Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

The 1920s: From New York to LA Dr. Josh Sides, CSU Northridge 1. Economic Prosperity and Its Perils 2. Labor and Great Migrations 3. African American Renaissance.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "The 1920s: From New York to LA Dr. Josh Sides, CSU Northridge 1. Economic Prosperity and Its Perils 2. Labor and Great Migrations 3. African American Renaissance."— Presentation transcript:

1 The 1920s: From New York to LA Dr. Josh Sides, CSU Northridge 1. Economic Prosperity and Its Perils 2. Labor and Great Migrations 3. African American Renaissance in New York and Los Angeles

2

3

4

5

6

7 People are Stepping Into Banks Saturday Evening Post, October 3, 1925, p. 65

8

9

10

11

12

13

14

15

16 A window display in Harlem urges community participation in solving Harlem's problems.

17 Chicago’s South Side

18 Major Race Riots

19 Chicago Defender

20 Harlem Apartment

21

22 Survey Graphic, which announced the arrival of the New Negro

23 Langston Hughes

24 Hughes, “Dinner Guest, Me” I know I am The Negro Problem Being wined and dined, Answering the usual questions That come to white mind Which seeks demurely To Probe in polite way The why and wherewithal Of darkness U.S.A.-- Wondering how things got this way In current democratic night, Murmuring gently Over fraises du bois, "I'm so ashamed of being white." The lobster is delicious, The wine divine, And center of attention At the damask table, mine. To be a Problem on Park Avenue at eight Is not so bad. Solutions to the Problem, Of course, wait.

25 William Johnson

26

27

28 Aaron Douglas

29

30

31 Tuskegee: Concert at the Institute, 1903 Concert at Tuskegee Institute, 1903

32 Tuskegee: Girls were taught cooking and table setting, dressed in maids' uniforms with white caps and aprons.

33 Shoemaking at Tuskegee

34 And then, there was Los Angeles “Los Angeles is wonderful. Nowhere in the United States is the Negro so well and beautifully housed, nor the average efficiency and intelligence in the colored population so high. Out here in this matchless Southern California there would seem to be no limit to your opportunities, your possibilities.” ----W.E.B. Du Bois, Crisis (August 1913)

35 "At the cross", boundary between the Black and White sections of Santa Monica and Venice beaches, circa 1925.

36 African American Social Club, 1930

37 African American girls on car, 1924

38 Manual Arts, 1940

39 Manual Arts Gardening class, 1940

40 Manual Arts Biology Club, 1940

41 Jefferson High club 1935

42 African American homeowner, 1930

43 Pullman Porters, 1945


Download ppt "The 1920s: From New York to LA Dr. Josh Sides, CSU Northridge 1. Economic Prosperity and Its Perils 2. Labor and Great Migrations 3. African American Renaissance."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google