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Art Minson, HistoryMaker Interview

“In 1946, I seen a house that I wanted to buy. The house that I live in now. I seen that house, and I interceded for this house, and they said yeah we'll sell it to you, but what they asked for the house I couldn't afford it. So, I had a white couple that I met and I asked them to intercede. I said buy the house, and the price that they got was half the price. Twice as much. They wanted twice as much from me than they did want this white couple. In other words, I had to pay twice as much money. So, they bought the house for me. They bought the house for me, and in a few years I paid, paid them back enough money so I could get a loan on the house. That was very gracious of them.

Yeah it was just a friend, just a friend and found out that's what the--you know they--you couldn't buy, you couldn't better yourself by getting in debt for these expensive houses. The bank wouldn't lend you no money. The bank wouldn't lend you no money to buy a house they know wasn't worth what you had to pay for it. So, we lobbied the banks. Lobbied the banks to, to make it lenient on us and then that's that's the way we started. You could live better if you had a better house, and that's something else I lobbied Ronald Reagan. I just--every time I turn around I was--(unclear)--and wanted to know about len, lending policy of HUD [Housing and Urban Development] and they finally, they finally agreed to have fair housing. The fair housing was the biggest victory we have in this country. People living in fair housing.”

History Makers: Art Minson (The HistoryMakers A2002.174), interviewed by Larry Crowe, August 1, 2002, The HistoryMakers Digital Archive. Session 1, tape 4, story 4, Art Minson talks about his interest in fair housing. Community leader Art Minson (1914 - 2005 ) 

In Focus: The Chicago Freedom Movement & the Fight for Fair Housing exhibition tour
  1. Chapter 1: Chicago in the 1950s/1960s
  2. Jennetta Pegues, National Public Housing Museum, interview
  3. Byron Dickens, National Public Housing Museum, interview
  4. Chapter 2: White Flight
  5. Dorothy Tucker, HistoryMaker interview
  6. Chapter 3: Preventative Practices
  7. Art Minson, HistoryMaker Interview
  8. Chapter 4: Welcome to Elmhurst
  9. Chapter 5: Selma, The Turning Point
  10. Chapter 6: Focusing on the North
  11. Chapter 7: Grant Park to City Hall
  12. Chapter 8: Soldier Field
  13. Chapter 9: Summer of '66 Marches
  14. Chapter 10: Marquette Park
  15. Reverend Evan Clay, HistoryMakers interview
  16. Chapter 11: Remember Why You're Here, Brother
  17. Chapter 12: Escalation and Agreement
  18. Chapter 13: Federal and Local Fair Housing Laws
  19. Chapter 14: Depth of Field, Teens Project
  20. Chapter 15: The Movement is Not Over