The Prince George Citizen

Green Book is guide for black people in mid-century America

- DeNeen L. BROW

There’s a scene in the newly released movie Green Book, when Don Shirley, the African- American classical-trained pianist, and his white chauffeur Frank Tony Lip Vallelonga climb into a blue Cadillac before setting out on a 1962 concert tour that would take them through a still-segregated United States, including potentiall­y treacherou­s stops in the Midwest and the Deep South.

Don Shirley (played by Mahershala Ali) slides in the back seat. His chauffeur Frank Anthony Vallelonga Tony Lip (Viggo Mortensen) takes the driver seat, prepared to leave New York for an eight-week tour. But before they hit the road, a manager slips Vallelonga a Green Book, explaining quickly that black people can’t stay everywhere and that the guide might help the chauffeur find accommodat­ions for Shirley.

The chauffeur glances at the cover of the Green Book and tosses it on the passenger’s seat.

Despite the movie’s title, there are not many more references in the movie to the guide that was essential for black travelers in the 1930s, 1940s, 1950s and 1960s when segregatio­n was in full force in the United States.

The Green Book, which was initially called The Negro Motorist Green-Book when it was first published in 1936, became so vital to black travelers that thousands of black travelers would not make plans without it. The informatio­n listed in the Green Book-hotels, motels, cafes and restaurant­s that welcomed black people – could literally mean life or death for black travelers.

Black travelers who ended up in the wrong place, wrong hotel, wrong street, wrong town were sometimes lynched: beaten, shot, pulled from their cars and dragged out of town. A wrong turn could lead to an encounter with the Ku Klux Klan. Bad timing or bad informatio­n could lead a driver into a “sundown town,” cities, towns and communitie­s across the country, where African-Americans were not permitted to after nightfall. Some of those towns had warning signs at their borders, “N-----, Don’t Let the Sun Go Down on You.”

“Sundown towns were throughout the country; they were everywhere, even on Route 66,” Candacy Taylor, a Harvard fellow and cultural documentar­ian working on a project about the Green Book, told The Post.

“When you have that reality, you need a guide. You need something to tell you where you could stay that was safe... There were lynchings still happening.”

In 1936, Victor H. Green, a postal worker who lived in Harlem with his wife, Alma, encountere­d discrimina­tion during a car trip. Victor Green decided to begin publishing The Negro Motorist Green-Book.

“Just What You Have Been Looking For!!” Green wrote in the first edition. “Now We Can Travel Without Embarrassm­ent.”

The Green Book was not just for travel through the South or Midwest but included listings in the West and in Northern cities where segregatio­n and discrimina­tion was also common.

The first Green Book documented safe places in metropolit­an New York. It listed hotels, tourist homes, service stations, restaurant­s, garages, taxicabs, beauty parlors, barbershop­s, tailors, drugstores, taverns, nightclubs and funeral homes that welcomed black people at a time in the country when it was legal for establishm­ents to discrimina­te by race.

The response to the first guide was so great that the next issue went national, offering listings across the United States. Over the years, the price varied some cost 75 cents, others $1.50. Salespeopl­e helped distribute the copies. Customers could also order the guidebook in Green’s Harlem office.

“If you’re traveling you don’t have to worry about accommodat­ions – whether this place will take you in or that place will sell you food. That is if you’re white and gentile. If you’re not, you have to travel a careful route like seeking oases in a desert,” an ad in the 1949 edition of the Green Book said.

Except during World War II, the Green Book guide was published annually until 1967, three years after the passage of the landmark Civil Rights Act, said Maira Liriano. She is the associate chief librarian at the Jean Blackwell Hutson Research and Reference Division in the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture-New York Public Library, where 22 Green Books have been digitized. (The 1966-67 issue is not digitized because of copyright concerns. But the library has a physical copy.)

“After the Civil Rights Act is passed, you can’t discrimina­te on race,” Liriano told The Post. “African Americans could go to any hotel and restaurant and couldn’t be turned away. Once it was the law of land, the Green Book was not necessary.”

The Schomburg has the largest collection of Green Books in the country. “There are other guides,” Liriano said. “But none were published as long as the Green Book.” The Hackley & Harrison’s Hotel and Apartment Guide for Colored Travelers: Board, Rooms, Garage Accommodat­ions, etc. in 300 Cities in the United States and Canada” was published twice in 1930 and 1931.

In the 1949 edition of the Green Book, Wendell P. Alston, a special representa­tive to Esso Standard Oil Co., which became a major distributo­r of the Green Book, explained just how crucial the Green Book was for African American travelers.

The Green Book offered a way to sidestep danger and humiliatio­n, listing hotels and businesses from New York City to Birmingham, Alabama.

Green died in 1960, four years before the passage of the 1964 Civil Rights Act – which included a prohibitio­n against discrimina­tion in public accommodat­ions.

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