Hip in the Heartland

It's not just Brooklyn and the Bay Area any more

This week Claire Cain Miller of the NY Times reported on an interesting migration trend. The young, college-educated, professional-and-entrepreneurial class we expect to see concentrating in Brooklyn, the SF Bay Area, DC, Seattle, and three or four other usual-suspect big cities is also now showing up in medium-sized and small places. The story was based on a new study, "Young and Restless," from City Observatory.

This is exactly in parallel with what we've been seeing and reporting on, in locales as non-usual-suspect as Sioux Falls, South Dakota, or Greenville, South Carolina, or Holland, Michigan, or Redlands, California. Now Deb Fallows has a report on this same phenomenon in the capital city of her home state: Columbus, Ohio.

Among the many things I hadn't known about Columbus before we went there is that it's considered the #3 city in the U.S. fashion-design universe. We've got New York, LA, and then — Columbus, home of influential retailers including The Limited, Victoria's Secret, Abercrombie and Fitch, and others, plus CCAD, the influential Columbus College of Art and Design.

Deb describes some of the "creative class" people who are moving to Columbus, or moving back to Columbus after growing up there and living elsewhere, to be part of the fashion movement. She also describes the touching fate of the state's symbolic Buckeye tree, planted on an official Tree Walk on the grounds of what had been the Ohio Institution for the Deaf and Dumb. I will leave the rest of the story to her and hope you find it as interesting to read as we did to learn about.

The author resting after her reporting, at a gastropub built on the site of a former tombstone factory and operated by an entrepreneur who came to Ohio from Albania
James Fallows is a contributing writer at The Atlantic and author of the newsletter Breaking the News.