Showing posts with label Mascot Flats. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mascot Flats. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 1, 2025

Remembering Jimmy Carter on 6th Street

Photo yesterday by Stacie Joy

On Sixth Street, Habitat for Humanity is paying tribute to former President Jimmy Carter, who died Sunday afternoon at the age of 100. 

His post-presidency work included lending his building skills to Habitat for Humanity. Carter and his wife Rosalynn were among the volunteers who helped rebuild the six-story residential building at 742 E. Sixth St., between Avenue C and Avenue D. In the early 1980s, the property, called Mascot Flats, was a burned-out shell missing a roof. 

The two helped build, renovate and repair more than 4,000 homes ... and Carter's advocacy played a pivotal role in elevating Habitat for Humanity's visibility. 

"I think New Yorkers and global citizens alike really, truly have lost one of the most ardent champions of affordable housing and humanitarian efforts in our history," Sabrina Lippman of Habitat for Humanity New York City and Westchester County, said in a statement to the press. 

In addition, the Carter's work running the Carter Center, established in 1982, helped promote human rights, reduce illnesses and support democracy worldwide. 

Per Axios:
Don Levy, director of the Siena College Research Institute, which ranks U.S. presidents in numerous categories, tells Axios that Carter ranked 13th for integrity in 1982, but by 2022 had risen to No. 2. That's behind only Abraham Lincoln.
Read more here.

Sunday, December 29, 2024

When former President Jimmy Carter helped rebuild an East Village tenement building


Jimmy Carter, the 39th president of the United States, died this afternoon at the age of 100. 

His post-presidency work included lending his building skills to Habitat for Humanity. 

Carter and his wife Rosalynn were among the volunteers who helped rebuild the six-story residential building at 742 E. Sixth St., between Avenue C and Avenue D. In the early 1980s, the property, called Mascot Flats, was a burned-out shell missing a roof. 

In 1983, Bruce Schoonmaker, a minister running the Graffiti Ministry Center on East 7th Street, helped convince Habitat for Humanity to start a project at this building; for the previous six years, the organization had focused on smaller home-building efforts in several states and a few foreign countries. That July 1983, they purchased the building from the City as its first large inner-city renovation, with apartments that would be sold at a very low price to the community's poorer residents who also committed 1,000 work-hours to the rebuilding efforts. 

In April 1984, Robert DeRocker, then Habitat for Humanity's New York executive director, persuaded the former president who was in town for a speech to tour the site. Carter had already worked with the nonprofit to build a house in Americus, Georgia, a few miles from his home in Plains. What the ex-president found was a building in total disrepair, with no roof or permanent staircase, and interiors fire-blackened and knee-deep in garbage. 

"There was this old lady — she was 65, maybe 70," Carter told the Times. "She was living in the next building and there was no water, no heat, no electricity. And she was cooking her meal on a trash fire that she built between two bricks. I realized then how much Habitat could mean to a neighborhood like this." 
Three years after renovations began, in November 1986, 19 families moved into the rehabilitated building. 

President Carter revisited Mascot Flats in 2013.

For more on this project, check out "The Rebuilding of Mascot Flats," a 60-minute film documenting the efforts of homesteaders to transform the building.

   

In a statement following Carter's passing, Habitat NYC and Westchester is inviting the public to visit Mascot Flats to share messages and items of tribute for Jimmy and Rosalynn. ("We ask the public to be mindful that this is a residential building and to conduct your visit with consideration and respect.")