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The city’s so-called “Highway to Nowhere” was designed to connect the downtown business district to interstates surrounding Baltimore, and officials used eminent domain to demolish nearly ...
Her childhood home at 1916 W. Mulberry St. is long gone, demolished, along with nearly 1,000 others, to construct a highway meant to extend west, from downtown Baltimore to Interstate 70.
The so-called “Highway to Nowhere,” which was designed to connect the downtown business district to interstates surrounding Baltimore, displaced an estimated 1,500 people in majority-Black ...
Her childhood home at 1916 W. Mulberry St. is long gone, demolished, along with nearly 1,000 others, to construct a highway meant to extend west, from downtown Baltimore to Interstate 70.
Baltimore will receive a $2 million grant award to create a plan for demolishing the so-called “Highway to Nowhere” that decimated Black neighborhoods decades ago.
BALTIMORE — In a major announcement out of D.C., as $85 million in federal funding has been approved for the redevelopment of Baltimore's "Highway to Nowhere." ...
In a major announcement out of D.C., as $85 million in federal funding has been approved for the redevelopment of Baltimore’s “Highway to Nowhere.” U.S. Senators Chris Van Hollen and Angela ...
Rep. Kweisi Mfume (D-Md.) is leading an effort to rebuild the West Baltimore community where the “Highway to Nowhere” separated and displaced 1,500 majority-Black families more than 50 years ago.
BALTIMORE (AP) — Using $2 million in federal grant funding, Baltimore officials will start developing a plan to reconnect Black The post Baltimore’s “Highway to Nowhere” could be ...
"I remember the once vibrant and connected communities that existed before the 'Highway to Nowhere,'" U.S. Rep. Kweisi Mfume, a Baltimore Democrat, said in a statement announcing the grant award ...