The Expansion of Brown University & Displacement of the Cape Verdean Fox Point Community
Brown University moved to College Hill in Providence, RI in 1770, and has significantly impacted the surrounding communities of color ever since. The University’s need for land and space to grow resulted in devastating consequences for communities of color, such as displacement through gentrification and urban renewal projects, and erasure from University history. Starting in the 1920s, Cape Verdean immigrants created a tightly knit, family-oriented, Creole community in Fox Point, College Hill’s southeastern neighbor. Originally from an island nation famous for seafaring, many Cape Verdean families settled around the Providence and Seekonk Rivers and took jobs as dock workers and fishermen. As the University expanded throughout the 20th century, Cape Verdean families were forced out of Fox Point.
“I don’t think there is anything that speaks to
how peaceable a kingdom it was.”
– Janet Walsh [1]
In the 1950s, the University and state government bought cheap tracts of land in Cape Verdean Fox Point, razed all buildings they deemed unworthy of saving, and rebuilt new structures for college students and faculty, who could afford higher rents. [2] Additionally, the construction of I-195 cut directly through the Cape Verdean neighborhood, destroying existing houses and businesses, despite community-led resistance.
“They priced you right out, so we moved.
We didn’t move because we wanted to move, we loved the place…”
– Charles Andrade [3]
Besides losing a diversity of residents, the Fox Point neighborhood lost a community that once felt like an extended family, where everyone knew and looked after each other. Thus, the intricate network of Fox Point became a diaspora of Cape Verdeans.
In recent years, there have been reclamation efforts of the erased history of Cape Verdeans in Fox Point. Remembering this history of gentrification is crucial as Brown celebrates its 250th anniversary, and continues to expand into and wield significant influence over the city of Providence.
[1] Interview with Janet Walsh, former Fox Point resident, Portuguese descent. October 10, 1997. Gorman, Lauren. “Fox Point: The Disintegration of a Neighborhood.” PhD diss., Brown University, 1998, 72.
[2] Gorman, Lauren. “Fox Point: The Disintegration of a Neighborhood.” PhD diss., Brown University, 1998.
[3] Interview with Charles Andrade, former Fox Point residents, Cape Verdean descent, current Deacon of St. Joseph’s Paris. Interview was conducted at the Fox Point Boys Club Reunion, November 2, 1997.
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