Monday, February 5, 2024

The Great Migration

Diaspora Destinations


Dedicated with love and gratitude to my grandmother, Mary Catherine Grayson, who made her migration from Alabama with my two year old father, Howard Earl, to Ypsilanti, Michigan, 1939.


© The Great Migration Series -  Jacob Lawrence, African-American  (1917 - 2000) 


Exodus 


We all have family stories that point to periods in African-American history. Consider if you’re from the Western US, you likely had ancestors who migrated west from Oklahoma, Louisiana, Arkansas, or Texas during the Great Depression or Great Migration.  The former occurred in two waves from the early to mid-20th century.  Historians debate the time frame for each since this was not formally recorded, although statistical data can be found to corroborate the increase of black populations in various Northern and Western cities between 1910 - 1970.  Stories were also shared through oral history and family artifacts.  


The First Great Migration began between 1910 - 1930 and the Second Migration at the onset of World War II, 1940 - 1970.  Until 1910 about 90 percent of the African-American population lived in the South.  The First Great Migration had 1.6 million people migrate to mostly industrial cities in the North.  


The Second Great Migration saw a surge up to 5 million people, which by then expanded west to California, Oregon, and other Western states. 


The Economy of Jim Crow 


There were several factors which precipitated the migration from the South; beginning with economics and extreme poverty.  Many black folks at the time worked under a sharecropping system where they in effect paid rent to landowners for the crops they cultivated and harvested.  This practice often kept farmers in continuous debt.  If they needed a mule, livestock, or equipment to cultivate, the landowner would purchase it and the sharecropper would go further in debt against what crops he/she could yield.  It was a cycle of exploitation and black folks had no rights under the law and severely restricted access to loans making the purchase of land for themselves nearly impossible. 


Positions in factories and industrial sectors of the cities also meant very low pay, far below that of white workers, and conditions were often dangerous.  Black women during this period worked primarily as domestics and cooks in white homes. 


Another factor which spurred migration was living under the Jim Crow Laws of the South at the time. These state and local laws enforced racial segregation, which were established by white Democratic-dominated ( Dixiecrat ) state legislatures in the 19th century after the Reconstruction period. These laws permeated all facets of public and private life - hospitals, schools, civic institutions, transportation,  and businesses were segregated throughout the South.  African-Americans had no rights or protections under Jim Crow.  Under this oppressive system, people lived under constant stress from the threat of violence, lynching, abuse, and exploitation. They had to become self-sufficient and created their own markets, trades, and local businesses. Even then, a black business could be burned out or dismantled ‘ legally’  if considered a threat to its white business owners. The irony of this is that black customers were often banned from supporting their own people so that white businesses could flourish, even if their product or service was substandard.  Although Northern cities were also segregated, there were still better opportunities and wages to be found in addition to more adequate housing.  At the beginning of the 20th century, the South largely remained an agriculture-based economy.  The North experienced an industrial boom and found a labor shortage. Businesses and manufacturers looked to the labor class of the South. 


 ‘ By 1920 post-war economic growth and a large migration of Southerners to the industrialized North had nearly doubled the city’s population to 993,678, an overall increase of 113% from 1910. Most startling, at least for white Detroiters, was the growth of the city’s black population to 40,838, with most of that growth occurring between 1915 and 1920. By the end of World War I over 8,000 black workers were employed in the city’s auto industry, with 1,675 working at Ford Motor Company. - The HenryFord.org, Collections and Research




© The Shoemaker (1945)  - Romare Bearden 




I pick up my life

And take it with me

And I put it down in

Chicago, Detroit,

Buffalo, Scranton…

I pick up my life

And take it on the train

To Los Angeles, Bakersfield

Seattle, Oakland, Salt Lake,

Any place that is

North and West ---
                                                              
                                                             And not South.

                                        One-Way Ticket by Langston Hughes


The African Face of the North 


The First and Second Great Migrations had a profound impact on the culture and demographics of northern American cities. Until this point, these was primarily European settlements and immigration which had characterized cities such as Milwaukee, Chicago, New York, Philadelphia, and Boston.

Southern black migrants established communities in Detroit, the Roxbury section of Boston, Harlem in New York, the South sides of Chicago and Philadelphia, and West Oakland in the Bay Area. Southern cuisine and church life became interwoven into these communities, following the Baptist and Methodist traditions brought from the South. West Oakland had its largest black population during the Second Great Migration when the shipyards of the Bay Area had an employment boom during World War II. Black folks settled into what became a thriving area of the city with jazz clubs, restaurants, and local businesses. Although limited to those banks who would serve black applicants, folks were able to apply for home loans and purchase property. Although most US cities implemented a red-lining system, where blacks were restricted to certain neighborhoods, the San Francisco Bay Area was no exception. Red-lining kept black communities contained to protect white property value and affluence.

Still despite civic and financial restrictions of where black folks could live, they still had the opportunity to chart their own path, however difficult the endeavor. For many of their generation, a new life in Los Angeles, Boston, New York, or Seattle still represented freedom from the horrendous oppression they had escaped from. As a result of the Great Migration, Detroit became a major African-American city with a population of 82.7% as of the 2010 census.

The Harlem Renaissance became the cultural and artistic center of black life in New York City between 1918 to the mid-1930s. It was here that painters, writers, musicians, and scholars found community; many coming from the First Great Migration. The largest population of Southern blacks settled in this section of Upper Manhattan.

What is extraordinary about the Great Migration is that it is the story of us and our American experience. Each one of us can chart an ancestor from a point in Africa to the New World, to a slave, to a Southern migrant, and ending in the place where you come from. We are the living embodiment of our shared history; from family photos, stories of struggle and adaptation, long treks by car, bus or rail, in the pursuit of freedom within our own country. The context of our narrative always remains the same - we move through and on, we reinvent ourselves, and in the process we became a people. 




        

 © The Great Migration Series - Jacob Lawrence, African-American (1917 - 2000)


Blackbird singing in the dead of night

Take these broken wings and learn to fly

All your life

You were only waiting for this moment to arise

Blackbird singing in the dead of night

Take these sunken eyes and learn to see

All your life

You were only waiting for this moment to be free

Blackbird fly, blackbird fly

Into the light of the dark black night

Blackbird fly, blackbird fly

Into the light of the dark black night

Blackbird singing in the dead of night

Take these broken wings and learn to fly 

All your life

You were only waiting for this moment to arise. 


© Blackbird 

Lennon /McCartney 


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