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Seriously...

The Green Book

Seriously...

BBC

Documentary, Society & Culture

4.1885 Ratings

🗓️ 6 December 2016

⏱️ 39 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In the Jim Crow era of racial segregation, travelling in the United States was fraught with difficulties if you were black. At best it was inconvenient, as white-owned businesses refused to serve African American motorists, repair their cars or offer them hotel accommodation. At worst, travel could be life-threatening if you walked into the wrong bar in the wrong town.

That's why in 1936 Victor H Green, a Harlem postal worker, published the first edition of The Green Book. The guide listed hotels, restaurants, bars and service stations which would serve African Americans and was an attempt, in Victor Green's words, "to give the Negro traveller information that will keep from him running into difficulties and embarrassments". 'Embarrassments' seems rather a tame word for the outright hostility and physical danger which many black travellers experienced in segregation-era America. The Green Book became a catalogue of refuge and tolerance in a hostile and intolerant world.

Alvin Hall hits the highway, Green Book in hand, to document a little-known aspect of racial segregation: the challenges - for mid-20th century America's new black middle class - of travelling in their own country. Alvin's journey starts in Tallahassee, Florida, where he was born and raised, takes him through Alabama and Tennessee and concludes in Ferguson, Missouri.

The guide ceased publication soon after the passing of the Civil Rights Act in 1964. But, as Alvin discovers in Ferguson, many African Americans still feel far from safe as they drive. Alvin asks whether the Green Book ceased publication too soon.

Interviewees: Carolyn Bailey-Champion, Dr. Charles Champion, Leah Dickerman, Jerome Gray, Prof. Allyson Hobbs, Ryan Jones, Maira Liriano, Ron McCoy, Robert Moman, Dr. Gwen Patton, Calvin Ramsey, Tiffany Shawn, Rev. Henry Steele, Bryan Stevenson and Rev. Starsky Wilson

Producer: Jeremy Grange

Archive audio courtesy of PBS, CBS and CNN

Photos: Jonathan Calm.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

This is the BBC.

0:05.0

Foraging for food, how to start a fire.

0:08.0

That's what I think of as a survival guide.

0:11.0

Not, where will I be safe to fill up on petrol or which restaurant would allow me to eat there?

0:17.0

I stopped in Butler, Georgia. I wanted to use a restaurant while they were servicing the car. The guy said they were out of water.

0:26.0

And I was a black guy working under the hood.

0:29.0

And when the white guy turns back, he said said nothing's wrong. Those restrooms.

0:35.0

They just don't want you to use them.

0:38.0

For three decades, African Americans didn't go anywhere without their survival guide, the Green Book.

0:45.0

And we didn't go to those places.

0:46.4

In fact, I cannot recall having gone to Excel in Fisco City,

0:50.5

even though they were 20 miles from where I lived during my growing up years.

0:55.2

I'm Riana Dylan and today we're going on a trip around the USA with Alvin Hall.

1:00.3

Let's hit the road, Green Book in hand.

1:05.0

Now right up here we're going to take a right.

1:10.0

And you want to take the first left.

1:15.0

I'm looking for a hotel in Tallahassee in the panhandle of Northern Florida.

1:20.0

I think we should slow up here because I think this is brag. Am I right? I am right.

1:26.0

A few minutes ago I was driving through an older part of the city, past white painted

1:32.0

clabbered houses with 10 roofs. Now close to the city limits.

1:37.0

It looks like you're way out in the country. Heavy foliage.

1:43.0

And this is the road I walked.

...

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