1970s denver nightclubs2/9/2024 ![]() ![]() Montbello in the 1980s was an “upside-down town,” meaning its tidy homes were filled with working class and black residents redlined out of other parts of Denver proper. Soon came a younger brother, Oren, a parental divorce, and a move to the Montbello neighborhood, where the now family of four first lived on the working class side of town on Sable Street, where the girls went to Ford Elementary School and then moved across town to a larger house on 47th Avenue Circle, where they transferred to McGlone Elementary. The family moved into a house on Vine street, where Mother Douglas, the austere grandmother figure who lived across the street, became the watchful eye over Philomena’s daughters while she worked at a federal agency as a staff nutritionist. Joy-Ann Reid has a connection to Denver that stretches back to 1970, when as a two-year-old, she left her birthplace of Brooklyn, New York and arrived in Denver with her father, Congolese immigrant Sebastien Ibeke Lomena, her Guyanese-born mother Philomena Carryl Lomena and her year-older sister June Lomena.
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