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AFRICAN AMERICAN MIGRATION, PT. 2

Who’s Coming In, Who’s Going Out?

World War II kicked off the second Great Migration, as African Americans from the South sought better living conditions in Newark and other cities. Between 1940 and 1950, the African American population of Newark increased from 45,760 to 74,965—growing from 10.7% to 17.2% of the city’s total population. In many ways, this population influx marked a tipping point for recognition.

For most of Newark, the depression ended. “Help wanted “ signs went up. But African Americans could not always find a job. The New Jersey Afro-American wrote in 1941 that while contracts for nearly a billion and a half dollars in government defense orders have been placed with firms in New Jersey, the Urban League finds that these firms have steadfastly refused to hire colored workers.”

 

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“Help wanted “ signs went up. But African Americans could not always find a job.
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But some African Americans did find employment. Jobs for blacks in the Newark defense workforce improved from 4% in 1942, to 8.8% in 1943. With the overall economy booming, Newark’s downtown stores began hiring some African Americans as elevator operators and janitors. Large restaurants hired blacks as chefs, cooks and waiters—they could work, but not sit down to eat. The war years helped enhance the prospects of some, while still denying prosperity for the many.

Whites Begin to Leave

Around 1947, the white middle class started deserting Newark for the suburbs, along with the businesses that sustained them. The post World-War II boom was good for businesses for a while, but factories, schools, and streets had been neglected during the war. Overcrowding was a problem, especially in the ghettos. These conditions made the suburbs very attractive as alternatives to Newark.

The G.I. Bill of Rights and FHA loans made it easier for whites to buy a house, and brand new highways built by the federal government with taxpayers’ dollars made it easier to drive those new automobiles to the suburbs, in Essex County and further west. These same mortgages were unavailable to most African Americans; and most suburbs were off limits.

 

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These same mortgages were unavailable to most African Americans; and most suburbs were off limits.
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But Newark’s heterogeneous ethnic character remained intact in the early and mid-1950s. Newark was described as follows by writer Joseph Conforti:

The Germans had given way to the Irish who in 1950 shared political power with an Italian and a Jew. The ethnic division of the city could also be observed less directly. Many occupations were ethnically identifiable: the police and fire departments were overwhelmingly Irish; the construction trades were Italian; the merchants were largely Jewish, the small luncheonettes were Greek, the large businesses were owned and operated by WASPs, skilled craftsmen were likely to be German, and the factory operatives were Irish, Polish and Italian. Even the city’s taxicabs had ethnic identifications…yellow cabs were operated by the Irish, 20th Century cabs by Jews, Brown and White cabs by Italians, and Green cabs by blacks.

Newark’s Changing Demographics

Ghettoization continued in Newark. By 1940, the Third Ward (today’s Central Ward) alone contained more than 16,000 black residents. By 1944 nearly one third of the apartments and housing in the black areas were below the standards of minimum decency. Some houses still had outside bathrooms.

The slums were among the worst in the nation. The situation was particularly grim for African Americans, clustered on “the hill” just west of the Essex County Court House. Public Housing did not help a lot. There were 7 low-income projects finished before the war, but by 1946, there were 2,110 white families and only 623 black families in the buildings. Four of the projects housed no black people. The best low-rise public housing, such as Bradley Court, was reserved for whites; while the poorest units, such as F.D.R. Homes, were reserved for blacks. Ultimately, the majority of African Americans were steered into the growing number of high rise public housing which just happened to be built in the center city where black people had been confined beginning at the turn of the 20th century.

 

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Four of the projects housed no black people.
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The 1950 Census showed the trend in population increases for blacks, and decrease by whites. Newark’s total population rose only slightly from 429,760 in 1940 to 438,776 in 1950. Black residents had increased from 45,760 to 74,965—more than a 60% increase. When newspapers took a look at the faces of misery, increasingly they were black.

Even though the city began hemorrhaging jobs (250 manufacturers left between 1950-60; 1,300 manufactures left during the 1960s), the more dramatic change in the city’s socioeconomic structure was the rapidly changing composition of the city’s population.

African Americans were rapidly become politically and economically obsolete in a city where they would soon be in the majority. Segregation and discrimination by race and class defined Newark’s offering to the city’s newest immigrants.

References:

Joseph Conforti, “Newark: Ghetto or City,” Newark (magazine)

John T. Cunningham, Newark

Robert Curvin, “The Persistent Minority: The Black Political Experience in Newark” (PhD diss., Princeton University, 1975)

Audrey Faulkner, et al., When I Was Comin’ Up: An Oral History of Aged Blacks

Wendell Holbrook, When I Was Coming Up

Barbara J. Kukla, Swing City: Newark Nightlife, 1925-50

Kevin Mumford, Newark: A History of Race, Rights, and Riots in America

Thomas Sugrue, Sweet Land of Liberty: The Forgotten Struggle for Civil Rights in the North

Kathryn Yatrakis, ”Electoral Demands and Political Benefits” (PhD diss., Columbia University, 1981)

 

Clip from an interview with Black Power advocate Dr. Nathan Wright, in which he explains the migration of southern Blacks to Newark during and after World War 2. Although these migrants sought better opportunities, employment, and housing, most found few job opportunities and overpriced, yet crumbling housing in segregated neighborhoods.

Clip from an interview with United Community Corporation (UCC) member Mary Smith, in which she describes her experiences moving to Newark from the South. Although many migrants sought better opportunities, employment, and housing, most found few job opportunities and overpriced, yet crumbling housing in segregated neighborhoods.

Photo of Slum Housing

Photo of Slum Housing

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Sidewalk view of “slum” housing in Newark. Housing discrimination in the city segregated Newark’s Black communities to areas where this type of housing predominated. — Credit: WPA Photographs, New Jersey State Archives

Bradley Court Housing Project

Bradley Court Housing Project

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View from outside the Bradley Court Housing Project in Newark in 1944. The project was constructed before World War II and was reserved for white residents. (Photo: Gottscho-Schleisner, Inc.) — Credit: Newark Housing Authority, Library of Congress

Inside 22 Clayton Street Apartment

Inside 22 Clayton Street Apartment

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An African American couple read at a table inside their apartment at 22 Clayton Street. (Photo: Nathaniel Rubel) — Credit: WPA Photographs, New Jersey State Archives

Inside Baxter Terrace Apartment

Inside Baxter Terrace Apartment

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Two young white girls read inside their family’s apartment in the Baxter Terrace housing project in 1944. (Photo: Gottscho-Schleisner, Inc.) — Credit: Newark Housing Authority, Library of Congress

African American Repairman

African American Repairman

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Photograph from the PSEG archives of an African American repairman at work. — Credit: PSEG

Oral Histories of the Jim Crow North