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Pullman porter

Pullman porters were men hired to work for the railroads as porters on sleeping cars.[1] Starting shortly after the American Civil War, George Pullman sought out former slaves to work on his sleeper cars. Their job was to carry passengers’ baggage, shine shoes, set up and maintain the sleeping berths, and serve passengers. Pullman porters served American railroads from the late 1860s until the Pullman Company ceased operations on December 31, 1968, though some sleeping-car porters continued working on cars operated by the railroads themselves and, beginning in 1971, Amtrak. The term "porter" has been superseded in modern American usage by "sleeping car attendant", with the former term being considered "somewhat derogatory".[2]

A Pullman porter assisting a passenger with her luggage

Until the 1960s, Pullman porters were exclusively black, and have been widely credited with contributing to the development of the black middle class in America. Under the leadership of A. Philip Randolph, Pullman porters formed the first all-black union, the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters in 1925. The union was instrumental in the advancement of the Civil Rights Movement. Porters worked under the supervision of a Pullman conductor (distinct from the railroad's own conductor in overall charge of the train), who was invariably white.[3]

In addition to sleeping cars, Pullman also provided parlor cars and dining cars used by some railroads that did not operate their own; the dining cars were typically staffed with African-American cooks and waiters, under the supervision of a white steward:[4] "With the advent of the dining car, it was no longer possible to have the conductor and porters do double duty: a dining car required a trained staff" and "depending on the train and the sophistication of the meals, a staff could consist of a dozen men."[5]

Pullman also employed African-American maids on deluxe trains to care for women's needs, especially women with children; in 1926, Pullman employed about 200 maids and over 10,000 porters.[6] Maids assisted ladies with bathing, gave manicures and dressed hair, sewed and pressed clothing, shined shoes, and helped care for children. The Central of Georgia Railroad continued using this service as a selling point in their advertisements for the Nancy Hanks well into the 1950s.[7][8][9]

History edit

 
Pullman advertising poster, 1894, depicting a Pullman waiter

Prior to the 1860s, the concept of sleeping cars on railroads had not been widely developed. George Pullman pioneered sleeping accommodations on trains, and by the late 1860s, he was hiring only African-Americans to serve as porters. After the Civil War ended in 1865 Pullman knew that there was a large pool of former slaves who would be looking for work; he also had a very clear racial conception.[10] He was aware that most Americans, unlike the wealthy, did not have personal servants in their homes.[citation needed] Pullman also knew the wealthy were accustomed to being served by a liveried waiter or butler, but to staff the Pullman cars with "properly humble" workers in uniform was something the American middle class had never experienced.[citation needed] Hence, part of the appeal of traveling on sleeping cars was, in a sense, to have an upper class experience.[citation needed]

From the start, Pullman's ads promoting his new sleeper service featured these porters. Initially, they were one of the features that most clearly distinguished his carriages from those of competitors, but eventually nearly all would follow his lead, hiring African-Americans as porters, cooks, waiters and Red Caps (railway station porters).[10] According to the Museum of the American Railroad:

The Pullman Company was a separate business from the railroad lines. It owned and operated sleeping cars that were attached to most long-distance passenger trains. Pullman was essentially a chain of hotels on wheels ... Pullman provided a Porter (attendant) that prepared the beds in the evening and made them in the morning. Porters attended to additional needs such as room service from the dining car, sending and receiving telegrams, shining shoes, and valet service.[2]

 
Pullman porter making an upper berth aboard the B&O Capitol Limited bound for Chicago

While the pay was very low by the standards of the day, in an era of significant racial prejudice, being a Pullman porter was one of the best jobs available for African-American men. Thus, for black men, while this was an opportunity, at the same time it was also an experience of being stereotyped as the servant class and having to take a lot of abuse. Many passengers called every porter "George", as if he were George Pullman's "boy" (servant), a practice that was born in the South where slaves were named after their slavemasters/owners. The only ones who protested were other men named George, who founded the Society for the Prevention of Calling Sleeping Car Porters George, or SPCSCPG, which eventually claimed 31,000 members.[10] Although the SPCSCPG was more interested in defending the dignity of its white members than in achieving any measure of racial justice, it nevertheless had some effects for all porters. In 1926, the SPCSCPG persuaded the Pullman Company to install small racks in each car, displaying a card with the given name of the porter on duty. Of the 12,000 porters and waiters then working for Pullman, only 362 turned out to be named George. Stanley G. Grizzle, a former Canadian porter, titled his autobiography, My Name's Not George: The Story of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters.[11]

Porters were not paid a livable wage and needed to rely on tips to earn enough to make a living. Walter Biggs, son of a Pullman porter, spoke of memories of being a Pullman porter as told to him by his father:

