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What an Ohio town reveals about the decline of hope in US politics

Nowhere else has seen more of its middle class slip down the economic ladder than Springfield, Ohio. The city's story offers insight into how shrinking views of the American Dream are affecting politics. 

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Bill Lackey/Springfield News-Sun
The Tower is the Clark County Heritage Center. At one time it was the City Hall but it had kinda gotten run down and used as a makeshift mall of sorts called the Marketplace. A few year鈥檚 back (10 or more) the city decided to do something about it so they rehabbed the whole building. It now houses the Clark County Historical Society along with top notch museum dedicated to the history of Springfield and Clark County. The large clock tower of the east end of the building is now a landmark in the center of Springfield.

This is a town of overgrown lots, of boarded-up homes, of vacant businesses. It is a town where the remaining sections of the mammoth Crowell-Collier publishing plant loom, a brick-and-concrete monument to a thriving city that once was but increasingly is no more.

It is a town of Dick Hatfields.

He once prowled the streets of Springfield in a 鈥53 Chevrolet. He can point to where the old root beer stand used to be. He remembers when Duke Ellington and Count Basie came to town.

When he recently built a replica of his 鈥53 Chevy 鈥 down to the flames on one side 鈥 Mr. Hatfield says he 鈥渟till went downtown to 鈥榖eat the block,鈥 but it was like there was nobody here to see.鈥

Yet this is also a town of well-appointed Victorian buildings lining once-genteel thoroughfares. It is a town where the Crowell plant might 鈥 just might 鈥 be an anchor for a new vision of Springfield.

It is a town of Kevin Roses, bounding 30-somethings who acknowledge that Springfield might not be the 鈥淐hampion City鈥 it once was. But in that history are the seeds of a renaissance, if only the city would grab it.

Since the shuttering of Crowell 鈥撀爋n Christmas Eve 1956, as locals tell it 鈥 Springfield鈥檚 story has been one of decline, sometimes in an almost imperceptible annual drip, or sometimes, with the closure of another of the city鈥檚 factories, in a great rush.

Bill Lackey/Springfield News-Sun
The Crowell-Collier publishing plant closed in 1956.

Now it stands as capital of an unenviable American trend: the decline of the middle class. Between 2000 and 2014, Springfield saw more of its middle class slip down the economic ladder than any other metro area in the United States, tying Goldsboro, N.C.

As voters across the country have voiced their disdain for Congress and all things Washington, it is perhaps not surprising that many in Springfield say they don鈥檛 necessarily see politics or even their preferred presidential candidate, either Democrat Hillary Clinton or Republican Donald Trump, as being a central part of their or the city鈥檚 future.

Yet in an election whose unusual twists have been driven by a white working class that feels like it is losing ground, Springfield鈥檚 story resonates. 聽

The two competing worldviews 鈥 the Hatfields and the Roses 鈥 have played out in similar communities across the country, says Chad Broughton, a University of Chicago professor who spent 12 years in Galesburg, Ill., to study the community after its primary employer, Maytag, moved its manufacturing jobs to Mexico.

Springfield is a portrait of a city struggling for hope.

Nationwide, there are new shoots of optimism for the middle class: Census figures released Tuesday showed a 5.2 percent increase in income for the typical American household in 2015 鈥 the first real increase since 2007. But middle class income growth has been largely stagnant for decades.聽

The Trump phenomenon is only one manifestation of how the pressures on a largely white middle class have refracted politics. Much deeper is the perception that, for many, the future has already closed in front of them 鈥 and Washington has seemed unable or unwilling to stop it.

鈥淭he American dream is breaking apart because there鈥檚 not really a standard pathway anymore, and that does bring about a lot of insecurity for the majority of Americans that don鈥檛 have a degree beyond high school,鈥 Mr. Broughton says. 鈥淭here鈥檚 anxiety and the feeling of really powerlessness to do anything about it. So what happens to them?鈥

鈥 聽鈥 聽鈥

On a recent day in July, about 40 people have gathered around Mr. Hatfield on the parched asphalt of downtown Springfield. This is one of his so-called 鈥渘ostalgia鈥 tours.

The tours run $12 each and include a free drink afterward. The promise is modest: Remember old times and hear some lesser-known facts about Springfield鈥檚 history. The tours are generally sold out.

The tone is upbeat and Hatfield, a former radio deejay, treats it as something of a comedy routine. Now, he notes, there鈥檚 nowhere to work in radio because the city no longer has its own station. Tune to the old frequency and 鈥測ou鈥檒l hear somebody saying the rosary in Portuguese,鈥 he says to a laughing crowd.

