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New Book Will Reveal The “Hidden” History Of Downtown Kalamazoo

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Regina Gorham

For the past five years summertime meant a special treat for history buffs in Kalamazoo. The Hidden Kalamazoo tour took participants through fascinating, obscure places normally closed to the public. There won’t be a tour this year, but organizers have something else for fans.

"We decided that this year rather than do a tour we planned we were going to do a book," City of Kalamazoo Historic Preservation Coordinator Sharon Ferraro said.

Ferraro says that as the downtown redevelops, it's getting harder to tour. Spaces that sat empty for years have been put back to use as offices or apartments.

"I want to make it really clear, none of these buildings are coming down," she added. "The reason we can't look at them again is because they're now rooms, offices, apartments, they're all sorts of different things so they're no longer vacant - which is wonderful, that's what we wanted, but it's harder to get in to tour when it's someone's apartment."

Inside the former Mongtomery Ward building on the Kalamazoo Mall.
Credit Regina Gorham / Hidden Kalamazoo

City of Kalamazoo Historic Preservation Commission member Regina Gorham says the paper version of the Hidden Kalamazoo tour, which the group hopes to finish in time for the winter holiday season, will answer questions such as "What is a transom window? Why were there skylights in the center [of many downtown buildings]? Why are all the rooms faced toward the center?"

"Plus we are adding more, as a group of nerdy researchers who love looking things up, " Gorham added. "Many of us, I will include myself in it, went down rabbit holes of researching finding the names of people that lived in the apartments, finding that they had an office up there and did sewing on the side out of their apartment."

We learn more about Hidden Kalamazoo - the tour that's becoming a book - in an interview with Ferraro, Gorham and former Historic Preservation Commission member Tony Holewinski.

The State Theatre in downtown Kalamazoo was one of the Hidden Kalamazoo tour's stops.
Credit Regina Gorham / Hidden Kalamazoo

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Sehvilla Mann joined WMUK’s news team in 2014 as a reporter on the local government and education beats. She covered those topics and more in eight years of reporting for the Station, before becoming news director in 2022.