When Carolyn Rivera moved to Settegast, a majority-Black neighborhood in northeast Houston, 45 years ago, horses roamed the streets and nearly every homestead had a backyard farm where chickens and speckled feather guinea hens darted between rows of corn and greens.
Rivera, who turns 83 next month, remembers those early days with a kind of wistful reverence. “It was absolutely a beautiful community,” she said. “Families looked out for one another. The land was a source of pride and sustenance.”
But as Rivera and other Black families put down roots, Settegast began to shift beneath their feet…