Traveling Black – A Story of Race and Resistance

A riveting, character-rich account of racial segregation in America that reveals just how central travel restrictions were to the creation of Jim Crow laws—and why “traveling Black” has been at the heart of the quest for racial justice ever since.

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A riveting, character-rich account of racial segregation in America that reveals just how central travel restrictions were to the creation of Jim Crow laws—and why “traveling Black” has been at the heart of the quest for racial justice ever since.

Why have white supremacists and civil rights activists been so focused on Black mobility? From Plessy v. Ferguson to #DrivingWhileBlack, African Americans have fought for over a century to move freely around the United States. Curious as to why so many cases contesting the doctrine of “separate but equal” involved trains and buses, Mia Bay went back to the sources with some basic questions: How did travel segregation begin? Why were so many of those who challenged it in court women? How did it move from one form of transport to another, and what was it like to be caught up in this web of contradictory rules?

From stagecoaches, steamships, and trains to buses, cars, and planes, Traveling Black explores when, how, and why racial restrictions took shape and brilliantly portrays what it was like to live with them. “There is not in the world a more disgraceful denial of human brotherhood than the ‘Jim Crow’ car of the southern United States,” W. E. B. Du Bois famously declared. Bay unearths troves of supporting evidence, rescuing forgotten stories of undaunted passengers who made it back home despite being insulted, stranded, re-routed, and ignored.

Black travelers never stopped challenging these humiliations and insist- ing on justice in the courts. Traveling Black upends our understanding of Black resistance, documenting a sustained fight that falls outside the tradi- tional boundaries of the Civil Rights Movement. A masterpiece of scholarly and human insight, this book helps explain why the long, unfinished jour- ney to racial equality so often takes place on the road.

                     

“Timely and well-written, Traveling Black offers a powerful new vision of the long arc of protest against racial segregation in America.”

—Annette Gordon-Reed, author of

The Hemingses of Monticello

About the Author

Mia Bay is author of To Tell the Truth Freely: The Life of Ida B. Wells,
The White Image in the Black Mind, and Freedom on My Mind: A History of African Americans with Documents. She is Roy F. and Jeanette P. Nichols Professor of American History at the University of Pennsylvania.