Eric Anthony knows his Hayden Place duplex needs renovations.
For years, his landlord refused to fix major issues. Multiple times, heโs had feces back up into his sink or flow into his backyard.
But Anthony is even more frustrated by his new landlord Cameron Ellis. A major renovation planned by Ellis, a local real estate investor, will soon result in Anthonyโs displacement. And he has no idea where heโs going to go.
โIโm losing control of everything,โ Anthony said.
Ellis bought Anthonyโs duplex, along with 24 adjacent ones and a small apartment complex, in February. And in recent weeks, heโs started $2 million worth of improvements.
This work by the young, Black investor fills a need. Despite major maintenance issues, the properties have been largely neglected for decades, according to residents and building permit records. And local leaders have long decried the lack of investment in Memphisโ Black neighborhoods that eventually leaves properties falling into disrepair.
But Ellisโ investment plans donโt include renewing any leases, which has left the community reeling. Many of the residents of the Hayden Place and Waynoka Avenue duplexes predated Ellisโ purchase by at least 15 years. They knew their neighbors well, watched out for each other, and enjoyed their streetsโ low crime rate. Now, theyโre being dispersed.
The same people who endured years of poor maintenance have been told renovations are coming โ just not for them.
After enduring unhealthy conditions for years, theyโve now been forced to fend for themselves in an inhospitable housing market. Lost in the progress of Memphisโ core city neighborhoods attracting investment they havenโt seen in decades, these peopleโs loss is a reminder of the pain that much-needed work can bring.
To capture this pain, MLK50: Justice Through Journalism asked three residents to share their stories, which were edited for length and clarity.
Ellis declined to be interviewed but sent the following response: โNot renewing a lease is not unethical or illegal. Tenants are not being forced out. Simply, the leases are expiring, and we are not renewing.โ

Eric Anthony, 56
Iโve been over here in Binghampton for about 35 years and in my duplex on Hayden Place for six or seven.
Recently, someone walked around with papers. They said, โWe just want to let yโall know weโre not going to renew your lease.โ
It was just like saying, โMaster said you got to get out of here by such and such time,โ or โFind you somewhere to go, cockroaches.โ
They ainโt giving us no type of options or somewhere else to live. White people who have good ass jobs will be in my duplex.
I have six grandkids living with me. Finding out weโd have to move felt like I was having another heart attack. I was thinking, โOh my God, what could happen worse now?โ
Where are my grandbabies going to go to school? Our school is in walking distance, and I donโt have a car.
Recently, my blood pressure went up so high I had to go to the hospital because I was worrying so much. They had to keep me overnight.
My doctor said, โYou need to stop worrying.โ I said, โI canโt. I might not have a place to lay my head anymore. Iโm fโ.โ
You just canโt imagine how it feels for someone to come tell you, โGet gone.โ
Whoโs to say where weโre going to go? And whoโs to say where weโre going to go will be safe? Everybody here is kind of on the same page. We look out for each other. That was just too good to be true.
(Editorโs note: The only homicide on either street in the last 10 years was a justifiable homicide, according to Memphis Police Department data. And there was just one violent crime โ an aggravated assault โ in the two years preceding Ellisโ purchase.)
Other people have it worse than me. They told some of my neighbors who didnโt have a lease they had to go immediately. I have until my lease ends in November.
But Iโm not going to be able to find nothing by then because I canโt afford nothing. Iโm already struggling to pay $575 a month, and itโs hard to find something for less than $650.
Iโm on disability. I have custody over my grandbabies, so I need to be with them most of the time. I get an $800 check each month. I try to hustle to make ends meet and pay my light bill. But after I had a heart attack two years ago, I donโt have the energy to do much stuff. And I donโt have a car.
If God is for me, what can be against me? Iโm not going to give up on faith. I know Heโll make a way somehow.
But Iโm worried I may not be able to take care of my children anymore. Iโm a single grandaddy, raising all these children. Theyโre probably going to have to live with their mom, who didnโt take care of them.
I wish, I wish, I wish I had money so I could take care of my children.

Mary Humphrey, 75
Iโve been here ever since 1983.
They gave me until October 31st. But they said theyโre not going to renew my lease.
How can you just walk up, give a person a piece of paper, and tell them to get out? Theyโre just throwing us out for nothing.
I am just so confused and I am so angry. I am so angry. I know itโs their property. But Iโve been here 40 years.
Before this happened, I just bought new light fixtures to go all the way through my house. And thatโs just money wasted. I feel like just taking them down and throwing them in the garbage; I donโt want to leave it to them.
Iโm very angry.
I know we Black. But weโre still human. Treat us right.
In spite of it all, I found somewhere to go. I worked for the University of Memphis for 35 years and have retirement. I found a one-bedroom on Harvard Avenue (less than a mile away). I had to find something.
When they handed me that paper, it was like they were evicting me then. I wasnโt going to wait until October. But a lot of people donโt have nowhere to go. They canโt afford anywhere. Iโm angry for them.
We just was family. If I left, I knew somebody was watching out for me. If we got sick, weโd watch out for each other. I knew most all of their children. Iโm going to miss sitting on this porch and just looking at everybody.
Itโs rough. Itโs rough. Itโs rough. Sometimes, I sit and cry. We just got to go our separate ways now.
But, itโs going to be alright. God got us. And he gonna take care of us. Because Iโm a firm believer in God. And without him, I would have not made it this far.
My mother, whoโs dead and gone, always said, โIf you put God first, no matter what happens, he can handle it, and youโll be able to handle it.โ
If we live right, we might not be together here on Earth, but when that great day comes, weโll all get together again.

Eric Brown, 58
The letter said to be out by April 3rd. Then they said we had until May 1st, but Iโm praying to God they donโt come evict me.
I have been riding my bicycle around the neighborhood, trying to find somewhere for rent. I havenโt found anything for sure, but I think the Binghampton Development Corporation is going to have something for me in a couple of weeks.
Weโve been in this duplex 18 years, going on 19. Iโve been in Binghampton all my life. Iโm 58. I grew up here. I went to Lester Elementary and East High.
My mom, who I live with, is worried. She has doctor appointments on Broad Avenue. If we move out somewhere, she canโt get to her appointments. Sheโs 79 years old. She walks to the community center and the store. But sheโs too old to do too much walking.
I just found me a job at Lost Pizza right here on Poplar โ a 10-minute walk.
We donโt want to move out of Binghampton because we know everyone in the neighborhood. If my mom needs to go to the doctor, neighbors help.
Most people on the street have been here for a while.
Binghampton is home.

Editorโs note: Since the initial interview was conducted, Eric Brown and his mother leased a house on Allison Street from the Binghampton Development Corporation. They love the look of their new place and are excited to move in. While Brown and Humphrey have secured new premises, Anthonyโs next move remains unclear. To support him directly during this time, his CashApp is $ericanthony0.
Jacob Steimer is a corps member with Report for America, a national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms. Email him at
Jacob.Steimer@mlk50.com
This story is brought to you by MLK50: Justice Through Journalism, a nonprofit newsroom focused on poverty, power, and policy in Memphis. Support independent journalism by making a tax-deductible donation today.

