Black Wall Street San Diego History
Black Wall St San Diego…SAN DIEGO HISTORICAL SOCIETY
Black Pioneers in San Diego 1880 - 1920
By Gail Madyun and Larry Malone
With an essay by Robert Fikes, Jr.
Senior Assistant Librarian San Diego State University
Actually,
the black presence in what is now San Diego County was established long
before whites from the United States began arriving in numbers. During
the Spanish and Mexi can periods blacks, who had accompanied Cortez in
1519 and had been slaves until 1829, as well as mixed-blood California’s
were found at all levels of society. They had been assimilated into the
population of Mexican-ruled California. In fact, Pio Pico, the last
Mexican governor of California, was part black -- his grandmother was
described as a "mulatta" in a census taken in 1790.1 The first known
black from the United States to set foot in San Diego was a sailor named
John Brown who in 1804, while the naval vessel O'Cain was anchored in
San Diego Harbor, jumped ship and successfully deserted.2 When
California entered the Union in 1850 only eight blacks in a total
population of 798 resided in the county. In 1870 there were only
seventeen, but by 1880 there were fifty-five. The great majority came
from the rural South, which is noteworthy in that proportionately fewer
blacks migrating to other parts of California came from the former slave
states.
Before the population boom of the 1880s most of the new
black arrivals were slaves, ex-slaves, or employees of whites whom they
had accompanied. One such person was Nathaniel Harrison, born a slave in
1820 in Tennessee, who journeyed to San Diego in 1848 and became the
county's first permanent black resident. Harrison built his cabin on a
160 acre farm 3,000 feet up on the western slope of Palomar Mountain. He
became the most widely known black of his day and lived to be one
hundred years old. One of the earliest black women to arrive was America
Newton who came from Missouri to settle in the Julian area in 1872.
Unlike Nathaniel Harrison who raised and sold livestock and worked on
nearby ranches, Miss Newton mainly earned her living laundering clothes.
The dusty trail near her cabin was named America Grade in her honor.
Likewise, Nathaniel Harrison Grade appears today on a street sign in
Pauma Valley leading motorists up a road past the location where his
cabin once stood.
Blacks in the early period preferred living
in the rural areas which offered more economic advantages than life in
the city. There were at least five farmers in the 1860s and 1870s: James
Hamilton, James Brown, Jesse Tull, Thomas Jackson, and Fred Coleman. At
one point the majority of blacks in the county were inhabitants of the
Julian area. It was in Julian that blacks made their presence most felt.
The Bon Ton Restaurant, owned by Ernest Morgan and Elvira Price, was
the only business of its type operated by blacks. Issac Atkinson owned a
bakery there before moving to San Diego. Fred Coleman discovered gold
in a creek in Julian in 1869 which launched the county's first gold
rush. A boom town sprang up near that spot called Coleman City. Mr.
Coleman later constructed and operated toll roads between El Cajon and
his boom town. But probably the most important black success story was
that of Margaret and Albert Robinson, who in 1887 built, and for
twenty-eight years owned and operated the Hotel Robinson. Today, located
at 2032 Main Street, this charming structure is known as the Julian
Hotel. It is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and is
the "oldest continuously operated hotel in Southern California."3
San
Diego's sluggish economy picked up during the last quarter of the
nineteenth century when rail connections were finally made to the north
and east.4 By 1890 San Diego had a downtown and the city's black
population had risen to 289. There were black business proprietors in
the city who catered to all races. Henry H. Brown ran a saloon and kept
six "loose" women on the premises. George Millen and Daniel Fry operated
blacksmith shops until their luck ran out. Edward Anderson owned the
IXL Laundry between 1897 and 1909, a hog farm in Coronado, a garbage
collection service, and a mortuary that is still in operation today. But
the average black man in San Diego worked as a servant or as an
unskilled laborer. There was an assortment of other occupations which
blacks felt lucky to have such as teamster, cook, seaman, porter,
bootblack, janitor, waiter, and longshoreman. Although these occupations
were hardly prestigious ones, they were the best blacks could aspire to
at that time and some of the most prominent and respected citizens in
the black community were able to maintain a decent standard of living
through hard work. Only three black professionals lived or worked in the
county in the 1890s. A Dr. Burney, who was probably retired, was said
to have owned a prosperous ranch just outside the city limits.5 The
first black to be admitted to the San Diego bar in 1891 was Joseph H.
Steward, formerly of South Carolina. The third professional, S.A.
McFarland, was a federal government clerk who had been quite active in
Minnesota Republican politics before moving here because of failing
health.
It was not until well after the Civil War that whites
gave up their attempts to keep blacks from entering the state. Before
1870 a black could not testify against a white in a court of law, vote
in public elections, intermarry with whites, or farm on certain lands.
Of course, hotels, restaurants, theaters and other public accommodations
were either segregated or completely off limits to them. Their status
in San Diego was no better or worse than that of other blacks living
outside the South. Though there were no lynchings or organized white
opposition to harass them, they were, by and large, treated as outcasts
and were referred to in the newspapers as "uncle," "aunt," or "nigger."
