Mayor seeks to revive distressed ghost town
No “guaranteed happy ending," says visionary chief of Braddock, Pa.
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John Fetterman, mayor of Braddock, Pa., is a rare man with an even rarer mission: to pump new life into his 142-year-old town, the site of Andrew Carnegie’s first steel mill but now one of America's most devastated Rust Belt cities.
In the 1920s, the height of the Industrial Revolution, Braddock — about 10 miles from Pittsburgh — was a thriving suburban metropolis of 20,000 with a density similar to that of Brooklyn. Today, the population has hollowed out to under 3,000.
Where once there were 30 tailors, 25 shoe stores, 14 jewelers, 51 barbers and 53 restaurants, today there are none. Most of the structures that once housed these businesses have long since collapsed. After the decline of the steel industry in the 1970s, Braddock couldn’t hang on to its residents, leaving it all but left for dead.
But what others have written off occurs to Fetterman as a calling. The hulking, 6-foot-8 Harvard Kennedy School graduate’s commitment to Braddock is as visceral as it is visionary: He has the city's ZIP code, 15104, tattooed on his left forearm, along with the dates of each murder that has occurred under his watch. For the past several years, he has been leading efforts to creatively reknit the community, working with remaining residents to convert abandoned spaces into community spaces.
He helped a local mason build a brick-oven pizza kitchen out of fallen debris from a neighborhood building. He purchased an old millworker’s row house with $7,000 of his own money and converted it into a foster home for abandoned children. An old Catholic middle school is now a studio and gallery for local artists.
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PopTech2009 John Fetterman, mayor of Braddock, Pa., addresses the PopTech 2009 conference Thursday in Camden, Maine. |
'Definitely still experimental'
But Fetterman, 39, is clear that his struggle to reimagine Braddock is just getting started. Fetterman told PopTech conferees that he “felt a bit like Obama must have when he got the Nobel Prize” — undeserving of public attention for his vision while the reality of his work has yet to materialize more fully.
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Gene J. Puskar / AP file U.S Steel's Edgar Thomson Works mill, Andrew Carnegie's first major steel mill, is seen in Braddock, Pa., in 2008. |
But Fetterman remains philosophical. “This isn’t like a Lifetime Original movie, you know — something that has a guaranteed happy ending,” says Fetterman, who just made the cover of the Atlantic magazine’s November “Brave Thinkers” issue, which hits the stands this week. “I don’t yet have the answer. We’re definitely still experimental.”
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