
Thinking Allowed Gentrification in Detroit and London
Feb 17, 2026
Matt Houlbrook, cultural historian of London who writes about race, class and urban change. Sharon Cornelissen, sociologist and housing expert who studies Detroit decline and housing policy. They discuss a 1920s London libel case that reveals early gentrification pressures. They contrast that with Brightmoor, Detroit, showing how depopulation, tax foreclosure and lack of investment can stall or reverse neighborhood revival.
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Local Press Amplified Racialized Fears
- Local press and proximity mattered: the muckraking paper John Bull was minutes from the cafe and drove negative coverage.
- That press attention framed Seven Dials as a 'Black Colony' and escalated conflict with property interests.
Libel Suit Ended In Bankruptcy
- The Kittens sued John Bull for libel in 1926 to defend their reputation and business.
- They lost the case, were overwhelmed by elite testimony, and Jim Kitten went bankrupt and lost the cafe.
Gentrification Can Be Stalled By Decline
- Early gentrification efforts combined police pressure, property sales and cultural projects like a new theatre.
- Yet 1930s attempts stalled due to planning blight and dilapidated buildings, delaying full transformation.