One of the most remarkable stories I liked hearing about was how when Jackie Gleason would ride ... all the porters wanted to be on that run. The reason why? Not only because he gave every porter $100.00, but it was just the fun, the excitement, the respect that he gave the porters. Instead of their names being George, he called everybody by their first name. He always had like a piano in the car and they sang and danced and had a great time. He was just a fun person to be around.[12]

The number of porters employed by railroads declined as sleeping car service dwindled in the 1960s as passenger numbers dwindled due to competition from auto and air travel, and sleeping car services were discontinued on many trains. By 1969, the ranks of the Pullman sleeping car porters had declined to 325 men with an average age of 63.[13]

Duties and wages edit

 
A porter is shown vacuuming the carpet in a Great Northern Railway parlor car, circa 1910.
 
Porters serving in a dining car, circa 1927

A porter was expected to greet passengers, carry baggage, make up the sleeping berths, serve food and drinks brought from the dining car, shine shoes, and keep the cars tidy. He needed to be available night and day to wait on the passengers. He was expected to always smile; thus the porters often called the job, ironically, "miles of smiles".[14]

According to historian Greg LeRoy, "A Pullman Porter was really kind of a glorified hotel maid and bellhop in what Pullman called a hotel on wheels. The Pullman Company thought of the porters as a piece of equipment, just like another button on a panel – the same as a light switch or a fan switch."[9] Porters worked 400 hours a month or 11,000 miles, sometimes as much as 20 hours at a stretch. They were expected to arrive at work several hours early to prepare their car, on their own time; they were charged whenever their passengers stole a towel or a water pitcher. On overnight trips, they were allocated only three to four hours of sleep – and that was deducted from their pay.

A 1926 report[15] by the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters (which finally achieved recognition by the Pullman Company in 1937), using the results of a survey by the Labor Bureau, Inc., stated that the minimum monthly wage for a regular porter was $72.50, with the average being $78.11, and tips on average amounting to $58.15; however, porters had to pay for their own meals, lodging, uniforms, and shoe-shine supplies, amounting to an average of $33.82 a month. Overtime pay of 60 cents per 100 miles was paid only for monthly service in excess of 11,000 miles, or about 400 hours of road service in a month. Maids received a minimum of $70 a month, with the same overtime provision, but they received fewer tips. By contrast, Pullman conductors, who already had a recognized union to bargain for them, earned a minimum $150 a month for 240 hours' work. The company offered a health, disability, and life insurance plan for $28 a year, and paid a pension of $18 a month to porters who reached age 70 and had at least 20 years of service. The BSCP booklet also reports that in 1925 the Pullman Company paid out over $10 million in dividends to stockholders from an aggregate net company income of more than $19 million.

"It didn't pay a livable wage, but they made a living with the tips that they got, because the salary was nothing," says Lyn Hughes, founder of the A. Philip Randolph Pullman Porter Museum.[16] The porters were expected to pay for their own meals and uniforms and the company required them to pay for the shoe polish used to shine passengers' shoes daily.[16] There was little job security, and the Pullman Company inspectors were known for suspending porters for trivial reasons.[9]

Characterization edit

 
Pullman porter photographed at Chicago Union Station, 1943

According to Larry Tye, who authored Rising from the Rails: The Pullman Porters and the Making of the Black Middle Class, George Pullman was aware that as former chattel slaves, the men he hired had already received the perfect training and "knew just how to take care of any whim that a customer had". Tye further explained that Pullman was aware that there was never a question that a traveler would be embarrassed by running into one of the porters and having them remember something they had done during their trip that they did not want their wife or husband, perhaps, to know about.[1]

Black historian and journalist Thomas Fleming began his career as a bellhop and then spent five years as a cook for the Southern Pacific Railroad. Fleming was the co-founder and executive editor of Northern California's largest weekly African-American newspaper, the Sun-Reporter.[17] In a weekly series of articles entitled "Reflections on Black History", he wrote of the contradictions in the life of a Pullman porter:

Pullman went on to become the largest single employer of [black people] in America, and the job of Pullman porter was, for most of the 101-year history of the Pullman Company, one of the very best a Black man could aspire to, in status and eventually in pay. The porter reigned supreme on George's sleeper cars. But the very definition of their jobs, of their kingdom, roiled in contradictions. The porter was servant as well as host. He had the best job in his community and the worst on the train. He could be trusted with his white passengers' children and their safety, but only for the five days of a cross-country trip. He shared his riders' most private moments but, to most, remained an enigma if not an enemy.[18]

