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Restrictive Covenants
editThe article says,
- Although both the DeMun Park and Hi-Pointe subdivisions were designed as public neighborhoods, there were restrictive covenants attached to their deeds. Wright was an original trustee for the Hi-Pointe subdivision, which had restrictive covenants until December 1999. The restrictions were designed to insure architectural consistency, maintain the residential nature of the area, provide a funding mechanism for maintenance of the parks, trees, and streets, and limit use of the property to those originally designated.
Restrictive covenants of this type were often used to exclude black people from residential neighborhoods, and in a city like St. Louis, which once had a Segregation regime, one naturally suspects that that was the case with the DeMun covenants. If it was, then that fact should be frankly acknowledged. If it was not, then that surprising fact should be mentioned as well.
Note, by the way, that the reference for the quoted paragraph (and for several more points in the article) is now a dead link, and needs to be updated. J. D. Crutchfield | Talk 17:51, 15 April 2015 (UTC)