Green Book restaurants

Interest in historical Green Book guides for Black travelers has been growing in the past decade and the new movie of this title will surely increase it.

The Green Books’ slogan, “Covering the United States like a blanket,” nicely sums up its goal of making travel more comfortable (maybe even enjoyable) for Black travelers living in a country that typically greeted them with hostility whenever they moved outside their restricted neighborhoods and social roles.

Prior to the arrival of the Green Book, Black Americans relied on the kindness of strangers – also Black – when traveling. Until the 1960s, Jim Crow laws in Southern states barred them from access to white hotels, resorts, and restaurants. Outside the South conditions were not much better, despite civil rights laws barring discrimination in many states. To deal with this, middle-class Black travelers relied on other Blacks who invited them into their homes, even providing meals despite not usually knowing them personally. According to Willis Duke Weatherford’s Race Relations (1934), “The institution of ‘dining out’ is not established among careful [Black] families – it is a reflection on the home to eat in a restaurant; it simply is not done.”

As travel increased among Black business people, entertainers, and tourists, accommodations in private homes were no longer adequate, especially for longer trips. A number of guides were published, among them the annual Negro Motorist Green Book published by Victor Hugo Green, a mail carrier in New Jersey. The guide was renamed the Negro Travelers Green Book in 1952. At some point in the 1950s, Victor became ill and his wife Alma took over as editor and publisher. The last two editions were by new owners.

The Green Books were first published in 1937, then every year after that except for four WWII years, ending with a 1966-1967 edition. With the exception of 1946 and 1958, all of the editions are available digitally in the New York Public Library. A 1946 edition sold for over $4,500 on eBay in 2016 and a copy is owned by Virginia Union University Library. As far as I can tell the 1958 edition is not publicly available. Several editions have been republished.

Green Books were sold directly to consumers and also distributed by Esso after Standard Oil of New Jersey hired a prominent Black businessman to promote Esso to Black motorists. Thirty-eight percent of Esso gas stations were operated by Black proprietors, according to a 1939 essay. Conoco also ran a Negro Travel Service which prepared custom “Touraides” free on request. Quite a few issues of guides devoted pages to new model cars of the major, and a few minor, automobile manufacturers. In the Black community cars were regarded as liberators, as well as providers of good jobs in the manufacturing and service sectors. An essay to this effect, “The Automobile and What It Has Done for the Negro,” appeared in the 1938 edition.

The books provided lists of hotels and tourist homes that were welcoming, most of them located in Black business areas of cities and towns. It also listed restaurants, roadhouses, taverns, nightclubs, beauty and barber shops, service stations, and other businesses. In later years it tended to focus primarily on places to stay. [Osborn’s, 1962]

I’ve looked at all the Green Books in the NYPL collection, paying special attention to restaurants in them. Overall there are not a huge number of restaurants. In 1939, for instance, only two restaurants are listed for the entire state of California.

Most of the restaurants seem to be in Black sections of towns, or are Chinese. Their numbers seem to have been dependent on Victor Green’s informants, who were said to be mail carriers like himself. Coverage was also spotty. Green lived in New Jersey and then New York City, and it’s noticeable that both states are more thoroughly covered than most others.

What seems to be lacking are restaurants in predominately white areas that welcomed Black customers. If Black tourists or business people were visiting Los Angeles, for instance, how would they know which restaurants in the main shopping or business districts would serve them without problems?

Comparing the Duncan Hines’ popular Adventures in Good Eating guide book of the late 1940s with a Green Book of roughly the same time reveals that there is no overlap whatsoever in their listings of Los Angeles restaurants. Not one of the 37 LA restaurants recommended by Hines is to be found in the Green Book or vice versa.

Things had changed somewhat by the 1962 edition. It is striking how many more white-owned and patronized restaurants are listed for New York City that year. Previously the only New York restaurants in the guides were located in Harlem, but now they are all over town. Among them are the Brass Rail chain, Davy Jones Seafood House, and Jack Dempsey’s. It’s hard to know whether the change was due to the policy of the restaurants or the Green Book.

Trying to learn more about restaurants listed in Green Books is difficult. Many I’ve looked for do not show up in city directories, nor in newspaper archives. Judging from feature advertisements for restaurants in later issues, many of the restaurants listed were small neighborhood places that served unpretentious home-cooked meals, quite similar to the majority of white-owned restaurants in the 1930s, 1940s, and 1950s.

