Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

‘It’s worse than anyplace in Mississipp­i’

- By John Pryzbys

Just about every Las Vegan has heard the phrase at one time or another: “The Mississipp­i of the West.”

Former state archivist Guy Rocha traces the epithet’s origins to a March 1954 issue of Ebony magazine, which had a story headlined “Negroes Can’t Win in Las Vegas.”

The story is emblematic of why Martin Luther King Jr. visited the city a decade later.

The subhead of the story by James Goodrich was “Nevada gambling town has more racial barriers than any other place outside of Dixie,” and the piece is a meshing of unnamed sources, broad generaliza­tions and solid reporting. While modern readers may quibble with some points, the thrust of the article bears historical validity.

From the first paragraph, Goodrich sets a tone local tourism officials no doubt didn’t appreciate: “A Negro celebrity, concluding a stopover in Las Vegas recently, sized up the Nevada boom town this way: It’s worse than any place in Mississipp­i.”

The article calls Las Vegas “rigidly Jim Crow by custom. No other town outside of Dixie has more racial barriers. … (T)he Negro finds little welcome anywhere. He is barred from practicall­y every place whites go for entertainm­ent or services. He cannot live outside a segregated, slum-like community. He is relegated to the most menial jobs. For the Negro, Vegas is as bad as towns come.”

Goodrich estimated the number of African-American residents here as “at least 10 percent of its 43,000 population,” and asserted that “the whites of Las Vegas overwhelmi­ngly support racial prejudice and make no bones about it.’”

The article addressed issues African-American residents of the ’50s faced regarding employment, public accommodat­ions and housing.

Goodrich also wrote that “Negroes themselves could be a great deal to blame for their lowly position in the town. … The record shows that Negroes of Las Vegas have never been very active in civic matters” and “are politicall­y impotent because they have yet to show a concerted vote in elections.”

He concludes: “From where the Negro eyes the world in Las Vegas, two shadows are omnipresen­t in his perspectiv­e — the ‘mean white boss’ and a damnable job. He cannot escape either, if he chooses to remain in the town. There is no other course open to him.”

 ?? © 1954 Johnson Publishing Company Inc. ?? This page, from the March 1954 issue of Ebony magazine, painted a negative picture of race relations in midcentury Las Vegas.
© 1954 Johnson Publishing Company Inc. This page, from the March 1954 issue of Ebony magazine, painted a negative picture of race relations in midcentury Las Vegas.

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