Eastlake Park
Nestled inside the boundaries of the Eastlake Park neighborhood is Phoenix's oldest park where Booker T. Washington once delivered a speech and home to the area’s annual Juneteenth and Martin Luther King, Jr. celebrations.
Eastlake Park and the surrounding neighborhood have been the center of Black life in Phoenix for much of the 20th century, steeped in a rich, cultural identity with established churches, hotels, businesses, and neighborhoods. School segregation, mandated by Arizona law until 1954, and a series of informal property restrictions that prevented non-whites from purchasing or renting homes north of Van Buren Street kept Black communities from moving elsewhere in the city and was the conduit behind the establishment of the Eastlake neighborhood. A cornerstone to the city, Eastlake continues to thrive as a significant cultural space for the Black community and civil rights movement.
At the center of it all, Mrs. White’s Golden Rule Cafe is an important culinary fixture to the neighborhood and to the local food scene in greater Phoenix. As a longstanding landmark offering home-cooked comfort food, Mrs. White’s is the birthplace of the popular Lo-Lo’s Chicken and Waffles establishments. Eastlake also serves as a crucial produce distribution hub that trucks out fresh produce to supermarkets and restaurants across the state.