代顿拱廊的黑色记忆:种族和一座心爱建筑的模糊遗产

Ohio history Pub Date : 2022-03-01 DOI:10.1353/ohh.2022.0006
C. Koester
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引用次数: 0

摘要

代顿的拱廊和该市的非裔美国人社区自1904年开放以来一直交织在一起。有色人种在整个拱廊历史上扮演着核心角色。大迁徙前的十年,成千上万的南部非洲裔美国人来到代顿。位于Arcade综合体的食品市场和零售店成为许多人的重要目的地,因为它位于西区社区附近,非裔美国人经常因为城市的住房做法而被迫在那里定居。它也位于非裔美国人工作的各个地方之间,比如城市东侧的工厂和他们居住的社区。因此,环境导致许多非裔美国人每天都要经过拱廊街。随着几十年的过去,黑人的庇护对拱廊越来越重要,因为该市的白人人口大量迁移到郊区。代顿作为一个种族隔离城市,有着悠久而臭名昭著的历史,并将继续存在。市中心的许多企业限制黑人就业,并劝阻黑人顾客。在拱廊街,黑人游客遇到的歧视比城市其他地方少。可以肯定的是,非裔美国人在拱廊的经历充满了矛盾。拱廊内的机构实行隔离。在很长一段时间里,事实上的种族隔离使非裔美国人无法在拱廊的一些场所坐着、坐电梯或试穿衣服。然而,许多非裔美国人认为拱廊比其他地方更受欢迎
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Black Memories of the Dayton Arcade: Race and the Ambivalent Legacy of a Beloved Building
Dayton’s Arcade and the city’s African American community have been intertwined since the complex’s opening in 1904. People of color have played a central role throughout the history of the Arcade. The decade before the Great Migration brought thousands of southern African Americans to Dayton. The food markets and retail shops located at the Arcade complex became a vital destination for many because it was located near the West Side neighborhoods, where African Americans were often forced to settle because of housing practices in the city. It was also located between the various places African Americans worked, such as the factories on the eastern side of the city, and the neighborhoods in which they lived. As a result, circumstances led many African Americans to pass through the Arcade on a daily basis. As the decades passed, black patronage became increasingly important to the Arcade because the city’s white population moved in large numbers to the suburbs. Dayton has had, and continues to have, a long, notorious history as a segregated city. Many downtown businesses restricted black employment and discouraged black customers. At the Arcade, black visitors encountered less of the discrimination than they did elsewhere in the city. To be sure, the African American experience of the Arcade was riven with contradictions. Establishments within the Arcade practiced segregation. For a long period, de facto segregation prevented African Americans from sitting, riding the elevator, or trying on clothes at some establishments in the Arcade. However, the Arcade was viewed by many African Americans as more welcoming than other places
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