In 2008, Amtrak became aware of The Pullman Porters National Historic Registry of African American Railroad Employees, a five-year research project conducted by Dr. Lyn Hughes, for the A. Philip Randolph Pullman Porter Museum, and published in 2007. Amtrak enlisted the APR Pullman Porter Museum, and partnered with them using the registry to locate and honor surviving Porters through a series of regional ceremonies. Amtrak also attempted to locate additional survivors in order to interview them for a promotional project. A few remaining living former Pullman porters were found, all of whom were in their 90s or over 100 years old at that time. The project coordinator remarked, "Even today, observers are struck by how elegant the elderly men are. When we find them, they are dapper. They are men, even at this age, who wear suits and ties."[19]

Unionization edit

 
Abraham Lincoln Pullman sleeper car – each car received a name.
 
William Crooks locomotive sleeping car, on display in Duluth, Minnesota

As early as 1900, Porters started to rally and organize for better wages and treatment. Porters who worked an average of 300-400 hours per month, were paid a fixed monthly wage regardless of hours or length of trips.[20] They were also subjected to easy dismissal or termination based on minor or false accusations by mainly white passengers. Initial efforts were largely unsuccessful and also increased risk of retributory termination for attempting to unionize.[20]

The Order of Sleeping Car Conductors was organized on February 20, 1918, in Kansas City, Missouri. Members had to be white males;[21] because the order did not admit Black people, A. Philip Randolph began organizing the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters.[22] Using the motto "Fight or Be Slaves", on August 25, 1925, 500 porters met in Harlem and decided to make an effort to organize. Under Randolph's leadership the first black union, the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, was formed and slowly working conditions and salaries improved.

By forming the first black labor union, the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, Pullman porters also laid the groundwork for the Civil Rights Movement, which began in the 1950s. Union organizer and former Pullman porter E. D. Nixon played a crucial role in organizing the landmark Montgomery bus boycott in Alabama in 1955. It was he who bailed Rosa Parks out of jail after she refused to move on the bus, and who selected her as the figure to build the boycott around.[19]

By the 1960s, between the decline of the passenger rail system and the cultural shifts in American society, the Pullman porters' contribution became obscured, becoming for some in the African-American community a symbol of subservience to white cultural and economic domination.[1]

The Pullman Company went out of business in 1969, and the railroads no longer followed the practice of hiring only black men as porters. In 1978, the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters merged with the larger Brotherhood of Railway and Airline Clerks.[23]

Contribution to a black middle class edit

The black community looked up to Pullman porters and many people credit them as significant contributors to the development of America's black middle class. Black historian and civil-rights activist Timuel Black observed in a 2013 interview:

[The Pullman porters] were good looking, clean and immaculate in their dress. Their style was quite manly, their language was carefully crafted, so that they had a sense of intelligence about them. They were good role models for young men ... [B]eing a Pullman porter was a prestigious position because it offered a steady income and an opportunity to travel across the country, which was rare for [black people] at that time.[24][12]

In the late 19th century, Pullman porters were among the only people in their communities to travel extensively. Consequently, they became a conduit of new information and ideas from the wider world to their communities. Many Pullman porters supported community projects, including schools, and saved rigorously to ensure that their children were able to obtain an education and thus better employment. Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall and former San Francisco Mayor Willie Brown were descendants of Pullman porters.[1] Marshall was also a porter himself, as were Malcolm X and the photojournalist Gordon Parks.[25] Berkeley, California Councilman, U.S. Congressman, and Oakland, California Mayor Ron Dellums was also a descendant of Pullman porters. His father was Verney Dellums, a Pullman porter and a longshoreman. His uncle, C.L. Dellums, was a leader in the Brotherhood of Pullman Car Porters union. Ron Dellums served fourteen terms as a Member of the U.S. House of Representatives. [26]

A. Philip Randolph Pullman Porter Museum edit

 
A. Philip Randolph Pullman Porter Museum, Chicago

In 1995, Lyn Hughes founded the A. Philip Randolph Pullman Porter Museum to celebrate both the life of A. Philip Randolph and the role of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters and other African-Americans in the U.S. labor movement.[27] Located in South Side, Chicago and housed in one of the original rowhouses built by George Pullman to house workers,[28] it is part of the U.S. Department of the Interior's Pullman National Historic Landmark District. The museum houses a collection of artifacts and documents related to the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters.[29][30] Additionally, in 2001, the museum began compiling a national registry of black railroad employees who worked for the railroad from the late 1800s to 1969.[19][31]

