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By the early 1970s, Black residents comprised nearly 73% of Washington, D.C.’s population, making it one of the most prominent majority Black cities in America. As a testament to that identity, residents in D.C. nicknamed it “Chocolate City.”
Chocolate City was a rare urban space in the 1970s where Black-owned businesses thrived, go-go music dominated the radio stations, and Black people held genuine political power. Standing at the intellectual heart of this world was Howard University, the nation's most prominent HBCU, which featured as a crown jewel of Black academic and cultural life training generations of lawyers, physicians, artists, and activists who shaped the city and the broader African diaspora.
On this episode of On the Yard, MSRC Director Dr. Benjamin Talton sits down with Sonja Woods, university historian at MSRC, Howard alum Abdur-Rahman Muhammad, and Dr. George Derek Musgrove, associate professor of history at the University of Maryland and co-author of Chocolate City: A History of Race and Democracy in the Nation's Capital.
The discussion covers the cultural touchstones that built Chocolate City and the figures who were transformative to D.C., cementing it as not just a political capital, but as a capital of Black intellectual life. They also discuss Howard University’s place in the city as a gathering ground for some of the most consequential Black thinkers, writers and scholars in the world.
Episode Guide:
00:00 Chocolate City Origins & Guest Introduction
03:34 Defining Chocolate City
05:12 Democracy Returns
08:45 The Art, Music, and Culture of Chocolate City
16:31 Howard University Shapes the City
18:13 Black Flight Tipping Point
22:15 Remaking Howard in 1968
26:28 Three-Year Campus Struggle
28:53 President James E. Cheek’s Howard Legacy
34:45 Working Beyond Political Party Lines
37:45 Reagan Visit and 1983 Protests
42:37 Jesse Jackson and D.C. Statehood
45:22 Final Reflections and Wrap
On the Yard is a production of The Moorland-Spingarn Research Center at Howard University and is produced by University FM.
The triple threat of Chocolate City
Blackness on everyday frequency
Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
By The Moorland-Spingarn Research Center at Howard UniversityBy the early 1970s, Black residents comprised nearly 73% of Washington, D.C.’s population, making it one of the most prominent majority Black cities in America. As a testament to that identity, residents in D.C. nicknamed it “Chocolate City.”
Chocolate City was a rare urban space in the 1970s where Black-owned businesses thrived, go-go music dominated the radio stations, and Black people held genuine political power. Standing at the intellectual heart of this world was Howard University, the nation's most prominent HBCU, which featured as a crown jewel of Black academic and cultural life training generations of lawyers, physicians, artists, and activists who shaped the city and the broader African diaspora.
On this episode of On the Yard, MSRC Director Dr. Benjamin Talton sits down with Sonja Woods, university historian at MSRC, Howard alum Abdur-Rahman Muhammad, and Dr. George Derek Musgrove, associate professor of history at the University of Maryland and co-author of Chocolate City: A History of Race and Democracy in the Nation's Capital.
The discussion covers the cultural touchstones that built Chocolate City and the figures who were transformative to D.C., cementing it as not just a political capital, but as a capital of Black intellectual life. They also discuss Howard University’s place in the city as a gathering ground for some of the most consequential Black thinkers, writers and scholars in the world.
Episode Guide:
00:00 Chocolate City Origins & Guest Introduction
03:34 Defining Chocolate City
05:12 Democracy Returns
08:45 The Art, Music, and Culture of Chocolate City
16:31 Howard University Shapes the City
18:13 Black Flight Tipping Point
22:15 Remaking Howard in 1968
26:28 Three-Year Campus Struggle
28:53 President James E. Cheek’s Howard Legacy
34:45 Working Beyond Political Party Lines
37:45 Reagan Visit and 1983 Protests
42:37 Jesse Jackson and D.C. Statehood
45:22 Final Reflections and Wrap
On the Yard is a production of The Moorland-Spingarn Research Center at Howard University and is produced by University FM.
The triple threat of Chocolate City
Blackness on everyday frequency
Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.