His routine is well-practiced. Did you know Springfield once had a pianomaker who sold pink keys to Liberace? Did you know that the root beer stand that used to be here was the first in the United States?

Bill Lackey/Springfield News-Sun
Dick Hatfield looks over the core block of Springfield where young people used to cruise with their cars.

Then he points to an empty lot and tells the crowd to make its way there for the next part of the tour.

鈥淭here鈥檚 no buildings to go to, we鈥檝e just got to go to empty places,鈥 he adds.

When the Pew Research Center set out to determine which American cities lost the most economic status, Springfield came in first (or last) with Goldsboro. It lost more high-income earners and gained more low-income earners than any other metropolitan area between 2000 and 2014; the difference was 16 percentage points.

In Springfield, the echoes of a more prosperous past are everywhere.

At the minor league baseball stadium, the few in the stands hum along to a 1950s television advertisement that evokes Springfield鈥檚 ever-present nostalgia, a sing-songy refrain of, 鈥淲e love baseball, hot dogs, apple pie, and Chevrolet.鈥

Around town, T-shirts, buses, and stoplight buttons herald 鈥淭he Champion City,鈥 harking back to the turn of the 20th century, when Springfield was one of the great worldwide hubs of agricultural machine-making, churning out International Harvester鈥檚 Champion machines.

Springfield even has a Frank Lloyd Wright 鈥 the Westcott House.

But the decline that began with the shuttering of the Crowell plant gained speed when International Harvester (now Navistar) made a big round of cuts in the 1990s.

That was when the Springfield of today really began to take shape, says Rob Baker, a political scientist at Springfield鈥檚 Wittenberg University.

鈥淲hen they pulled out again and really decimated that big plant out there, that really began to create that divide,鈥 Baker said. 鈥淎 lot of people left town. But the folks who stayed, the older generation 鈥 they got pretty down about everything. And some other folks have come in, younger folks, who are more optimistic.鈥

The divide is sharp.

Take Raymond Upshaw, a Springfield resident in his late 60s and an African-American who voted for President Obama in 2008. He now supports Mr. Trump.

鈥淭hey may have elected a black man to the White House, but they didn鈥檛 follow him,鈥 says Mr. Upshaw, whose construction business has not done well for years. He plans to vote for Trump because he believes the US can鈥檛 rebuild until after it hits rock bottom. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 expect Trump to do a good job. I鈥檓 putting him in there so he can continue to destroy this country.鈥

Upshaw isn鈥檛 necessarily emblematic of the mood in town, but of an underlying sense of mingled frustration and fear. So many things that once felt so certain, now aren鈥檛.

鈥 聽鈥 聽鈥

Ann Armstrong is among those taking the nostalgia tour. The Republican, who voted for Governor Kasich in the Ohio primary, is congenial and upbeat, and, like many here, doesn鈥檛 really want to go into politics at length. But after some prodding, she admits that she has grave concerns.

While out at a ceremony for a new museum wing at Wright-Patterson Air Force base, a key area employer, Ms. Armstrong says her mind drifted toward possible terrorism.

鈥淎ll I could think about was, 鈥楪ee, I wonder if the security has tightened up, because the Air Force museum would be a good place to blow up,鈥 鈥 she says.

She adds, laughing, 鈥淭hey wouldn鈥檛 let me carry my gun.鈥

Armstrong wishes Kasich were still in the race. Kasich, who won the Ohio primary, took Springfield and surrounding Clark County over Trump by three percentage points. Indeed, Springfield hardly comes across as revolutionary, sitting in the district of former House Speaker John Boehner, Mr. Establishment. But many voters in the city, which tends to vote Democratic, likely crossed over and voted for Trump, political experts say.

Armstrong says her mistrust of Clinton extends to Obama. Many of her Republican friends believe that the president is not who he says he is, despite the fact such conspiracy theories about his background have been consistently debunked.

鈥淧eople I hang out with say that the trouble with him is, I don鈥檛 know, it just seems like he could do anything he wanted, and I think his agendas are totally different, and that鈥檚 how come Trump got so liked,鈥 she says. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a feeling that [Obama is] really truly Muslim even though he says he鈥檚 not.鈥

Terrorism in the heartland. Fears of a Muslim in the White House. These are worries in themselves. But they also are the bubbling up of a deeper angst, says Tom Stafford, a semi-retired reporter and columnist for the local Springfield News-Sun.

