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AlabamaNorth : African-American migrants, community, and working-class activism in Cleveland, 1915-45
1999
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Langston Hughes called it "a great dark tide from the South": the unprecedented influx of blacks into Cleveland that gave the city the nickname "Alabama North." Kimberley L. Phillips reveals the breadth of working class black experiences and activities in Cleveland and the extent to which these were shaped by traditions and values brought from the South. 

Migrants' moves north established complex networks of kin and friends and infused Cleveland with a highly visible southern African American culture. Phillips examines the variety of black fraternal, benevolent, social, and church-based organizations that working class migrants created and demonstrates how these groups prepared the way for new forms of individual and collective activism in workplaces and the city. Giving special consideration to the experiences of working class black women, AlabamaNorth reveals how migrants' expressions of tradition and community gave them a new consciousness of themselves as organized workers and created the underpinning for new forms of black labor activism.

- (Chicago Distribution Center)

Biografía del autor

Kimberley L. Phillips is former Frances L. and Edwin L. Cummings associate professor of history and American studies and co-chair of the Lemon Project Committee at the College of William & Mary. Her books include War! What Is It Good For? Black Freedom Struggles and the U.S. Military from World War II to Iraq. - (Chicago Distribution Center)

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Acknowledgments xiii
Introduction: ``Militancy and Courage'' in AlabamaNorth: African-American Migrants and the Crossroads of Southern Black Culture 1(14)
``Pins'' North: The Routes of African-American Migration to Cleveland
15(42)
Encountering Work: African-American Workers' Experiences in the Cleveland Labor Market, 1915-29
57(41)
``Join a Union'': African-American Workers and Organized Labor, 1915-30
98(29)
A New World in the City: Making Homes in Cleveland
127(34)
``AlabamaNorth'': A Community of Southerners
161(29)
``The Future Is Yours'': Store Boycott Campaigns and Black Workers' Militancy
190(36)
``The Plight of Negro Workers'': Federal Initiatives and African-American Working-Class Militancy during World War II
226(35)
Conclusion: We Will make a Way Somehow: The Legacy of a Southern Past in a Northern City
253(8)
Notes 261(66)
Index 327

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