The Gilmore Car Museum is touring the state again with a series of talks. Last year, they spoke at the HSL about the first all-woman cross country road trip in 1909. This year, they're coming back to talk about the experience of African Americans traveling during the Jim Crow era. African Americans faced severe discrimination on the road, being met by white-only gas stations, restaurants, hotels, etc. "To ease their way, Victor Hugo Green published “The Negro Travelers’ Green Book” with a listing of places — some commercial, some private homes — where dark-skinned people could stay and eat, where they could buy gas and even which towns to avoid for their own safety. Green, an African-American mail carrier, was outlived by his annual book. He started it in the mid-1930s and his company kept it going until passage of civil rights legislation in the 1960s." (FROM THE GILMORE MUSEUM WEBSITE). If you watched the movie "The Green Book" and would like to learn more about this episode of American history, or if you've never heard of it before, please join us on March 20th at 1pm in the center of the library. This lecture is free and open to the public. https://www.gilmorecarmuseum.org/museum-showcases-near-forgotten-guidebook-african-american-travelers/
Driving Through the Jim Crow Era"
Date and Time
Wednesday Mar 20, 2019 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM EDT
March 20th at 1pm
Location
Harbor Springs Library 206 S. Spring St. Harbor Springs, MI