Recognition edit

In 2008, Amtrak, in partnership with the A. Philip Randolph Museum, honored Pullman porters in Chicago. Museum founder Lyn Hughes spoke at the event saying, "It's significant when an organization like Amtrak takes the time to honor those who contributed directly to its own history. It's also very appropriate as it's the culmination of the effort to create the Pullman Porter Registry. We started the Registry with Amtrak and now we're coming full circle with its completion and the honoring of these great African American men." Hughes is also author of An Anthology of Respect: The Pullman Porter National Historic Registry.[32]

In 2009, as part of Black History Month, Amtrak honored Pullman porters in Oakland, California. An AARP journalist writes, "They were dignified men who did undignified labor. They made beds and cleaned toilets. They shined shoes, dusted jackets, cooked meals and washed dishes in cramped and rolling quarters."[33] Amtrak invited five retired members of The Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters to speak at the event. The eldest of the five, Lee Gibson,[34] age 98, spoke of his journey to the event (by rail) saying, "It was nice. I got the service I used to give." He spoke of his years as porter with fondness saying, It was a wonderful life."[35]

In 2009 Philadelphia honored about 20 of the 200 former Pullman employees who were still alive at that time as part of National Train Day. Speaking to Michele Norris of NPR, former cook and porter Frank Rollins, 93, said "the railway wanted Southern boys to run the dining cars because 'they thought they had a certain personality and a certain demeanor that satisfied the Southern passengers better than the boys who came from Chicago.'" Rollins also spoke of the racist comments that black men experienced but commented on positive experiences as well. He recalled, "I used to have a little speech that I'd make. I would walk into the car, and I would say, 'May I have your attention please. My name is Frank Rollins. If you can't remember that, that's OK. You can call me porter – it's right here on the cap, you can be able to remember that. Just don't call me 'boy' and don't call me George.'"[36]

In August 2013, the A. Philip Randolph Pullman Porter Museum celebrated the 50 year anniversary of the historic March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom (also known as "The Great March on Washington"), one of the largest political rallies for human rights in United States history.[37] Interviewed in a neighborhood newspaper, founder Lyn Hughes suggested that some people in the Chicago area may prefer to celebrate the anniversary of the march in their own community rather than travel to Washington. She added that many people are unaware that Asa Philip Randolph was the initial activist who inspired the March on Washington Movement.[24][38] Scheduled activities included speakers and screenings of films related to black labor history. Two organizers said that two former Pullman porters, Milton Jones[39] (age 98) and Benjamin Gaines[40] (age 90), were expected to attend.[24]