But
even before the turn of century there were those courageous blacks who
protested discrimination. The best example was that of businessman
Edward Anderson and his wife, Mary, who were not allowed to take
orchestra circle seats they had purchased tickets for at the Fisher
Opera House in 1897. They were told to stand in the balcony or leave.
The Andersons sued and won a judgement of $150. They lost the case on
appeal but it represented an historic first of its kind in Southern
California.
Politics and socializing was also a concern of San
Diego's black citizens before the century closed. Between 1885 and 1900
the black population rose dramatically, but was still less than one
percent of the total. A real community was present in the city and only a
handful remained in the hinterland. The racial climate seemed to have
improved, at least on the surface, and blacks came together to form
groups in which they could share and express themselves in ways which
were not permitted in a predominantly white setting. Since the Civil
War, blacks had been staunch Republicans and there were no less than
four local political clubs organized by them: the Colored Voters
Political Club in 1886, the Silver Cate Colored Republican Club in 1890,
the McFarland Club in 1892 and the McKinley Club in 1896. Political
heresy would not be tolerated as Issac Atkinson learned after he sold
his bakery in Julian, moved to San Diego and started the first
black-owned newspaper in 1892, the Colonizer. His Democratic views
prompted the Republican San Diego Union to label him a "Judas" and black
Democrats as "freaks of nature."6
Also in that year Reverend
G.W. Brown presented visiting President Benjamin Harris with an
artistically designed red, blue, and gold printed folio as a souvenir on
behalf of the city's black citizenry. San Diego's black pioneers not
only took their politics seriously but were enthusiastic about their
entertainment. In the Gay Nineties the cakewalk was the popular dance
craze and black couples entered and won local contests. A brass band
organized by blacks in 1893 with thirteen musicians first performed with
shiny new instruments at the corner of Seventh and H. A desire for
social recognition brought together members of the Hotel Florence Social
Club. One evening in 1891 they waltzed in elegant attire into the wee
hours of the morning to the music of Professor Forbes and his five piece
orchestra. The Violet Club, founded by women in 1899, admitted only the
black elite of San Diego.
The Acme Social Club was formed
after the turn of the century as were several other social and
professional groups. Fidelity Lodge No. 10 included as members Edward
Anderson and Walter W. Meadows, the city's only black jeweler, and later
vaulted R. C. Marshall of Coronado to Grand Master of California's
Prince Hall Masons. To satisfy the need for religious communion Second
Baptist Church and Bethel A.M.E. Church were founded between 1886 and
1888, and Mt. Zion Baptist Church in 1900.
In the 1880s and
1890s the majority of blacks lived in or near downtown San Diego where
they rented, lived with their employers or in an abode on their
property. As their numbers grew and their economic status improved some
moved into more expensive neighborhoods further away from downtown.
By
1900 twenty-four black families in San Diego and seven in outlying
areas owned their own homes which were mostly constructed by them,
demonstrating initiative, self-reliance, and varying degrees of
technical skill. Homeowners like Amos Hudgins, a barber shop owner who
lived in Coronado, and city employee Issac Wooden of Logan Heights --
two of the more socially prominent blacks in the first quarter of this
century -- were fortunate not to have been affected by restrictive
covenants in property deeds. This was a legal maneuver used increasingly
by whites after 1888 to deny blacks their chosen place of residence. It
ultimately helped to concentrate them in southeast San Diego, a clearly
observable development by 1920.
The early 1900s produced a number of
colorful personalities. For example Reuben Williams (a.k.a. Reuben the
Guide), who wore a Mexican sombrero, a serape, and a sheriff's star on
his vest when he gave his guided tours. It was said that he always got
top price for his tour of Tijuana because when he approached the Tijuana
River he would stop his mules and tell his passengers: "Dollar tickets
keep your seats, 75-cent tickets walk and 50-cent tickets push."7
One
of the most active pioneers was Solomon Johnson who came from
Evansville, Indiana in the late 1880s. Johnson was a founder of perhaps
the first black church in the city, Bethel A.M.E. Church. He also helped
found several social organizations and brought in a chapter of the
NAACP. Possibly the most brilliant orator, writer, and intellect ever to
reside in San Diego's black community was Reverend George Washington
Woodbey, a self-educated ex-slave from Johnson County, Tennessee who had
been active in politics in Kansas and Nebraska before coming here in
1902. His involvement in the Socialist Party eventually led to his
ouster as pastor of Mt. Zion Baptist Church, but he continued lecturing
and writing in Southern California. One of his booklets, What to Do and
How to Do It, or Socialism vs Capitalism, was translated into three
foreign languages and gained him international renown.8
Recently, the existence of seventeen black-owned establishments in downtown San Diego's Gaslamp Quarter between 1880 and 1930 was confirmed -- the most fashionable of these being the Hotel Douglas, built in 1924 at 206 Market Street by businessman George Ramsey -- where some of the city's best entertainment could be found.
There is a considerable amount of research yet to be done on San Diego's blacks in this century. Sufficient scholarly attention would likely uncover many more interesting personalities and notable achievements of the city's black community and its contribution to the area's progress.
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