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START OF WORLD WAR I AND THE GREAT MIGRATION OF AFRICAN AMERICANS
The start of World War I was 100 years ago today when Austro-Hungarian Archduke Franz Ferdinand was assassinated by Serbian nationalist Gavrilo Princip in Sarajevo. The Great War reduced the flow of European immigrants – then a principal source for cheap labor in large American cities outside of the South – to a slow drip, which subsequently created new employment opportunities for African Americans, who wanted to escape the South’s Jim Crow laws and lynching.
The movement of about 6 million African Americans from the South to the Northeast, Midwest and Western industrial cities in pursuit of these opportunities is called the Great Migration. Harlem, a predominantly white New York City neighborhood located at the northern end of Manhattan, saw a tremendous influx of African Americans during the Great Migration. One could argue that Archduke Ferdinand’s death helped to spark the Harlem Renaissance… - Lioness Daiba Sala
Mother and child image in Chicago’s Union Station shot by Esther Bubley. |
“At some point, being Black became profitable to anyone and everyone who wasn’t, in fact, Black.” — Jack Qu’emi, The Appropriation of Black Culture through White Consumption of Hip Hop, 2014
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