Notable Pullman porters edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d "Pullman Porters Helped Build Black Middle Class". NPR.org. National Public Radio. May 7, 2009. Retrieved 12 March 2018.
  2. ^ a b . Museum of the American Railroad. Archived from the original on 13 March 2018. Retrieved 12 March 2018.
  3. ^ Powe, Jr., Lucas A. (2018). America's Lone Star Constitution: How Supreme Court Cases from Texas Shape the Nation. Oakland: University of California Press. p. 111. ISBN 978-0520297814. Retrieved 12 March 2018.
  4. ^ Porterfield, James D. (1993). Dining By Rail: The History and Recipes of America's Golden Age of Railroad Cuisine. New York: St. Martin's Griffin. p. 79. ISBN 9780312187118. Retrieved 12 March 2018.
  5. ^ Quinzio, Jeri (2014). Food on the Rails: The Golden Era of Railroad Dining. Lanham, Maryland: Rowman & Littlefield. p. 27. ISBN 978-1442227330. Retrieved 12 March 2018.
  6. ^ Chateauvert, Melinda (1998). Marching Together: Women of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters. Urbana and Chicago: University of Illinois Press. pp. 22–27. ISBN 0252066367. Retrieved 12 March 2018. maid.
  7. ^ Tye, Larry. "Interview with Larry Tye". Npr.org. Retrieved 2011-11-09.
  8. ^ Cavanaugh, Maureen (23 March 2010). "The African-American Railroad Experience". KPBS.org. Retrieved 2013-07-19.
  9. ^ a b c http://www.goodmantheatre.org/Global/PPB%20Study%20Guide%20for%20web.pdf[permanent dead link]
  10. ^ a b c Lawrence Tye (2011-05-05). "Choosing Servility To Staff America's Trains | Alicia Patterson Foundation". Aliciapatterson.org. Retrieved 2013-07-19.
  11. ^ Ito, Gail Arlene (2008-04-16). "Stanley G. Grizzle (1918- ) • The Black Past: Remembered and Reclaimed". Retrieved 2021-02-26.
  12. ^ a b "Pullman Porters, The: From Servitude to Civil Rights". WTTW. Retrieved 2013-07-19.
  13. ^ "The Sad Plight of Passenger Service". The Meriden Journal. 6 January 1969. Retrieved 14 November 2013.
  14. ^ "Miles of Smiles - About Pullman Porters". Paul Wagner Films. Retrieved 2013-07-19.
  15. ^ (PDF). New York: Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters. 1926. Archived from the original (PDF) on 14 March 2018. Retrieved 14 March 2018.
  16. ^ a b "Pullman Porters, The: From Servitude to Civil Rights - WTTW". interactive.wttw.com. Retrieved 2021-08-15.
  17. ^ The Columbus Free Press
  18. ^ "Reflections on Black History". Freepress.org. Retrieved 2013-07-19.
  19. ^ a b c Ron (2012-04-26). "US Slave: Pullman Porters". Usslave.blogspot.de. Retrieved 2014-02-15.
  20. ^ a b Tye, Larry (2004). Rising from the Rails : Pullman Porters and the Making of the Black Middle Class (1st ed.). Henry Holt. pp. 75–112.
  21. ^ Stewart, Estelle May (1936). Handbook of American trade-unions: 1936 edition. U. S. Govt. Print. Off. for the United States. Bureau of Labor Statistics. pp. 252–253. Retrieved 2013-08-07.
  22. ^ "Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters". Windsor Mosaic Website. Retrieved 2013-08-07.
  23. ^ "Miles of Smiles - About Pullman Porters - Paul Wagner Films". www.paulwagnerfilms.com. Retrieved 2021-08-15.
  24. ^ a b c . Chicago: Dnainfo.com. 2013-08-07. Archived from the original on 2014-02-25. Retrieved 2014-02-15.
  25. ^ Harry Bruinius (2008-02-29). "Pullman porters tell tales of a train ride through history". CSMonitor.com. Retrieved 2014-02-15.
  26. ^ History, Art & Archives, U.S. House of Representatives, “DELLUMS, Ronald V.,” (2023-04-23). "DELLUMS, Ronald V." U.S. House of Representatives. Retrieved 2023-04-22.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link),
  27. ^ . Archived from the original on 2008-05-15. Retrieved 2009-03-09.
  28. ^ "Chicago - Chicago : News : Politics : Things To Do : Sports". Chicago Sun-Times.
  29. ^ . Encore.org. Archived from the original on 2013-12-02. Retrieved 2014-02-15.
  30. ^ . Archived from the original on 2014-03-29. Retrieved 2014-03-28.
  31. ^ Outskirts Press Self Publishing Presents An Anthology Of Respect The Pullman Porters National Historic Registry by Lyn Hughes
  32. ^ "Amtrak Celebrates National Train Day with Ceremony Honoring Pullman Porters in Chicago". Cruising the Past. Retrieved March 14, 2018.
  33. ^ Zielenziger, Michael. "Pullman Porters Take Their Place in History". AARP. Retrieved March 13, 2018.
  34. ^ Lowe, Frederick. . BlackMansStreetToday. Archived from the original on March 15, 2018. Retrieved March 14, 2018.
  35. ^ "The Oakland Tribune tells the story of Pullman Porters. These gracious and hard working men paved the way for the African-American middle class and provided first class professional service aboard the largest hotel system ever created on wheels". Cruising the Past. Retrieved March 14, 2018.
  36. ^ "Former Pullman Porter Subtly Confronted Racism". NPR.org. Retrieved March 13, 2018.
  37. ^ Bayard Rustin Papers (1963-08-28), March on Washington (Program), National Archives and Records Administration, retrieved 2013-05-21
  38. ^ A. Philip Randolph Museum. . aprppmprogramsandnews.org. Archived from the original on 2014-03-29.
  39. ^ "Milton William Jones, 98, one of last Pullman porters". Chicago Sun-Times. February 27, 2014.
  40. ^ Lyn Hughes (2007). "Southern Registrant ID: 1359, Benjamin Franklin Gaines, City/State: Evanston, IL, Position: Club car". An Anthology of Respect: The Pullman Porters National Historic Registry of African American Railroad Employees. Hughes-Peterson Publishing. ISBN 9780979394119.

