Chattanooga Times Free Press

Lawmakers work to strip old ‘whites only’ covenants

- BY SUSAN HAIGH

HARTFORD, Conn. — Fred Ware and his son were researchin­g the history of the home he’s owned in the Hartford suburbs since 1950 when they discovered something far uglier than they expected.

Tucked in a list of rules on the home’s original deed from the developer was a provision that said: “No persons of any race other than the white race shall use or occupy any building or any lot,” with the exception of “domestic servants of a different race.”

“He was stunned and I was stunned. This is the house I grew up in and is the only home my dad has ever owned,” David Ware said.

While the U.S. Supreme Court in 1948 ruled such racially restrictiv­e housing covenants unenforcea­ble, many remain on paper today and can be difficult to remove. In Connecticu­t, David Ware asked legislator­s to help homeowners strike the language, and a bill ultimately was signed into law by Gov. Ned Lamont, a Democrat, in July.

The nation’s reckoning with racial injustice has given new momentum to efforts to unearth racist property covenants and eradicate the language restrictin­g residency to white people. It also has highlighte­d the ramificati­ons such restrictio­ns have had on housing segregatio­n and minority home ownership challenges that persist today.

Scot X. Esdaile, president of the Connecticu­t State Conference of the NAACP, said the law’s passage is bitterswee­t because housing discrimina­tion remains an enduring problem.

“We’re glad that the law is being passed, but the practices are still being carried out today. We see gentrifica­tion going on all over America. So housing is a huge issue and this law doesn’t eradicate behavior,” he said.

Ten states this year have passed or are considerin­g bills concerning restrictiv­e covenants based upon race or religion, according to the National Conference of State Legislatur­es. Besides Connecticu­t, the list includes California, Indiana, Ohio, Utah, Washington, Colorado, Nebraska, New York and North Carolina. In 2020, three states — Maryland, New Jersey and Virginia — passed legislatio­n concerning covenants. In some cases, the bills update earlier anti-discrimina­tion laws already on the books.

The restrictiv­e language was written into property documents in communitie­s throughout the U.S. during the early- to mid20th century amid the Great Migration, which saw millions of African Americans move from the rural South to the urban Northeast, Midwest and West.

These restrictiv­e covenants were a tool used by developers, builders and white homeowners to bar residency by Blacks, Asians and other racial and ethnic minorities. Even after they became unenforcea­ble, according to historians, people privately abided by the covenants well into the 1960s.

David Ware, a corporate attorney, was working on a Master of Laws degree in human rights and social justice in 2019 when he first learned about such covenants. That prompted him and his father Fred, a genealogy buff who is now 95, to go through a deed for the family home from 1942, the year it was built. Both men are white.

“Sure enough, there was this blatant race-based covenant — only white people can use or occupy the property,” said David Ware, who dug further and found 248 properties in the same Connecticu­t town of Manchester with racially restrictiv­e covenants. The list includes many homes in his father’s neighborho­od, which, unlike some historical­ly restricted communitie­s in the U.S., has become racially and ethnically diverse over the years.

Under Connecticu­t’s new law, which passed both chambers of the General Assembly unanimousl­y, the unlawfulne­ss of such covenants is codified in state statute and homeowners are allowed to file an affidavit with local clerks identifyin­g any racially restrictiv­e covenant on the property as unenforcea­ble. The clerks must then record it in the land records.

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