Sistrunk Boulevard is the main street of the oldest Black neighborhood in Fort Lauderdale. It was a thriving arterial for many of the city's historically Black communities. Lining its corridor was the first theater in Broward where Black people could watch movies, the first hospital that would treat Black patients and numerous locally owned businesses.
But around the 1980s, the area began to be neglected and slum and blight crept in. In recent years, the Sistrunk neighborhood has seen a boom in new construction leading to raising housing costs and gentrification.
A new exhibit at the Old Dillard Museum, 鈥淪istrunk Then & Now鈥 will highlight those changes. The exhibit features historical then-and-now photos from as far back as the 1950s paired with current day photos of the same locations. It debuts Jan. 15 with an opening night program, beginning at 6 p.m.
鈥娾漎ou see the nostalgia of it, of what the community used to look like, but you鈥檙e also seeing the changing of the times.鈥 said Emmanuel George, the museum鈥檚 curator and community liaison. 鈥淚t is a bit worrying because of the locals who are here, who are rooted from here, whose grandparents and parents are from here 鈥 this could be affecting them.鈥
There are also large 鈥渋mpact photos鈥 from photographer Gene Hyde to give a sense of place for what Sistrunk looked like in the 1950s. Hyde was the longtime photographer for the Broward edition of the Miami Herald.
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The contemporary photos were taken by David Paulo, whose Instagram page chronicles Broward landmarks.
鈥溾夾 lot of people actually aren't aware of what was before us. People my age 鈥 I'm 28 years old 鈥 they think Broward County was just developed in the 70s and 80s when really back in the 40s and 50s it was thriving,鈥 he said.
Paulo and George are frequent collaborators, their YouTube page features a host of documentary films about Broward鈥檚 Black art, history, and culture.
鈥溾奣hat's my brother, we always work together,鈥 George said of Paulo, 鈥淏oth of our work is very similar. Him through photography and archiving history, and me through data and research, it goes hand in hand like peanut butter and jelly.鈥
The exhibit鈥檚 opening night will be showing two of the pair鈥檚 short films and . There will also be a community panel featuring people who went to Dillard High School during segregation. George hopes that the exhibit can create an intergenerational connection.
鈥溾娾奣he older generation has a lot of understanding of the community. There's things that they know about the community that the younger generation may not know about, and the younger generation has a lot of foresight into what the future is gonna be. They're gonna be here for the next 20, 30, 40, 50 years.鈥 he said.
It's those intergenerational connections that George says can lead to solutions for the neighborhood's residents.
鈥溾奍t's inevitable for the community to change, but how do we find that balance to where it benefits the locals who are from here as well?鈥 he said.
The exhibit runs from Jan. 15 to Jan. 30 before moving to Terminal 4 at the Fort Lauderdale Hollywood International Airport where it will be stationed for three to four months.
鈥溾奧hen I do go into Fort Lauderdale airport, it's always art of maybe alligators or sports like the Florida Panthers. So to see history, especially black history, which is super rich in Fort Lauderdale鈥檚 airport, it's major,鈥 said Paulo.
IF YOU GO:
What: Sistrunk: Then & Now
When: Opening night January 15 @ 6pm. Monday- Friday until Jan 30.
Where: Old Dillard Museum, 1009 NW 4th St, Fort Lauderdale, FL 33311