INDUSTRIAL DEVOLUTION_Caravan Magazine_Nov 2016

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INDUSTRIAL DEVOLUTION PHOTOGRAPHS BY SCOTT HOUSTON


Decay and discontent in a small American town PHOTO ESSAY / CITIES


INDUSTRIAL DEVOLUTION PHOTOGRAPHS BY SCOTT HOUSTON

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above: Jen and her son opposite page: A workspace in the factory of Hall China, a ceramics company whose former prosperity caused East Liverpool to be known as the “Pottery Capital of the World� previous page left: A house in East Liverpool previous page right: A car in a rundown automobile showroom


the town of east liverpool, in the state of Ohio, is a ragged notch on the United States’s Rust Belt—a line of former industrial hubs that stretches across the country’s northern mid-west. Many of those cities and towns, including East Liverpool, are still suffering from the midtwentieth century collapse of American manufacturing. Today, the town’s population sits at around 11,000, less than half of what it was in the 1950s. Scott Houston, a New York City-based photographer, is married to a woman who grew up in East Liverpool. On his first visit to her hometown, he recalled, “I just wanted to get back to New York.” But after returning a few times, he “started to like the colours there,” and “the way that some people looked.” Houston’s growing fascination with the place culminated in East Liverpool, Ohio, USA, a series that he shot between 2004 and 2016, over many separate visits to the town. Since 1903, East Liverpool has been home to Hall China, a ceramics company that, at its height in the mid 1900s, earned the town the title of the “Pottery Capital of the World.” But by the second half of the century, non-American pottery began to dominate the US market. Hall China’s prosperity plummeted, and, along with it, East Liverpool’s. The dip in industry was accompanied by rises in unemployment, poverty and crime. Houston captures this decay through stark, varied shots: a rundown house, an old automobile showroom, a heroin addict’s cluttered bed. Places such as East Liverpool have been deeply affected by the recent ascendency of Donald Trump—the current nominee for president under the conservative Republican Party. “East Liverpool is the kind of town that Donald Trump is trying to galvanise,” Houston said. The photographer believes that Trump, with his racist, anti-immigrant rhetoric and his call to “make America great again,” is trying to woo “the angry white working-class male who is suspicious of the government and political establishment.” And for the people of East Liverpool, there has long been plenty to be angry about.


above: The East Liverpool country club opposite page: A desk in an upper-middle-class household



above: The funeral of Tiffany Faulk, whose brutal murder at the hands of her drug-addict boyfriend served as a wake-up call to many about East Liverpool’s substance-abuse problem opposite page: Mourners of Tiffany Faulk heading out to fight someone who they thought could have saved her life



above: A local man near a supermarket opposite page: Morgan and Matt in front of their home



above and opposite page: A heroin addict’s bed



above: Katlyn on her bed opposite page: A teenage girl’s bedroom



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