The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Phoenix video stirs up ghosts of Southwest’s segregated past

- By Anita Snow

PHOENIX >> Three American Legion posts stand within miles of each other in central Phoenix, a curious reminder of how segregatio­n once ruled the U.S. Southwest as well as the Deep South.

Soldiers returning after World War I in 1919 chartered one of the first posts of the U.S. veterans’ organizati­on near downtown. But when black and Mexican American men returned from World War II, they opened their own posts, in their own neighborho­ods farther south.

Decades later, tensions in Phoenix’s minority communitie­s remain, spilling over this summer after video of police officers pointing guns and cursing at a black couple revived disturbing memories of the days of segregatio­n, when black and Hispanic residents recall commonly being mistreated by police.

The couple in the cellphone video filed a $10 million claim against the city, and the police department launched an internal investigat­ion.

Minority residents, meanwhile, packed meetings at a church and City Council chambers to express distrust and resentment of police, who they complained have historical­ly meted out harsh treatment in their neighborho­ods.

“That has long been a reality for African Americans, to not be treated fairly by the police,” said Rev. Dr. Warren H. Stewart Sr., pastor of the First Institutio­nal Baptist Church in Phoenix. “Segregatio­n has been outlawed, but the remnants of systemic racism and discrimina­tion remain.”

His son and fellow pastor Warren Stewart Jr. encouraged hundreds at a downtown gathering in June to help heal the community.

“Over 20 years ago we didn’t have a King holiday, and we fought and won that,” the younger Stewart said. “In Phoenix, we will be the initiators of that change.”

Arizona was among the last states to make Martin Luther King Day a paid day off in 1993, after the NFL pulled the Super Bowl out of Phoenix because voters rejected an initiative to create the holiday.

Confederat­es from southern slave states settled much of the Southwest, and Civil War skirmishes were fought here, including the Battle of Picacho Pass, south of Phoenix. More than 350 combatants from both sides were killed in the Battle of Glorieta Pass in New Mexico.

“Phoenix was as much a southern city as a western city into the 1960s,” said journalist and historian Jon Talton.

Real estate covenants barred black and Hispanic people from buying or leasing homes north of downtown Phoenix, according to Thomas Sheridan’s book, “Arizona: A History.”

As late as 1960, half of the African Americans in Phoenix lived south of downtown. Until the 1960s, nearby Tempe was a “sundown town.” Black people could work there during the day but were encouraged to live elsewhere.

Princess Lucas-Wilson, of the Maricopa County NAACP, said her family left Texas after burning crosses appeared around their neighborho­od, but things were not much better in Phoenix.

“I remember a Mexican restaurant refusing us service,” said Lucas-Wilson, now 64. “I also remember a black doctor who moved to Scottsdale and had both arms broken by white adolescent­s who said he shouldn’t live there. He refused to move.”

Before the adoption of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, African Americans like wellknown funeral home owner and former Tuskegee Airman Lincoln Ragsdale Sr. protested outside the Arizona Capitol for the desegregat­ion of public places.

Phoenix public schools like the all-black Booker T. Washington Elementary were segregated for decades before Arizona state courts declared the practice unconstitu­tional in 1953, a year before the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision regarding the desegregat­ion of U.S. schools, Brown V. Board of Education of Topeka. Still, Tucson took longer to integrate, and partial compliance wasn’t reached until last fall in a federal court case overseeing the desegregat­ion of black and Hispanic students at Tucson schools that has dragged on more than 40 years.

Schools were also segregated in some eastern New Mexico cities including Hobbs and Clovis near the Texas state line. Charles Becknell Sr., 77, of Rio Rancho, New Mexico, grew up in segregated Hobbs and recalls entering some restaurant­s with his family from the back because only whites could enter from the front. He also attended sitins at restaurant­s where blacks were not allowed at all.

“Even our high school football games had segregated seating,” recalled Becknell, who said close friends of differing races would sit on each side of a dividing rope on the bleachers so they could watch a game together.

As a U.S. Air Force colonel, conservati­ve Sen. Barry Goldwater of Arizona was among those who pushed the Pentagon to end segregatio­n in the military in 1948.

Still, minorities returning to Phoenix after World War II encountere­d the discrimina­tion they always knew.

Mexican Americans formed Post 41, which Tempe historian Jared Smith said helped Hispanics gain access to the once-segregated Tempe Beach pool beginning in 1946. That post now serves menudo Sunday mornings at a building painted with a mural of service members under the words: “America’s Hispanic Heroes.”

“I love bold choices in a playroom,” says Mel Bean, a designer in Tulsa, Oklahoma.

In one client’s theater room, for example, “we used a high-contrast carpet as a real show-stopper,” she says. “Another space uses black and white walls and floors as a backdrop for colorful art supplies, chairs, books and paintings.” Yet another playroom she is working on “includes a stunning, greenmarbl­e-slabbed wet bar with navy cabinetry, multiple television screens, and something for all ages, from a play kitchen to gaming.”

Los Angeles designer Kate Lester has a similar approach: “Don’t take the space too seriously — have fun with it,” she says. “Wallpaper the whole room, or paint the ceiling.”

Lester favors a light-filled palette and livable furniture. She recently completed a safari-themed play

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