Quote:
Originally Posted by edale
I'm interested to hear more about this. I know there are some famous black Pittsburghers, and I saw the August Wilson AA Cultural Center downtown last time I was in the city, but Pittsburgh seems decidedly less black, and less culturally influenced by its black population than its peer/nearby cities.
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Yes, Pittsburgh definitely is decidedly less black than its peer/nearby cities, and significantly less influenced as a city by its black population. That's the sad and shameful part, considering the immense contributions to black American history.
Pittsburgh has had a difficult racial history, to say the least, and the Pittsburgh region's fractured physical geography never allowed the black population to reach a critical mass to become more politically visible and influential locally with black mayors and other leaders earlier on... the black population centers were just too spread out up and down the river valley industrial cities and towns and far apart from each other to coalesce for significant political power in the city.
When the money was flowing in the Pittsburgh region like nowhere else on Earth at the time, life was pretty good for all, and Pittsburgh had a large black middle and (for the time) upper-middle classes... with the best public high schools in the nation being fully integrated; Schenley and Westinghouse high schools both being nationally-notable foundations of Pittsburgh's black renaissance. And then, life was rather suddenly not good for all... and of course, the black population felt it the hardest and the most quickly with the demise, then collapse of the steel industry.
While a fraction of the size of NY or Chicago, Pittsburgh is where the
Courier was founded, written, and published. Joe Louis, Jackie Robinson, and FDR/Democratic Party don't exist without the influence of the Pittsburgh
Courier. The most widely-circulated and most influential black newspaper in America.
Pittsburgh Crawfords and Homestead Grays... anyone who knows baseball, well those team names are really all that needs to be said... two of the greatest Negro League franchises in the same town, and the teams/owners who solidified the Negro Leagues as true stable, professional organizations. The first instance of a black-owned and black-funded and black-built sports stadium and field in the nation was Greenlee Field in the Hill District, home field of the Crawfords. Josh Gibson, Cool Papa Bell, Oscar Charleston, Buck Leonard, Judy Johnson, Satchel Paige, Gus Greenlee, Willie Foster, Smokey Joe Williams, Boojum Wilson, Cum Posey... these are the names in the absolute upper echelons of black baseball royalty... very likely the best baseball players of the era, and among the best baseball players of all time.
Early industrialist
Cap Posey was reportedly the wealthiest black man in the nation in the early 1900s, the nation's first black professional engineer, business associate of Carnegie and Frick. His son
Cum Posey was "the Michael Jordan" of the 1900s-1920s; who founded the Monticello Athletic Assn. and
Leondi Big Five... these were the teams that largely introduced basketball to black people... the "Black Fives" or "Black Basketball"; Cum is the only person in both the baseball and basketball halls of fame. (It is a crime that Pittsburgh does not have an NBA team.)
Loendi Social & Literary Club, the nation’s most prestigious private club for African Americans, located in Pittsburgh's famed
Hill District... which was the epicenter of it all, and also was home to the Pythian Temple, Hurricane Lounge, and
Crawford Grill among others... legendary sites for black jazz. The roster of jazz musicians from Pittsburgh is among the most impressive in the history of the musical form ... these are just some of internationally known jazz musisicians from that specific era in the Hill District (with absolute luminaries in bold):
Art Blakey
Lou Blackburn
Ray Brown
Paul Chambers
Sonny Clark
Kenny Clarke
Ray Crawford
Billy Eckstine
Roy Eldridge
Erroll Garner
Slide Hampton
Earl Fatha Hines
Joe Harris
Lena Horne
Ahmad Jamal
Eddie Jefferson
Grover Mitchell
Horace Parlan
Wyatt Ruther
Dakota Staton
Billy Strayhorn
Maxine Sullivan
Stanley Turrentine
Mary Lou Williams
I mean, fuck... look at those names. If you know anything about jazz, the you know these people make up a significant history of it. The Hill District was a major center of black culture back in the day, one of THE major African-American neighborhoods in the US. Aside from Harlem, there arguably is not a more culturally-influential historic black neighborhood in America... referred to as the
"Crossroads of the World" by Harlem Renaissance poet Claude McKay, due to its serving as the East-West nexus for black culture and black entrepreneurism. This provided the setting to engender Hill District native
August Wilson's work... he being the most prominent black American playwright... and one of the best American playwrights, period.
Yet, it sucks that no one really knows the very deep and rich black history of Pittsburgh... and much of that is due to the fact that city "leaders" plowed much of the neighborhood down by the 1960s. Tragic.