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#TheRootTrip: Former Tourist Home in Atlanta Retains Some Signs of Its Past Glory
In the 1957 Negro Motorist Green Book, the Connally Tourist Home is located just a block away from Morris Brown College in Atlanta and is a multistory home that was common in the late 19th century. But I was interested in it because it was the first tourist home on this trip that I could…
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#TheRootTrip: In Atlanta, a Mystery. Who Was Ma Sutton?
In the short time that I have to research these Green Book spots, the hardest ones tend to be those that were owned by black women. Even when theyāre called āfamousā or dubbed as āmust visitsā in historical documents, the details about the lives of these female entrepreneurs are often either lost or hard to…
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#TheRootTrip: Ga. on My Mind
Another night on the road, another black-owned hotel stay. This time it was the Hilton Garden Inn Atlanta North/Alpharetta in Alpharetta, Ga., right outside of Atlanta. And yet again, the property is owned by the Capstone Development Group. But Atlanta has a few black-owned hotel options, including properties owned by Robert Johnson (founder and former…
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#TheRootTrip: Chillinā in Style in Birmingham, Ala.
More chillinā at a black-owned hotel! This one is the Residence Inn by Marriott Birmingham Downtown at the University of Alabama-Birmingham at 821 20th St. South, and itās another property held by the black-owned Capstone Development Investment Group. Back in 2013, the group purchased this seven-story, 129-room hotel for $20 million in cash. Youāve gotta…
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#TheRootTrip: Success … and Then … Sadness
As Iāve noted over and over, I donāt know what Iāll find when I go to a Green Book location. Thousands of miles, a few dozen sites, and most are either empty or shells of what they used to be. So when I put 1705 4th Avenue North, Birmingham, Ala., into my GPS for the…
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#TheRootTrip: Martin Luther King Jr. Slept Here
The A.G. Gaston Motel is an important landmark in the civil rights movement and was designated by President Barack Obama as the center of the Birmingham Civil Rights National Monument. Located just a block away from the 16th Street Baptist Church, the site where four black girls lost their lives in 1963 when the Ku…
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#TheRootTrip: A Grand Hotel in the Heart of Meridian, Miss.
#TheRootTrip is a series of long, two- to three-hour drives on the highway as I desperately try to get to small towns before sundown. The trip from Jackson, Miss., to Meridian, Miss., happened in the late afternoon, and I could see a thunderstorm approaching as I tried hard to reach my destination before dark. Whatās…
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#TheRootTrip: Try the Pig Ear Sandwich at the Big Apple Inn, Home of Authentic Southern Cooking in Miss.
You canāt visit Jackson, Miss., a surprisingly progressive city in a very conservative state, without checking out the Big Apple Inn Restaurant on 509 N. Farish St. A delightful hole in the wall that reeks of old, black Mississippi, the Big Apple Inn has become a darling of television shows looking for authentic, unfiltered, black…
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#TheRootTrip: In a Historic District in Jackson, Miss., a Chance at a Rebirth
It was onward to Jackson, Miss., and my first Green Book stop was at the former Shepherds Kitchenette at 604 North Farish St. During Jim Crow segregation, Farish Street was the center of the black business community, home to numerous record companies and restaurants, and it was the original home of Jackson State University. David…
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#TheRootTrip: Donāt Expect to Be Welcome at This Old-School Pool Hall Without a Little Home Training
I know these black men. Iāve known them all of my life. That was my first thought after Iād walked down the darkened hallway, past Stamperās barbershop in Monroe, La., and into the pool hall where a dozen black menāranging in age from mid-30s to āhe been here foreverāāsat around enjoying each otherās presence. Bones…