
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
For decades, there were cities and towns that were all-white on purpose. These communities are known as "sundown towns." Because this practice was both formal and informal, researchers put together a database of these laws, customs and firsthand accounts, under the leadership of the late sociologist and civil rights champion James Loewen.
At the peak of the exclusionary practice in 1970, an estimated 10,000 communities across the U.S. kept out African-Americans through "force, law, or custom." Many sundown suburbs also excluded Jewish and Chinese Americans, and other minority groups.
There are 40 towns listed as possible or probable past sundown towns in Connecticut. This hour, we hear about this history and what it can tell us. You can add to this research too.
GUESTS:
Dr. Stephen Berrey: Assistant Professor of American Culture and History, University of Michigan
Logan Jaffe: Reporter, ProPublica
Paul Saubestre: Volunteer Researcher, Hamden Historical Society
Cat Pastor contributed to this episode which originally aired November 27, 2023.
Support the show: http://wnpr.org/donate
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4.2
5151 ratings
For decades, there were cities and towns that were all-white on purpose. These communities are known as "sundown towns." Because this practice was both formal and informal, researchers put together a database of these laws, customs and firsthand accounts, under the leadership of the late sociologist and civil rights champion James Loewen.
At the peak of the exclusionary practice in 1970, an estimated 10,000 communities across the U.S. kept out African-Americans through "force, law, or custom." Many sundown suburbs also excluded Jewish and Chinese Americans, and other minority groups.
There are 40 towns listed as possible or probable past sundown towns in Connecticut. This hour, we hear about this history and what it can tell us. You can add to this research too.
GUESTS:
Dr. Stephen Berrey: Assistant Professor of American Culture and History, University of Michigan
Logan Jaffe: Reporter, ProPublica
Paul Saubestre: Volunteer Researcher, Hamden Historical Society
Cat Pastor contributed to this episode which originally aired November 27, 2023.
Support the show: http://wnpr.org/donate
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3,861 Listeners
3,898 Listeners
38,208 Listeners
37,614 Listeners
1,006 Listeners
208 Listeners
6,591 Listeners
25,762 Listeners
57 Listeners
43 Listeners
4,637 Listeners
86,340 Listeners
111,437 Listeners
13 Listeners
3 Listeners
15,873 Listeners
18 Listeners
2 Listeners
0 Listeners
78 Listeners
29 Listeners
23 Listeners
15,316 Listeners
0 Listeners
0 Listeners
1,431 Listeners
0 Listeners
0 Listeners
9 Listeners
0 Listeners
20 Listeners
44 Listeners