I recognized a few names of well-known Black restaurants such as Paschal’s in Atlanta (est. 1947 as a small sandwich shop), Little Gray Shops #2 and #3 (considered Harlem’s better eating places in the 1930s), and Dooky Chase in New Orleans (like Paschal’s, still going strong today).

There was also a listing for Bagley’s, operated by Black socialite Caroline Bagley in Sheepshead Bay NY, as a kind of tea room with garden dining. A number of other tea rooms are listed, among them the Black Beauty Tea Room in Mount Olive NC, which had the distinction of being raided in 1950 for serving bootleg whiskey.

Probably quite a few restaurants in the Green Book were community institutions in their time, such as Hammond Café in Abilene TX, specializing in spicy chili. Certainly that was true of Harlem’s Aunt Dinah’s Kitchen, run by Broadway actor Richard Huey. Aunt Dinah’s hosted one-act plays and discussion forums in the 1930s and 1940s, and served as an informal support center for actors who needed a place to gather and have a free meal now and then.

Researching restaurants, hotels, etc. listed in the Green Books would be an interesting way to construct a picture of 20th-century Black life before the Civil Rights Act. It would make a good group project.

© Jan Whitaker, 2018

17 Comments

Filed under guides & reviews, patrons, racism

17 responses to “Green Book restaurants

  1. Katie Heflin

    Looking for a hip family restaurant I worked at in the west village NYC near Sheridan square.

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  3. Pingback: Green Books guided black Americans to welcoming restaurants and inns - Food History

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  5. Hi Jan,

    I loved this this article and shared with a friend/co-worker who is interested in these accounts. Thought you’d be interested in her take (as a woman of color) on the Green Book:

    “My understanding that the Green Book was not just important for comfort and enjoyability, but for safety. Trying to use the wrong facility for dining, a room or even bathroom use could end in physical harm or death. The Green Book was used to plan out your trips for everything from getting gas to using the bathroom.”

    • I don’t doubt it a bit, though the sense of danger is not conveyed at all in the Green Books, which have an upbeat attitude overall.

    • Marie Wells

      The Green Book definitely was not Zagat. It was strictly for safety purposes. If it seems to cheery to the outside viewer it had an entirely different meaning to the people that actually had to use it. And, if you’re asking about Los Angeles restaurants and where were blacks allowed to eat. They weren’t. Especially during the period this book was published. The NAACP had to fight tooth and nail to try to get African Americans the ability to be able to eat in restaurants in Los Angeles as most of them they were refused service. If it seems like there weren’t many listed in the book I would say it’s accurate given African American history in Los Angeles.

  6. Great, as always, Jan. You piqued my interest with your mention of Alma Duke Green, so now I’m compelled to do a little digging on her. 🙂

  7. Anonymous

    The Green Books helped African American travelers of all kinds. The biography of Jackie Robinson by Arnold Rampersad describes how when Jackie traveled with his team, he still had to find separate accommodations and restaurants. Thanks for writing about this often overlooked part of American restaurant history.

  8. Jennifer A Thompson

    My aunt, Frencella Bonner owned restaurants in St. Louis for many years during the fifties through the eighties. Black entertainers and notables of sports legends would routinely visit her eating establishments when performing shows or participating in sporting events. Southern Kitchen was the spot for Black people to get a home cooked meal, and not be turned away from a white establishment during the Jim Crow Era in St Louis.

    • I just looked up a few newspaper articles mentioning your aunt’s restaurant, at 4509 Delmar. There was another place with the same name but a different owner at 2617 Franklin. It looks like your aunt’s restaurant was a community institution. I also read that she was appointed by Mayor Cervantes to the city’s Food Service Advisory Council, which I think had a role in establishing sanitary regulations for restaurants.

      • Jennifer A Thompson

        Thanks for the research. Mrs. Bonner also owned a Southern Kitchen at the Franklin location, but closed it to spend more money investing in the Delmar location, which became the busiest location. She was a trailblazer and when the family lost her in 2010, it was a huge loss. Mrs. Bonner lived to 92 and still satisfying appetites until she could no longer do it. She truly enjoyed preparing food, friends, family, celebrities, politicians, and strangers who became friends over many years.

      • Anonymous

        Ms. Whitaker – my sister, Frencella Hudson Bonner also owned the establishment at 2617 Franklin Avenue for a time prior to moving to 4509-15 Delmar. Thanks for your comments. Eloise Hudson Hunt

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