Benfranklin,
An armchair myself, I have to disagree.
The wealth of Buffalo was just as strong before as after the great depression. The real wealth in the US was not really effected by the depression. Their wealth did not grow during this time but it sure as heck did not shrink and never bounce back.
What changed Buffalo were the unions and the politicians they elected. The main reason Buffalo landed the Steel plants was because at the time it was non-union. The reason why GM moved to town was because at the time it was non-union.
The first attempts to unionize the workforce failed in Buffalo. It was only until the Catholic Church pressed their members, the city because indifferent AND the Federal government got involved did the "union way" become the Buffalo way.
In fact I think it is safe to say that there is not a single industry that has found long term success in WNY that has unions involved. A cancer is a good comparison.
In terms of Martin walking away from his house because of taxes, you need to focus on one word. TAXES. Bethlehem was used as an ATM by Lackawanna for years. Add that to the unions and only a crazy person would have stayed. Businesses and their owners have been squeezed for decades with no end in sight until they closed shop or moved. Yet instead of changing this and welcoming these power brokers, people rant and cry.
As far as the Erie Canal...Opening did help the Boom. What also helped was the very cheap and limitless power and a productive NON UNION workforce. When the Canal closed, it did NOT have to have the same damage it did. Buffalo could have easily migrated AWAY from industries that were reliant upon the canal and towards industries that were not. However, the elected leadership and the command of the unions choose NOT to do this.
Every great city has one common trait that Buffalo does not. That is the ability to adapt. Do you see Chicago holding dear to the stockyards? Do you see San Fran holding onto the mining industry? Do you see Charlotte holding onto the textile industry? No. These areas moved on. They adapted to what was real and not what was desired.
The saddest thing for those who realize it is this. EVERYTHING that is considered a treasure in Buffalo was because of the power players. Just who do you thing brought in Olmsted? Who built the museums and music centers? Who built the treasures people try and save. Now compare that to what elected leaders have built. The vision, the quality and the production is not even in the same room.
People want to long for days of yesterday and go on and on about what went wrong. Here is the answer. Time and time again the big guy behind the desk said enough. You would think after 30 or 40 similar experiences the collective whole would have learned.
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