Monday, October 9, 2023

Maternity Homes


 This building and its past use has been on my mind here recently, as well as the former hospital, behind me as I was taking this picture, now used as the Detroit Job Corps Center. This building is formerly the Florence Crittenton Home for unwed mothers.. According to a post on the Historical Detroit Area Architecture group on Facebook, it was built around 1952. This building housed teen girls and young ladies who were pregnant out of wedlock, and due to societal, religious and familial norms at the time, were not welcome at home. Family and friends were told that the young lady had moved away or had gone to be with a relative who was dying or vey ill. These homes helped a young lady while she was pregnant. Many times, after the child had been born, the child was put up for adoption. The mother, in most cases, was not informed of her child's adoption, and was in the dark about her child's wherabouts, the homes would not tell the mother where their child was located, or be told any information on the child's adoptive parents. As of the past 10=20 years, many mothers and the children they gave up have been reunited after a decades-long search for each other and limited information on parents and in birth and adoption records, at times, being sealed. For this Crittenton Home, the hospital across Woodrow Wilson in Northwest Detroit, where this is located, is the former Metropolitan Hospital, which was at one time a Tuberculosis Sanitarium  It is currently the location for the Detroit chapter of the Job Corps. If Metropolitan Hospital was not used for the mothers and their children, I am guessing Herman Kiefer Hospital just south of the home on Taylor and Hamilton/John C. Lodge freeway was used. Florence Crittenton wasn't the only organization to run unwed mothers homes. Many religious and civic groups also ran these homes, as well.

Tuesday, October 3, 2023

Sentimental Send-Off


 This weekend was very sentimental for fans of the Detroit Tigers, as well as baseball fans in general, in that Miguel Cabrera retired from baseball. "Miggy," as he is affectionately known, made it known at the beginning of the season that 2023 would be his final season. At each stadium the Tigers visited, each team presented Miguel with farewell gifts and a donation to the Miguel Cabrera Foundation, which helps young people through sports and education. The weekend of September 29-October 1 was the Tigers turn to honor their teammate.

There was a pop-up restaurant, El Rey, first located on Columbia Street across from Comerica Park, then again as a pop up stand in the park that served up Miguel Cabrera's favorite Venezuelan foods and offered facts about Miggy's career ad tune in Detroit. 
The weekend of festivities, the giant Tiger at Comerica Park's main entry on Witherell donned a giant Miguel Cabrera jersey. Many people got pictures with it, myself included. A drone show was featured that evening, put together by Pixis Drones , which was fantastic 
As people entered Comerica Park throughout the weekend and traversed the concourses, they experienced many different things, from enjoying a Venezuelan Street Hot dog and a specialty cocktail, to getting pictures with the many photo ops around the ballpark, to learning about Miguel Cabrera's career through information and artifacts. There was a ceremony on Saturday, September 30 where the Tigers presented Miguel with a $24,000 donation to the Miguel Cabrera Foundation, custom designed cleats, an autographed Comerica Park seat (seat number 24, of course!) and a permanent 24 statue made from 3,500 baseballs, the white baseballs representing his 3,000 hits and 500 gold baseballs representing his 500 home runs. The Tigers also announced that Miguel was made a Special Assistant to Scott Harris, the Tigers' President of Baseball Operations. He will help with developing the next generation of Tigers players 





Sunday, October 1 was the final game of a storied career. Tigers staff and concessionaires got T-Shirts, which I am modeling here, and special pins for their uniforms and ID lanyards.  At the beginning of the game, the fans pulled a surprise for Miguel, holding up cards that collectively read "Gracias, Miggy!" .
Towards the end of the game, Tigers Manager AJ Hinch, enlisting the help of the Cabrera children, daughters Rosangel and Isabella and son Christopher, took Miguel out of the game to a standing ovation from the sold out Comerica Park crowd. 



At the conclusion of the game, the Tigers had a spcial message for Migel upon his retirement. He gave an emotional curtain call and thanked the fans for their support throughout his career. This was flashed on the scoreboard, with the lights above it lit in the number 24 above it. I pray that Miguel will be blessed in retirement. 

Maternity Homes

 This building and its past use has been on my mind here recently, as well as the former hospital, behind me as I was taking this picture, n...