External links edit

  • A. Philip Randolph Pullman Porter Museum
  • The Abraham Lincoln 1910 Heavyweight Pullman Business Car
  • Pullman Porter – Lives on the Railroad
  • Pullman: Labor, Race, and the Urban Landscape in a Company Town – online exhibition by the Newberry Library of documents relating to the Pullman Company's industrial relations, including porters' working conditions and grievances

pullman, porter, film, pullman, porter, were, hired, work, railroads, porters, sleeping, cars, starting, shortly, after, american, civil, george, pullman, sought, former, slaves, work, sleeper, cars, their, carry, passengers, baggage, shine, shoes, maintain, s. For the film see The Pullman Porter Pullman porters were men hired to work for the railroads as porters on sleeping cars 1 Starting shortly after the American Civil War George Pullman sought out former slaves to work on his sleeper cars Their job was to carry passengers baggage shine shoes set up and maintain the sleeping berths and serve passengers Pullman porters served American railroads from the late 1860s until the Pullman Company ceased operations on December 31 1968 though some sleeping car porters continued working on cars operated by the railroads themselves and beginning in 1971 Amtrak The term porter has been superseded in modern American usage by sleeping car attendant with the former term being considered somewhat derogatory 2 A Pullman porter assisting a passenger with her luggageUntil the 1960s Pullman porters were exclusively black and have been widely credited with contributing to the development of the black middle class in America Under the leadership of A Philip Randolph Pullman porters formed the first all black union the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters in 1925 The union was instrumental in the advancement of the Civil Rights Movement Porters worked under the supervision of a Pullman conductor distinct from the railroad s own conductor in overall charge of the train who was invariably white 3 In addition to sleeping cars Pullman also provided parlor cars and dining cars used by some railroads that did not operate their own the dining cars were typically staffed with African American cooks and waiters under the supervision of a white steward 4 With the advent of the dining car it was no longer possible to have the conductor and porters do double duty a dining car required a trained staff and depending on the train and the sophistication of the meals a staff could consist of a dozen men 5 Pullman also employed African American maids on deluxe trains to care for women s needs especially women with children in 1926 Pullman employed about 200 maids and over 10 000 porters 6 Maids assisted ladies with bathing gave manicures and dressed hair sewed and pressed clothing shined shoes and helped care for children The Central of Georgia Railroad continued using this service as a selling point in their advertisements for the Nancy Hanks well into the 1950s 7 8 9 Contents 1 History 2 Duties and wages 3 Characterization 4 Unionization 5 Contribution to a black middle class 6 A Philip Randolph Pullman Porter Museum 7 Recognition 8 Notable Pullman porters 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksHistory edit nbsp Pullman advertising poster 1894 depicting a Pullman waiterPrior to the 1860s the concept of sleeping cars on railroads had not been widely developed George Pullman pioneered sleeping accommodations on trains and by the late 1860s he was hiring only African Americans to serve as porters After the Civil War ended in 1865 Pullman knew that there was a large pool of former slaves who would be looking for work he also had a very clear racial conception 10 He was aware that most Americans unlike the wealthy did not have personal servants in their homes citation needed Pullman also knew the wealthy were accustomed to being served by a liveried waiter or butler but to staff the Pullman cars with properly humble workers in uniform was something the American middle class had never experienced citation needed Hence part of the appeal of traveling on sleeping cars was in a sense to have an upper class experience citation needed From the start Pullman s ads promoting his new sleeper service featured these porters Initially they were one of the features that most clearly distinguished his carriages from those of competitors but eventually nearly all would follow his lead hiring African Americans as porters cooks waiters and Red Caps railway station porters 10 According to the Museum of the American Railroad The Pullman Company was a separate business from the railroad lines It owned and operated sleeping cars that were attached to most long distance passenger trains Pullman was essentially a chain of hotels on wheels Pullman provided a Porter attendant that prepared the beds in the evening and made them in the morning Porters attended to additional needs such as room service from the dining car sending and receiving telegrams shining shoes and valet service 2 nbsp Pullman porter making an upper berth aboard the B amp O Capitol Limited bound for ChicagoWhile the pay was very low by the standards of the day in an era of significant racial prejudice being a Pullman porter was one of the best jobs available for African American men Thus for black men while this was an opportunity at the same time it was also an experience of being stereotyped as the servant class and having to take a lot of abuse Many passengers called every porter George as if he were George Pullman s boy servant a practice that was born in the South where slaves were named after their slavemasters owners The only ones who protested were other men named George who founded the Society for the Prevention of Calling Sleeping Car Porters George or SPCSCPG which eventually claimed 31 000 members 10 Although the SPCSCPG was more interested in defending the dignity of its white members than in achieving any measure of racial justice it nevertheless had some effects for all porters In 1926 the SPCSCPG persuaded the Pullman Company to install small racks in each car displaying a card with the given name of the porter on duty Of