Historical Photo Courtesy of Kenneth Stahl [The riot] set everything back. It set people who lived in those neighborhoods back; many lost jobs. They had no place to shop. It set businesses back because they had all this damage. — David Broner 12th Street still smoldering after the riot erupted at 12th and Clairmount, July 1967 burned all around them, Parker Brothers was one of the only stores to remain stand- ing. But, the solid brick structure with three ground-level storefronts and three second-floor apartments sustained plenty of damage. “Four days later, we came back and the whole store was completely destroyed,” Shindler says. “The windows were all bro- ken. The display cases were smashed. They looted us and we lost everything.” Determined to remain in business, with the help of nine employees, Parker Brothers reopened. But, the shop could not afford the high cost of insurance. Shindler sold clothing and shoes from the corner of the burned-out block for about a year until 1968, when Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated. Police told him that afternoon, “You’d better leave.” He did. And that was the last time he saw the store intact. “By the time I got home, Guardian Alarm called,” he recalls. “They said, ‘They hit your store. Don’t come back.’” Shindler never returned. He donated the building to the city for a recreation center (he would drive by years later only to find it had been demolished) and bought Brody’s Camp Supplies and Custom Printing in 1969. His loyal workers were left without jobs. He remained in touch with several families and even attended The Intersection Project stationed on the nearby school football fields. “They were patrolling the streets because of the unrest. They had the National Guard with all kinds of Jeeps and equipment,” he says. “Our building didn’t have a scratch — but, when we went back to where our customers were, a lot of them were completely destroyed.” David Broner recalls At the time, Broner had his family’s business, young children, two sons ages 2 Broner Glove and 4. He remembers the feel- Company, was not ings of fear and uncertainty that damaged, he believes, kept many people home from because it was next work. to three schools. The “My wife didn’t want me to go building was sold to to work — we really didn’t know a church that wanted what was going on,” he says. to expand. Broner “There was a curfew and people Hat and Glove is now HEADING FOR were afraid to go out. It was an based in Auburn Hills. THE ‘HILLS’ unsafe time; people were scared, David Broner of West and they didn’t know what to do Bloomfield believes his fam- — were they going to reopen or ily’s business, Broner Glove Company, was close? Did they have insurance? Could they spared because of its close proximity to afford to reopen?” three schools, just across the street. The Amid the turmoil, the Broners received business, founded in 1933 by his grandfa- an offer they couldn’t refuse. The church ther, Harry, and father, Barney, was located next door was thinking about expanding at 7501 Linwood St. During the riot, he and wanted to know if they were selling could see military personnel and equipment their building. The family did sell and the funerals of two former employees, but the lack of an adequate bus system to transport people from the city to the suburbs and back prevented them from moving with him. The same was true for many businesses. “Most [of our employees] didn’t have transportation,” Shindler says. “One came and worked for me for a little while, but it just didn’t work out.” Brody’s moved from Oak Park to West Bloomfield in the late 1970s. Today, it remains a popular busi- ness on Orchard Lake Road, owned and operated by the Shindler family. moved the business to Ferndale, keeping their workers onboard. Relatives, includ- ing Harry and Goldie Broner and an aunt and her husband who lived in the building, moved to Oak Park. In 1978, the company relocated to Troy. Now called Broner Hat and Glove, with a division known as Broner Glove and Safety, the business employs 60 people and is based in Auburn Hills. David’s son Bob and daughter Stephanie Miller are the fourth-generation owners. “[The riot] set everything back,” Broner says. “It set people who lived in those neighborhoods back; many lost jobs. They had no place to shop. It set businesses back because they had all this damage.” A 1997 New York Times article about the 30-year anniversary of the riot described the ripple effect this way: “Hundreds of burned or looted businesses were never rebuilt. Tens of thousands of Detroiters moved to the suburbs, including many mid- dle-class and affluent families. The city’s tax base shrank and the quality of its schools declined. ‘Whatever damage you inflict to your own city, it is likely to remain per- manent,’ said then-mayor Dennis Archer, ‘because in the very same areas where there used to be flourishing businesses, they do not exist today and, in the very same areas where there used to be dense housing units, they no longer exist today.’” Nearly 50 years after a police raid at 12th and Clairmount streets ignited violence and carnage, the Detroit Journalism Cooperative, which includes the Detroit Jewish News, is exploring whether conditions that produced the civil unrest have improved for Detroit residents in a series of stories called “The Intersection.” Look for future stories from the JN on this project throughout 2016. To see all the stories done by our partner media agencies, go to wdet. org/series/detroit-journalism-cooperative. continued on page 16 June 23 • 2016 15