鈥淭he world has changed in all these immense ways. And the loss created in people鈥檚 lives, I kept waiting for it to find some expression,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 think that鈥檚 what鈥檚 happened with Donald Trump. All those issues unaddressed are going to coalesce somehow and in some way.鈥

Karen Duncan, a member of the city commission, says she sees the shifting changes sometimes emerge from the shadows. America鈥檚 opioid and heroin epidemic has hit the area hard; the area鈥檚 available jobs 鈥 particularly for truckers, welders, and machine operators 鈥 often result in many failed drug tests.

Employers have taken to diplomatically calling it a lack of 鈥渟oft skills.鈥

The growth of the working poor has been marked. Many work for minimum wage at a local call center, for example, but still qualify for government benefits.

At a tech park on the edge of town, much of the land is leased to area farmers who grow corn.

鈥淲hen we鈥檙e trying to attract jobs that pay very well, one of the key issues is workforce issues,鈥 says Mayor Warren Copeland. 鈥淲e鈥檙e not competitive with some other areas. This is the Midwestern disease. We鈥檙e too typical of these problems, so every other city is looking at the same problems and trying to do the same things.鈥

Bill Lackey/Springfield News-Sun
Historic buildings along Main Street in downtown Springfield, Ohio, reflected in the glass of the EF Hutton Tower.

Meanwhile, the vestiges of Springfield鈥檚 historic upper middle class are growing fainter. Springfield still has a symphony, but its performances are half full. The Turner Foundation, a historic preservation charity founded by a well-known businessman and philanthropist, is something of a vestige of another time, reflecting a past when the city still had a strong corporate presence. 聽The city of 59,700 now has fewer people than it did in 1920.

鈥淭his is a town where people show up for car shows, not for operas,鈥 says Mr. Stafford.

The middle is being hollowed out, says Ms. Duncan. 鈥淲hat we wind up left with are the people who don鈥檛 have the opportunity to go someplace else.鈥

鈥 聽鈥 聽鈥

Mr. Rose is all about rebuilding that middle. And he is convinced that, of all the struggling Rust Belt cities with dreams of reinventing themselves, Springfield is ideally placed to do it.

As the historian at the Turner Foundation, he looks at Springfield and sees numerous gems, like the Frank Lloyd Wright house. Others just need to be polished, like the elegant, Victorian-era housing stock. 聽And downtown sports two new white tablecloth restaurants, the coffee shop at the grand entrance of the old city market, and a near-universally attended summer arts festival.

鈥淲e have this great architecture, this great history,鈥 he says. 鈥淢y group, the people who are involved in stuff, are very hopeful.鈥

Bill Lackey/Springfield News-Sun
Kevin Rose, the historian at the Turner Foundation, stands in the Westcott House, designed and built by Frank Lloyd Wright, in Springfield, Ohio.

And Rose has allies.

Kevin Loftis, who used to work with his father in his real-estate development, has raised about $3 million locally to open a brewery in the former site of a metallic casket manufacturer.

鈥淚t鈥檚 like getting a train going,鈥 Mr. Loftis says of Springfield. 鈥淚t was decaying for years. We have momentum, and we鈥檙e keeping it going.鈥

Carl Carroll has bought a small, rundown bar across the street from the Crowell plant, convinced that it could become the center of Springfield鈥檚 renaissance. He doesn鈥檛 care about the bar 鈥 he鈥檚 interested in what鈥檚 going to happen with the old factory and wants to be in a good position when things take off.

He pulls out a postcard-sized picture of the old Crowell site and points to where things used to be with his pinky. 鈥淚 think it will happen,鈥 he says of the redevelopment. 鈥淚 know it will happen.鈥

Rose agrees that the trajectory of Springfield is upward.

鈥淪ome things aren鈥檛 moving in the right direction 鈥 but things are getting better in Springfield, even though I know that鈥檚 not true for everyone.鈥

鈥 聽鈥 聽鈥

For Terry Davis, that future, or any future at all, is hard to see. It already seems gone.

A career in construction has left scars; both his knees have been replaced and there鈥檚 a bar in his forearm. As he shuffles by the cavernous Crowell plant, a third of which has already been razed, he shrugs when asked whether anything can be done with the site.

Then he cuts off the conversation. He doesn鈥檛 want to discuss the election or his future. He鈥檚 on his way to buy cigarettes, and he鈥檚 just looking for 75 cents.

[Editor's note: The spelling of Wittenberg University has been corrected.]

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