Harlem Barber Shop and Beauty Salon, Albany

The Harlem Barber and Beauty Salon was a well-loved anchor of the historic Harlem community but has been closed for quite a few years. Mr. Eugene Bailey was the longtime proprietor and a living witness to the Civil Rights efforts of the Albany Movement. He told WALB News 10 in a 2011 feature that he was a shoe shine boy when the first activists began marching through the neighborhood and that he proudly joined them, even getting arrested on one occasion. But he was proud of being part of such a positive change and said being in the barber shop kept the memories alive. He passed away in 2012.

Harlem Cab Company, Albany

Harlem Cab Company and its neighbor, Harlem Barber Shop, was, along with Carter’s Grill, among the last remaining historic businesses in Albany’s Harlem neighborhood.

Ritz Theater, 1930, Albany

When it opened in 1930, the Ritz Theater was the premier venue for the performing arts in Albany’s historic Harlem neighborhood. Harlem was centered around the intersection of South Jackson Street and West Highland Avenue and was home to numerous Black-owned businesses. The 500-seat venue was considered the crown jewel of the neighborhood, and hosted numerous performers, including Ray Charles. It also served as a movie theatre during the Jim Crow era, when such spaces were segregated. It closed as a first-run venue in 1969 but continued to show older movies in the 1970s. It was partially restored circa 1991 and served as the Ritz Cultural Center until 2011. It has been closed since, and is beginning to show serious signs of deterioration. An effort to revitalize the Harlem neighborhood is underway, but there is little specific information about the Ritz. A plaque outside notes that it was once on the National Register of Historic Places, but it is not presently listed, presumably because non-historic changes were made to the interior at some point.

Yoder’s Dead & Breakfast Inn, Monticello

I made these photos around Halloween 2017 in Monticello’s historic district. The whole street was well decorated, but this was my favorite.

Gothic Revival Cottage, Circa 1880, Shellman

Shellman Historic District, National Register of Historic Places

Eclectic House, Circa 1900, Shellman

Shellman Historic District, National Register of Historic Places

Colonial Revival Cottage, Shellman

Shellman Historic District, National Register of Historic Places

Queen Anne House, Circa 1876, Shellman

Shellman Historic District, National Register of Historic Places

Buford Street, Shellman

The Back Porch restaurant, pictured above, brings more people to Shellman these days than any place else, but the building has always been important to the community. To people of another generation, it was the Suwannee Store, an early grocery chain.

I had a nice visit with one of the Duke sisters, who own the restaurant. Their family has been serving up good food in Shellman for at least a generation and they are glad to see positive changes to the town.

Shellman Historic District, National Register of Historic Places

Randolph Street, Shellman

Randolph Street is one of the two “side streets” in downtown Shellman that are characterized by angular buildings. I’m not sure why the buildings were built this way.

Shellman Historic District, National Register of Historic Places