Havenwoods neighbors partnered with Ex Fabula to tell their stories of righting wrongs and growing businesses, of old shopping trips and newfound love, as part of an event that highlighted a community that stands out beyond Milwaukee.
“People in this part of Milwaukee have figured out how to create communities and businesses and workplaces and parks that reach across boundaries of race, ethnicity and class in ways other parts of the city and nation have not figured out,” said Dr. Aims McGuinness, a historian from University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, during the event.
The storytelling about the far-northwest neighborhood was part of an annual community banquet, hosted by long-time area business, Direct Supply, and run by the Havenwoods Economic Development Corporation (HEDC).

The stories were the culmination of a banquet that featured an invocation and meal; awards for block watch leaders, community garden green thumbs and business paragons; and updates on commercial strips and façade upkeep.
The Havenwoods storytellers:
Debi Banks remembered cheering with her daughter when the nearby Kmart closed for good. Decades before, a flashing “blue light special” at the diminished big-box store set into motion a confrontation on prejudice and pain over “this roll of film with pictures of my first granddaughter.”
Jim Bartos, a member of the HEDC, led with an African proverb: “If you want to go fast, go alone. If you want to go far, go together.” Bartos said it related to an employment grant that has taken root in Havenwoods. What started as a group effort on an employee placement program PowerPoint turned into state funding for jobs in the neighborhood.
“The synchronicity was almost too much to believe,” Bartos said.

“And I thought, ‘Hmmm, he looks a little cute,’” she said.
Claudette Holloway has lived in Havenwoods for more than 40 years and made more than a few hello’s as she sauntered from her seat to the stage. In telling of her love of shopping, especially at the local Ben Franklin, Holloway took a detour on the houses and families she’d come across.
“Everyone back in the day kept their yards so beautiful. The whole neighborhood was beautification,” Holloway said.
The Ben Franklin store is gone – replaced by a Family Dollar – but Holloway said what made up the essence of the store really was the people inside, many of whom remain with their families in the neighborhood.

Brown also shared numerous ultra shorts from the about 125 crowd members. In them, the community remembered when horses ran on the polo grounds, where people gathered to watch Fourth of July fireworks and “how the trees grew” over the decades.
Are you interested in sharing your own neighborhood stories? Click here to attend and share at an upcoming Ex Fabula event or contact us here to ask about storytelling at your upcoming event.
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