the 12 000 porters and waiters then working for Pullman only 362 turned out to be named George Stanley G Grizzle a former Canadian porter titled his autobiography My Name s Not George The Story of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters 11 Porters were not paid a livable wage and needed to rely on tips to earn enough to make a living Walter Biggs son of a Pullman porter spoke of memories of being a Pullman porter as told to him by his father One of the most remarkable stories I liked hearing about was how when Jackie Gleason would ride all the porters wanted to be on that run The reason why Not only because he gave every porter 100 00 but it was just the fun the excitement the respect that he gave the porters Instead of their names being George he called everybody by their first name He always had like a piano in the car and they sang and danced and had a great time He was just a fun person to be around 12 The number of porters employed by railroads declined as sleeping car service dwindled in the 1960s as passenger numbers dwindled due to competition from auto and air travel and sleeping car services were discontinued on many trains By 1969 the ranks of the Pullman sleeping car porters had declined to 325 men with an average age of 63 13 Duties and wages edit nbsp A porter is shown vacuuming the carpet in a Great Northern Railway parlor car circa 1910 nbsp Porters serving in a dining car circa 1927A porter was expected to greet passengers carry baggage make up the sleeping berths serve food and drinks brought from the dining car shine shoes and keep the cars tidy He needed to be available night and day to wait on the passengers He was expected to always smile thus the porters often called the job ironically miles of smiles 14 According to historian Greg LeRoy A Pullman Porter was really kind of a glorified hotel maid and bellhop in what Pullman called a hotel on wheels The Pullman Company thought of the porters as a piece of equipment just like another button on a panel the same as a light switch or a fan switch 9 Porters worked 400 hours a month or 11 000 miles sometimes as much as 20 hours at a stretch They were expected to arrive at work several hours early to prepare their car on their own time they were charged whenever their passengers stole a towel or a water pitcher On overnight trips they were allocated only three to four hours of sleep and that was deducted from their pay A 1926 report 15 by the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters which finally achieved recognition by the Pullman Company in 1937 using the results of a survey by the Labor Bureau Inc stated that the minimum monthly wage for a regular porter was 72 50 with the average being 78 11 and tips on average amounting to 58 15 however porters had to pay for their own meals lodging uniforms and shoe shine supplies amounting to an average of 33 82 a month Overtime pay of 60 cents per 100 miles was paid only for monthly service in excess of 11 000 miles or about 400 hours of road service in a month Maids received a minimum of 70 a month with the same overtime provision but they received fewer tips By contrast Pullman conductors who already had a recognized union to bargain for them earned a minimum 150 a month for 240 hours work The company offered a health disability and life insurance plan for 28 a year and paid a pension of 18 a month to porters who reached age 70 and had at least 20 years of service The BSCP booklet also reports that in 1925 the Pullman Company paid out over 10 million in dividends to stockholders from an aggregate net company income of more than 19 million It didn t pay a livable wage but they made a living with the tips that they got because the salary was nothing says Lyn Hughes founder of the A Philip Randolph Pullman Porter Museum 16 The porters were expected to pay for their own meals and uniforms and the company required them to pay for the shoe polish used to shine passengers shoes daily 16 There was little job security and the Pullman Company inspectors were known for suspending porters for trivial reasons 9 Characterization edit nbsp Pullman porter photographed at Chicago Union Station 1943According to Larry Tye who authored Rising from the Rails The Pullman Porters and the Making of the Black Middle Class George Pullman was aware that as former chattel slaves the men he hired had already received the perfect training and knew just how to take care of any whim that a customer had Tye further explained that Pullman was aware that there was never a question that a traveler would be embarrassed by running into one of the porters and having them remember something they had done during their trip that they did not want their wife or husband perhaps to know about 1 Black historian and journalist Thomas Fleming began his career as a bellhop and then spent five years as a cook for the Southern Pacific Railroad Fleming was the co founder and executive editor of Northern California s largest weekly African American newspaper the Sun Reporter 17 In a weekly series of articles entitled Reflections on Black History he wrote of the contradictions in the life of a Pullman porter Pullman went on to become the largest single employer of black people in America and the job of Pullman porter was for most of the 101 year history of the Pullman Company one of the very best a Black man could aspire to in status and eventually in pay The porter reigned supreme on George s sleeper cars But the very definition of their jobs of their kingdom roiled in contradictions The porter was servant as well as host He had the best job in his community and the worst on the train He could be trusted with his white passengers children and their safety but only for the five days of a cross country trip He shared his riders most private moments but to most remained an enigma if not an enemy 18 In 2008 Amtrak became aware of The Pullman Porters National Historic Registry of African American Railroad Employees a five year research project conducted by Dr Lyn Hughes for the A Philip Randolph Pullman Porter Museum and published in 2007 Amtrak enlisted the APR Pullman Porter Museum and partnered