Ron Chernow's new Mark Twain bio led me back to Justin Kaplan's 1966 bio, which has now led me to this evocation of New York in the decade of my birth. A different world. I wouldn't call it "great"... (After he retired From baseball Jackie Robinson went to work For chock full O. nuts, giving the company an undeserved "progressive" reputation).
"The owner of Chock full o’ Nuts, a white man named William Black, advertised in the tabloids for “light colored counter help,” an example of nth-degree job discrimination. The separation of whites and blacks was an embedded fact of American life, “civil rights” an unfamiliar phrase, Harlem another world. In 1956 the city’s nearly eight million population was 83 percent white, only 11 percent black. Except downtown in the Village and in other artistic and intellectual enclaves, white people and black people did not mingle. We were accustomed to seeing only white faces as patrons in theaters, restaurants, hotels, and sports arenas. It was only in 1947, when Jackie Robinson, wearing a Brooklyn Dodger uniform, trotted out to second base at Ebbets Field, that the color line in major league baseball was finally breached."
"Back Then: Two Literary Lives in 1950s New York" by Anne Bernays, Justin Kaplan: https://a.co/0BpjOPs
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