Whiteness in Plain View: A History of Racial Exclusion in Minnesota

Whiteness in Plain View: A History of Racial Exclusion in Minnesota

by Chad Montrie
Whiteness in Plain View: A History of Racial Exclusion in Minnesota

Whiteness in Plain View: A History of Racial Exclusion in Minnesota

by Chad Montrie

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Overview

Whiteness in Plain View examines the ways white residents in towns, cities, and suburbs across Minnesota acted to intimidate, control, remove, and keep out African Americans over the course of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Their methods ranged from anonymous threats, vandalism, and mob violence to restrictive housing covenants, realtor deceit, and mortgage discrimination, and they were aided by support from local, state, and federal government agencies as well as openly complicit public officials. What they did was not an anomaly or aberration, in some particular place or passing moment, but rather common and continuous, prevalent throughout the state from decade to decade. Additionally, the all-white communities that resulted became their own justification, supporting the notion (among whites) that blacks' supposed racial failings must be what kept them out or demonstrating (to whites) that blacks wanted to live with their own race.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781681342115
Publisher: Minnesota Historical Society Press
Publication date: 02/01/2022
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Sales rank: 738,158
File size: 37 MB
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About the Author

Chad Montrie is a professor in the history department at the University of Massachusetts, Lowell. He is the author of four books, including The Myth of Silent Spring: Rethinking the Origins of American Environmentalism. His article "In that Very Northern City: Recovering a Forgotten Struggle for Racial Integration in Duluth" appeared in the Summer 2020 issue of Minnesota History magazine.

Read an Excerpt

When workers in Austin began organizing a union at the George A. Hormel plant in the early 1930s, there was not a single African American in the packinghouse, although John Winkels, an employee there, later claimed that the company briefly employed a group of Black men from out of town during the campaign. He was involved in chasing them away. “They hired forty of them and they put them in the plant all at one time,” he remembered, and the whole lot lived in “the jungles,” a wooded area just east of the packinghouse. “We told them after work, ‘You better get the hell out of town because you’re not going to come in here tomorrow.’” To make good on the threat, that night Winkels and other White workers armed themselves with clubs, went to the woods, broke up the cooking fires, and ran the African American workers out. “After that,” he said, “they didn’t come in no more because they knew [Hormel] couldn’t hire them.” Likewise, the remaining local Black residents also knew not to bother. “We had Frank,” Winkels recalled. “He was shining shoes in the barbershop and then afterwards he would bellhop for the bus, and everybody liked him.” But, he noted, Frank would “never go in the packinghouse because he knew we didn’t want him there.”

Table of Contents

Introduction
Chapter 1 “The Master Race of the World Is Caucasian”: Indian Uprising, Mass Hanging, and Forced Removal
Chapter 2 “They All Must Be Taught Their Duty”: Barbers, Porters, Washerwomen, and Inmates
Chapter 3 Not “a Negro Town”: Packinghouse Workers and Whiteness in Austin
Chapter 4 “In That Very Northern City”: Making the Color Line in Duluth
Chapter 5 “A Bigoted, Prejudiced, Hateful Little Area”: Racial Exclusion in Edina
Chapter 6 “This Vicious Vice”: Black Removal in St. Paul
Chapter 7 “The First Negro Family on Our Block”: A Housing Integration Campaign in Bloomington
Conclusion
Endnotes
Bibliography
Index
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