id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt work_kpnadimen5e4nctjr5x2oaosve Paul R. Mullins Marketing in a Multicultural Neighborhood: An Archaeology of Corner Stores in the Urban Midwest 2008 9 .pdf application/pdf 5664 356 55 by corner stores, a few social spaces like were from the same ethnic group, such as African Americans who settled around black schools stores and clubs that formed black Indianapolis's central business and leisure district. The Ransom Place neighborhood eventually became home for many members of the African American elite, including decade." In 1914, 50 of 255 businesses in Indianapolis's near westside were groceries, including at least 10 run by African Americans. stores were the most common African American Camp Street store, like many in Indianapolis, was Street store and similar African American corner marketing districts in many cities, with diversified African American business communities in consumer economy, and even in the most prosperous black business districts, African Americans were still compelled to buy some goods single-store, African American marketers. 1950s, the disintegration of near westside neighborhoods was reflected in the Camp Street store, African American consumers still had distinctive social and material politics. ./cache/work_kpnadimen5e4nctjr5x2oaosve.pdf ./txt/work_kpnadimen5e4nctjr5x2oaosve.txt