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  1. Apr 26, 2023 · Coleman A. Young // Photograph courtesy of Elmwood Cemetery. Detroit’s first Black mayor, Coleman A. Young served a record five terms from 1974 to 1994. While in office, Young reduced crime rates, curtailed police brutality, integrated city departments, and led construction projects —including the Joe Louis Arena and the Renaissance Center.

  2. Detroit, Michigan locations for cemeteries.

    • Alger Theater, 14561 E. Warren Ave. When the Alger Theater opened to the public in 1935, it served as an 800-seat venue that hosted popular jazz acts like Dave Brubeck and Duke Ellington Orchestra.
    • Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity House, 293 Eliot St. Built around 1912 in the Brush Park neighborhood of Detroit, this 2,600 square-foot, two-story neoclassical-style structure has been the home of the Gamma Lambda Chapter – a 100-plus-year-old Alpha House – since its purchase in May of 1939.
    • Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History, 315 E. Warren Ave. The Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History was founded in 1965. For more than half a century it has been a leading institution dedicated to the Black and African American experience.
    • Dunbar Hospital, 580 Frederick St. Dunbar Hospital was the first hospital for Black residents in Detroit. By 1917 more than 30,000 African Americans lived in Detroit, which like most of the United States was heavily segregated.
  3. Aug 26, 2017 · Elmwood Cemetery, incorporated in 1846, was integrated from its beginning. It became a popular burial ground for African Americans. Historian Dr. Norman McRae said, “In 1910 Detroit had a population of 300,000 people but only 5000 were black. There weren’t many of us here.

  4. Oct 3, 2019 · Detroit’s first – and longest serving – mayor Coleman A. Young rests at Elmwood in a black granite sarcophagus. Elsewhere in the grounds, spot servicemen and women by the stars, eagles or sabers that festoon their monuments.

  5. Oct 22, 2014 · A number of former Michigan governors and Detroit mayors, including Coleman A. Young, are buried in Elmwood. 1200 Elmwood Ave.; 313-567-3453; visiting hours: 8 a.m.-4 p.m., daily (winter), 7...

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  7. One of the first fully-integrated cemeteries in the Midwest, Elmwood Cemetery is the resting place for a number of iconic Black Detroiters. Former mayor, Coleman A. Young; Fannie Richards, Detroit’s first African American school teacher in the public school system; and Dudley Randall, Detroit’s former Poet Laureate, are all resting in this ...

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