Photo Courtesy of Anthony Lockhart see more of his photos of Cooley at http://www.flickr.com/photos/71288712@N00/ |
My good friend Tim Miller wrote me
shortly after I posted my letter. I have
known Tim since grade school. We were in
Boy Scouts and great friends back in the day.
We used to play tennis, baseball, and toss the football around at
Cooley High School. It was a great
campus. I looked forward to going to
high school at what seemed like a wonderful place. Tim wrote as he often does to comment on my
letters. He reminisced about the old
neighborhood and the year he spent at Cooley.
In 1968-1969, Cooley was not the
High School we had thought about going to.
The building, the architecture, had not changed but the student body had
changed. The change reflected the
changing demographics of the city.
Cooley was transition from being an all-white school to an all-black one
and it was not a smooth one. Cooley’s
transition was simply a reflection of the times. Whites were abandoning the city. Black people were expressing their discontent
with years of discrimination. It was
just two years after the Detroit Riots of 1967 that polarized the city and
divided the races. Tim’s year at Cooley,
before his family moved to Livonia, was tough.
He was jumped his first day there, he was shot at his last day, his
friend from middle school who was black stopped socializing with him due to the
polarization of the races, and other minor day to day pressures that made a not
entirely pleasurable experience.
Photo Courtesy of Anthony Lockhart see more of his photos of Cooley at http://www.flickr.com/photos/71288712@N00/ |
What happened?
Cooley just became another victim
of what was generally happening to Detroit.
Cooley closed on July 30, 2010 due declining enrollment. It is a shame. It was probably necessary as they closed several Detroit Schools at the same time. In the greater scheme of what has happened to
the city, the closing of one high school is but a small chapter or maybe even a
footnote. It is a symbol. Everyone that loves the city has memories of
what made the city grand for them back when the city was grand. Cooley High has been such an icon for me.
Why was I so impressed with
Cooley? Why did the architecture impress
me so?
Cooley was designed and built in
what is called the Spanish or Mediterranean Renaissance style. It is one of the few examples of Spanish
Renaissance architecture in Michigan.
Most other examples of this style architecture are in places like Miami
and Southern California where the climate is more like the lands in which this
style of architecture was created. The
architects of the building were Donaldson and Meier, a firm founded in Detroit
in 1880. Other notable buildings from
this firm include the David Stott and Penobscot buildings that help define the
Detroit skyline. The firm also designed
the Beaumont tower on the Michigan State University and the Dental Building and
Alumni Hall at the University of Michigan.
It would be interesting to know how they chose this style of architecture
for the building.
Cooley High School just after it opened in 1928 |
Cooley in 2008 |
The most notable graduates of
Cooley High School was Jimmy Hoffa, the famed leader of the Teamsters, and Mike
Ilitch the owner of Little Caesars Pizza, the Detroit Tigers, and the Detroit
Red Wings. Cooley produced three major
league baseball players: Joe Ginsberg,
Bill Roman, and Milt Pappas. Milt Pappas
used to return to Cooley when his team, the Baltimore Orioles, was in
Detroit. He would warm up on his high
school field to the delight of the youngsters.
I believe Milt used to like to see the young ballplayers in his old
neighborhood. I also believe Milt
enjoyed pitching from the old high school mound.
The Cooley Auditorium |
Time passes, things change, and
nothing lasts forever. The closing of
Cooley hurt a bit more than other architectural closings. I
hope the school is not torn down. I hope
it can be reborn as a school or other useful community building someday. It is a treasure worth saving.
My last year at Cooley High was the 1968-69 year (I graduated in January 1969). Although my family moved from Detroit in 1966 (part of the white flight), much to the chagrin of my parents, I continued to attend Cooley while living in Ferndale. You are right, the architecture is amazing and I hope the school can be saved...
ReplyDeleteI really enjoyed your article! It saddens me to watch the closing of Cooley. I like yourself never attended. I was just a neighborhood child who was marveled by is beauty.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the info.
ReplyDeleteDoes anyone know what the max enrollment was?
I don't know the max enrolment, but if I remember rightly my senior graduation class was supposed to be 500. That I was told by some other people was more than their entire school.
DeleteYesw, We had wonderful riots in 1969-70!! Canine and Tacticle Mobile Units. Cars on fire. White folk could not enter certain entrances and bathrooms. One of my classmates was knocked unconscious after being hit with a pipe and was wheelchaired out of the school. I never saw him again! What a nightmare!
ReplyDeleteInevitably, Cooley High School is falling prey to vandalism and deterioration. So sad. http://www.fox2detroit.com/news/local-news/229973982-story#
ReplyDeleteThanks for the article! A slice of life!!
ReplyDeletehttps://www.wxyz.com/news/community-connection/6-000-volunteers-erasing-blight-during-life-remodeleds-2022-six-day-project
ReplyDelete