higher density zoning. Other areas of Association concern included the allocation of low-interest mortgage loans, enforcement of building codes, absentee landlords, and a new freeway which was planned so as to eliminate even more neighborhood housing and businesses.

All of these disputes were resolved with varying degrees of success, from the Association's point of view, and in the intervening years, enthusiasm of MTNA members waned. There were divisive internal struggles for leadership in 1968, 1971, and 1972, which reflected changes in the composition of the neighborhood and in the philosophies of the members. Many of the early supporters left the Association, to be replaced by newer residents whose interest diminished as the Midtown Conservation Project was completed. As of 1971, MTNA was still organized but was struggling to retain members and community interest.

Scope and Content Note

The collection has been arranged in two series: Records of the Mid-Town Neighborhood Association and Records of Other Organizations. The majority of the items date from 1968 to 1975, and were gathered by Father John Baumgartner, who was a member of the Association's executive board, and MTNA president or vice-president since 1963. The records represent a broad, if not complete and detailed, view of the many activities of the Association. Since the MTNA was one of the earliest such organizations formed in Milwaukee in response to a growing problem of “urban blight,” it shows local response to city and federal urban planning throughout most of the 1960s and 1970s.

Included with the RECORDS OF THE MID-TOWN NEIGHBORHOOD ASSOCIATION are organizational and administrative documents such as articles of incorporation and by-laws; minutes, memoranda, membership records of the executive board, minutes of the general membership meetings and membership lists. Several folders of correspondence reflect the general activities of the Association, especially of the executive officers and their interaction with the city's Department of Redevelopment. There is a fair amount of correspondence dating from the organization's beginnings, but it does not always present a complete outline of MTNA, as the quantity and type of correspondence varies greatly from year to year. Financial records of the Association are incomplete. Check stubs are available for several years, which, combined with the treasurer's records, give a general view of income and disbursement for the years 1969-1973, but items from earlier and later years are missing, except for an occasional list of dues paid.

Information on the activities of various committees is sparse and must be gathered from the executive board and general membership minutes, lists of committee members, and fragmentary memoranda. Committees usually were formed to address specific issues and thus tended not to be of long duration or of a dominant nature within the Association. An exception to this is the Rehabilitation Committee which was constantly active in neighborhood improvement. One folder containing housing and property maintenance records gives information about empty lots owned by the city but contracted for maintenance to MTNA. Also in this file are lists of houses to be inspected by the city and rechecked by MTNA for completed improvements. Each of the last two mentioned housing records also illustrates the cooperative efforts of the city of Milwaukee and MTNA.

Other records include an interrupted run of the organization's newsletters, Midtown News and its successor, MTNA, together with a mailing list. A handwritten daily log, 1965, 1968-1972, appears to be an account of office activity, and provides a good record of actual MTNA involvement in the community. The file containing MTNA/Cooperation West Side Association (COWSA) youth projects documents MTNA's concern for youth and delinquency problems as well as for the elderly, poor, and minorities that provided the motivation for many projects.

Several maps, some of which have been placed in an oversize folder, follow the changing neighborhood plans proposed by the city as money from the federal government was either withheld or made available and as input from local groups was incorporated into the plans. News clippings illustrate the activities of MTNA and reveal the impact that a neighborhood association can have on city politics and planning.

The series containing the RECORDS OF OTHER ORGANIZATIONS documents the involvement of MTNA and its officers with other social action groups in the city, and with the Midtown Conservation Project. The latter records directly pertain to the Association's reactions to city plans and its attempts to mold these plans to fit neighborhood needs and desires. Many of these records, specifically from the Citizens' Conservation Council, the Milwaukee Alliance of Concerned Citizens, and the Westside Action Coalition, are those of umbrella organizations which coordinated otherwise separate neighborhood groups and thereby increased community input to city government. MTNA was a member of these umbrella groups. The Midtown Clergy was a similar organization which tried to coordinate the work of activist clergy, among them Father Baumgartner.

Administrative/Restriction Information
Acquisition Information

Presented by the Mid-Town Neighborhood Association, via Joan McManus, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, 1980. Accession Number: M80-167, M80-242


Processing Information

Processed by Menzi Behrnd-Klodt and Thomas Reitz, November 1980.


