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flar

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BEASLEY


Beasley is one of Hamilton's original neighbourhoods (the others are Corktown, Central and Durand). It is located
northeast of downtown Hamilton. A large chunk of downtown Hamilton is technically in Beasley, but this tour
focuses on "Beasley the neighbourhood" which is quite distinct and separate from downtown.

Beasley is the poorest neighbourhood in Hamilton and one of the poorest in Canada, with an average per capita
annual income of just $6,226. With it's cheap rents, the neighbourhood is home to a large transient population
and also a large population of immigrants. In 2006, the Hamilton Spectator ran a four part series on Beasley,
highlighting the neighbourhood's problems. Many considered the Spectator articles exploitative and overly negative.
As you will see in the photos, Beasley is a diverse neighbourhood with both good things and bad things, and a wide
variety of people. Nevertheless, the neighbourhood does suffer from a litany of social problems. Several of the
residents that I spoke with while taking photographs refered to Beasley as "crack central." Drugs, poverty,
homeless shelters and soup kitchens are central features of Beasley. Some of the people you see in Beasley
are stark reminders that our society creates both winners and losers.

Here are two different viewpoints on Beasley:

Beasley: Portrait of a neighbourhood - This isn't Mr. Rogers' neighbourhood
http://www.thespec.com/article/262185

It's a Beautiful Day in My Neighbourhood
http://www.viewmag.com/printer.php?storyid=3829

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A sea of parking lots separates the residential section of Beasley from downtown. It's sad to think of how many
buildings were demolished. I can only speculate, but I believe that there were once many large industrial/warehouse
type buildings in this area:
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Some remain:
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There are a number of highrise apartments in Beasley, but not nearly as many as in other downtown neighbourhoods.
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Quite a few rowhouses remain in Beasley:
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Multilane one-way roads only add to the neighbourhood's woes.
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This house was built in 1845
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There happened to be a murder the same day I was taking the pictures. It would be a mistake to think the area is
dangerous based on this. This was Hamilton's sixth murder this year. Last year Hamilton had the lowest homicide
rate of Canadian cities over 500,000.
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So many parking lots!
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There is a prison here:
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Beasley Park
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A former industrial site:
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One of my favourite rows in Hamilton. Another reminder that Beasley is not all poor.
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Alleys like this are found throughout Beasley.
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Fantastic tour as usual flar. Hamilton has some great building stock doesn't it. I've toured around the city a number of times and a lot of areas are just stuck in time due to their economy. I don't know if an area like Beasley can ever turn around in a place like Hamilton but I hope they at least preserve what they've got.
 
Fantastic tour as usual flar. Hamilton has some great building stock doesn't it. I've toured around the city a number of times and a lot of areas are just stuck in time due to their economy. I don't know if an area like Beasley can ever turn around in a place like Hamilton but I hope they at least preserve what they've got.

Beasley is by no means "gentrifying" but it looks a lot better than it did a few years ago. A lot of paint has been applied and a lot of garbage picked up. It's actually getting harder to find serious grit in the Hammer these days.
 
Excellent photos once again. Thanks, Hamilton is really endearing itself to me.

This neighbourhood (as with some others) has so much potential, it hurts.
 
Beasley-an interesting component of Hamilton...

Flar: Good photo tour of the Beasley neighborhood-I was not sure what to expect reading your text at the beginning of the pics but it looks to me like Beasley is rough around the edges but not too bad compared to US cities that I have explored.
I like the HPD cars and what one person thinks of them in pics #10 and 11.
#12-Nice brick houses and buildings-that maroon red sure stands out!
#15,45 and 63-these pics remind me of Southeastern Pennsylvania-type row houses in towns or cities there.
#60-I understand why you like these row houses-they look good to me too!
Again it is just another reason to explore Hamilton...LI MIKE
 
I'm a student at Mac and volunteer weekly at a school in Beasley... the depth of poverty in this community is mind boggling. What makes it unique compared to innercity Toronto neighbhourhoods is the number of poor White families. There are certainly a number of Middle Eastern and East African pockets sprouting up... but the school I work at is overwhelmingly white (70%+) and most of the kids are definitely teetering around or below the poverty line.

I agree that there has been some minor sprucing up, with newly painted homes and well-maintained lawns, but I don't see the usual signs (coffee shops, speciality shops) that hint at gentrification. Most of the gentrification seems centered strictly along James with little diffusion.
 

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