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https://facebook/BlackEdenIdlewild Welcome To Black Eden In Paradise Idlewild... This Tribute Page Is For Educational, Entertainment And Memoir Purposes Only... To Reflect And Share A Positive Picture And Memories Of This Great Community, Residents And History... In Hopes, To Inspire Others To Visit And Support With The Revitalization Movement Efforts, Of This Legendary Resort By Keeping Its Rich Legacy Growing.... michigan.gov/mshda/0,1607,7-141-54318_44827_45464-162794--,00.html https://facebook/2012ArthurBraggsIdlewildReunion?fref=ts https://youtube/channel/UCwv064ucqGBlir3ONb0LnQQ https://plus.google/u/0/b/103900125122545790233/103900125122545790233/posts https://twitter/ParadiseIdle/status/554853733100957696?s=17 iaacc/letters/idlewild.htm mlive/entertainment/index.ssf/2012/08/idlewild_the_black_eden_marks.html northernexpress/michigan/article-787-the-rise-fall-of-idlewild.html blackpast.org/aah/arthur-braggs-idlewild-revue-idlewild-michigan-1954-1964 Idlewild... Beginning in 1915, African Americans from throughout the country, particularly the Midwest, came to Idlewild in the summer. During the early years the resort offered beaches, boating, and other typical summer diversions. By the 1920s and into the 1960s, however, Idlewilds rousing nightlife lured swarms of visitors to the community to see elaborate floorshows and some of Americas most popular black entertainers. The Arthur Braggs Idlewild Revue toured the country during the off-season, spreading the Idlewild name. The 1964 passage of legislation that prohibits segregation-opened doors for blacks to stay at previously whites-only resorts. Idlewilds heyday ended, but it remained the largest African American resort in the nation... The Flamingo Club... Detroit hotelier Phil Giles opened the Flamingo Club in 1955. A 1956 Chicago Defender article reported it was classed with the top nighteries in the nation. As early as the 1920s, resorters had many options for evening activities, Including card parties and dances. By the 1930s the Islands clubhouse had been renovated as the Idlewild Club Casino. During the next thirty years venues like Paradise Club and the El Morocco featured top African American entertainers. Including Sarah Vaughan, Jackie Wilson, and the Four Tops. Idlewilds club scene declined during the 1960s, in part because of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which provided equal access to employment and public places and expanded opportunities for black entertainers and audiences alike. The Flamingo closed by 1968. Idlewild was founded in 1912. During this period, a small yet clearly distinguishable African American middle class – largely composed of professionals and small business owners – had been established in many urban centers, including several in the American Midwest. Despite having the financial means for leisure travel, racial segregation prevented them from recreational pursuits in most resort destinations in the region. Idlewild is a vacation and retirement community in Yates Township, located just east of Baldwin in in southeast Lake County, a rural part of northwestern lower Michigan. During the first half of the 20th century, it was one of the few resorts in the country where African-Americans were allowed to vacation and purchase property, before such discrimination became illegal in 1964. It surrounds Idlewild Lake, and the headwaters of the Pere Marquette River run through the area. Much of the surrounding area is within Manistee National Forest. Idlewild gained national stature among African Americans during the period between the World Wars. For example, the Idlewild Land Owners Association had members from over thirty-four states in the country. In addition, the Purple Palace, Paradise Clubhouse, Idlewild Clubhouse, Rosanna Tavern, and Pearls Bar provided summer entertainment for tourists and employment opportunities for seasonal and year-round residents in the community. The Pere Marquette Railroad built a branch line to the area by 1923. A post office opened that same year. The Idlewild Fire Department was established, and a host of new entrepreneurs began entering the community. Paradise Palace became McKnights Convalescent Home. Following World War II, Idlewild attracted what some sociologists have labeled the new African American working middle class. With the construction of a few paved roads in Idlewild, a reinvestment in the townships only post office, and greater availability of electricity, a new generation of entrepreneurs began to invest in Idlewild. Phil Giles, Arthur Big Daddy Braggs, and a host of other African American businessmen and women took advantage of the market by purchasing property on Williams Island and Paradise Gardens, and began developing these areas into an elaborate nightspot and business center. The cottage started by Albert Cleage in the 1940s was expanded by his sons Louis, Hugh, and Henry. Many African American entertainers of the period performed in Idlewild. Della Reese, Al Hibbler, Bill Doggett, Jackie Wilson, T-Bone Walker, George Kirby, The Four Tops, Roy Hamilton, Brook Benton, Choker Campbell, Lottie the Body Graves, the Rhythm Kings, Sarah Vaughan, Cab Calloway, Louis Armstrong, Dinah Washington, B.B. King, Aretha Franklin, Fats Waller, and Billy Eckstein, and many other performers, entertained both Idlewilders and white citizens in neighboring Lake County townships throughout the 1950s and early 1960s. Arthur Braggs produced singers, dancers, showgirls, and entertainers, which helped Idlewild to become the Summer Apollo of Michigan. Braggs produced the famous Arthur Braggs Idlewild Revue which not only performed in Idlewild but was also taken on the road to Montreal, Boston, Kansas City, Chicago, New York, and other cities. Braggs show helped Idlewild become a major entertainment center and contributed to the financial prosperity of the area. Decline and redevelopment efforts (1964 – present) Following the enactment of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, business in Idlewild declined. Other vacation resorts were beginning to accommodate African American visitors, and with federal law requiring that they be accepted anywhere, African Americans began taking advantage of this opportunity. The national recession in the early 1970s further contributed to an economic downturn in Idlewild, which led to a population decline as local employment options dwindled. Idlewild became a lesser-known family vacation and retirement community, primarily attracting retirees who remembered it from its boom period. — in Idlewild, Michigan — at Historic Idlewild Resort. — at Historic Idlewild Resort. — at Idlewild Historic & Cultural Center. — at Idlewild Historic & Cultural Center.
Posted on: Sun, 25 Jan 2015 08:09:11 +0000

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