Contents List
Series: Records Of The Mid-Town Neighborhood Association
Box   1
Folder   1
Ad-Hoc Redlining Committee - General Papers, 1973-1974
Box   1
Folder   2
Articles of Incorporation, 1963; By-Laws, 1970-1972
Box   1
Folder   3
Check Stubs, 1965-1971, 1974
Box   1
Folder   4
Committees, 1969-1970, 1972
Box   1
Folder   5
Community Organizing, 1968-1973
Contract Committee
Box   6
Folder   1
Contracts, 1968-1972
Box   1
Folder   6
Memoranda, 1972; Members, , 1972
Correspondence
Box   1
Folder   7-10
1961-1970
Box   2
Folder   1-4
1971-1980, undated
Box   2
Folder   5
Daily Log, 1965, 1968-1972
Executive Board
Box   2
Folder   6
Attendance Records, 1969-1970, 1972-1973
Box   2
Folder   7
Elections, 1968-1975, 1977
Box   2
Folder   8
Members, 1969-1978
Box   2
Folder   9
Memoranda, 1972-1977
Box   2
Folder   10
Minutes, 1969-1979
Box   2
Folder   11
Flyers and Meeting Notices, 1965-1976, undated
Box   3
Folder   1
General Membership Meeting Minutes, 1968-1976, 1978-1979
Box   3
Folder   2
Histories of MTNA, 1969-1973, undated
Box   3
Folder   3
Housing and Property Maintenance Records, 1969-1972, undated
Box   3
Folder   4
Insurance Information, 1971-1972
Box   3
Folder   5
Inventory, 1970; Payroll, , 1972
Box   6
Folder   2
Maps, 1966-1969, 1972-1973
Box   3
Folder   6
Membership Lists, 1961-1962, 1968, 1970-1973
Box   3
Folder   7
MTNA-BAC Committee, 1969
Box   3
Folder   8
MTNA/COWSA Youth Projects - General Papers, 1968, 1975-1976
Box   3
Folder   9
“Midtown News,” 1966-1970, 1972-1974; “MTNA,” , 1979
Box   3
Folder   10
“Midtown News” Mailing List, undated
Box   3
Folder   11
Miscellany, 1968-1979
Box   6
Folder   3-4
Newsclippings, 1961-1975, 1978-1979, undated
Box   3
Folder   12
Proposals, Project Papers and General Papers, 1962-1979, undated
Box   4
Folder   1
Rehabilitation Committee - General Papers, 1970, 1973
Box   4
Folder   2-3
Reports, 1965-1980, undated
Box   4
Folder   4
Tax Information, 1974-1975
Box   4
Folder   5
Treasurer's Records, 1967-1973, 1979
Series: Records of Other Organizations
Citizens' Conservation Council
Box   4
Folder   6
Constitution, Meeting Notices, Minutes, 1970-1971
Box   4
Folder   7
Committee Minutes, 1970-1971; Correspondence, , 1967-1971; Miscellany
Box   4
Folder   8
Midtown Clergy - Minutes, Correspondence, 1976-1978; Miscellany
Midtown Conservation Project
Box   6
Folder   5
Brochure, undated
Box   4
Folder   9-10
Density Committee - Zoning Changes, Questionnaire, 1973-1975
Box   4
Folder   11
General Papers, 1968-1973
Box   4
Folder   12
Low-Interest Mortgage Plan, 1979
Box   5
Folder   1
Model Cities Material, 1970-1972
Box   5
Folder   2
Redevelopment Authority of City of Milwaukee, 1968-1974
Box   5
Folder   3
Social Services, 1968, 1971
Box   5
Folder   4
Staff Reports, 1970-1979
Box   5
Folder   5
Task Force - General Papers, 1973
Box   5
Folder   6
Task Force - Petition, 1973
Box   5
Folder   7
Tot Lots, 1970-1974
Box   5
Folder   8
Milwaukee Alliance of Concerned Citizens, 1975-1976
Box   5
Folder   9
Milwaukee Urban Observatory - “Toward Housing and Community Development Policy,” by Sammis B. White, June 1974
Box   5
Folder   10
Miscellaneous Flyers and Papers
Box   5
Folder   11
People's Committee for Model Cities, 1969-1971
Box   5
Folder   12
Police Department, 1979
Box   5
Folder   13
Urban Poverty Material, 1967-1968
Westside Action Coalition
Box   5
Folder   14
Statement of Purpose, 1973; Minutes, Committees, , 1973-1974
Box   5
Folder   15
Convention, 1973-1974; Miscellany
Oversize Folder   1
Ten large maps of the Midtown Conservation Project, and one poster promoting neighborhood pride