with them using the registry to locate and honor surviving Porters through a series of regional ceremonies Amtrak also attempted to locate additional survivors in order to interview them for a promotional project A few remaining living former Pullman porters were found all of whom were in their 90s or over 100 years old at that time The project coordinator remarked Even today observers are struck by how elegant the elderly men are When we find them they are dapper They are men even at this age who wear suits and ties 19 Unionization edit nbsp Abraham Lincoln Pullman sleeper car each car received a name nbsp William Crooks locomotive sleeping car on display in Duluth MinnesotaAs early as 1900 Porters started to rally and organize for better wages and treatment Porters who worked an average of 300 400 hours per month were paid a fixed monthly wage regardless of hours or length of trips 20 They were also subjected to easy dismissal or termination based on minor or false accusations by mainly white passengers Initial efforts were largely unsuccessful and also increased risk of retributory termination for attempting to unionize 20 The Order of Sleeping Car Conductors was organized on February 20 1918 in Kansas City Missouri Members had to be white males 21 because the order did not admit Black people A Philip Randolph began organizing the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters 22 Using the motto Fight or Be Slaves on August 25 1925 500 porters met in Harlem and decided to make an effort to organize Under Randolph s leadership the first black union the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters was formed and slowly working conditions and salaries improved By forming the first black labor union the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters Pullman porters also laid the groundwork for the Civil Rights Movement which began in the 1950s Union organizer and former Pullman porter E D Nixon played a crucial role in organizing the landmark Montgomery bus boycott in Alabama in 1955 It was he who bailed Rosa Parks out of jail after she refused to move on the bus and who selected her as the figure to build the boycott around 19 By the 1960s between the decline of the passenger rail system and the cultural shifts in American society the Pullman porters contribution became obscured becoming for some in the African American community a symbol of subservience to white cultural and economic domination 1 The Pullman Company went out of business in 1969 and the railroads no longer followed the practice of hiring only black men as porters In 1978 the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters merged with the larger Brotherhood of Railway and Airline Clerks 23 Contribution to a black middle class editThe black community looked up to Pullman porters and many people credit them as significant contributors to the development of America s black middle class Black historian and civil rights activist Timuel Black observed in a 2013 interview The Pullman porters were good looking clean and immaculate in their dress Their style was quite manly their language was carefully crafted so that they had a sense of intelligence about them They were good role models for young men B eing a Pullman porter was a prestigious position because it offered a steady income and an opportunity to travel across the country which was rare for black people at that time 24 12 In the late 19th century Pullman porters were among the only people in their communities to travel extensively Consequently they became a conduit of new information and ideas from the wider world to their communities Many Pullman porters supported community projects including schools and saved rigorously to ensure that their children were able to obtain an education and thus better employment Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall and former San Francisco Mayor Willie Brown were descendants of Pullman porters 1 Marshall was also a porter himself as were Malcolm X and the photojournalist Gordon Parks 25 Berkeley California Councilman U S Congressman and Oakland California Mayor Ron Dellums was also a descendant of Pullman porters His father was Verney Dellums a Pullman porter and a longshoreman His uncle C L Dellums was a leader in the Brotherhood of Pullman Car Porters union Ron Dellums served fourteen terms as a Member of the U S House of Representatives 26 A Philip Randolph Pullman Porter Museum edit nbsp A Philip Randolph Pullman Porter Museum ChicagoFurther information Pullman District In 1995 Lyn Hughes founded the A Philip Randolph Pullman Porter Museum to celebrate both the life of A Philip Randolph and the role of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters and other African Americans in the U S labor movement 27 Located in South Side Chicago and housed in one of the original rowhouses built by George Pullman to house workers 28 it is part of the U S Department of the Interior s Pullman National Historic Landmark District The museum houses a collection of artifacts and documents related to the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters 29 30 Additionally in 2001 the museum began compiling a national registry of black railroad employees who worked for the railroad from the late 1800s to 1969 19 31 Recognition editIn 2008 Amtrak in partnership with the A Philip Randolph Museum honored Pullman porters in Chicago Museum founder Lyn Hughes spoke at the event saying It s significant when an organization like Amtrak takes the time to honor those who contributed directly to its own history It s also very appropriate as it s the culmination of the effort to create the Pullman Porter Registry We started the Registry with Amtrak and now we re coming full circle with its completion and the honoring of these great African American men Hughes is also author of An Anthology of Respect The Pullman Porter National Historic Registry 32 In 2009 as part of Black History Month Amtrak honored Pullman porters in Oakland California An AARP journalist writes They were dignified men who did undignified labor They made beds and cleaned toilets They shined shoes dusted jackets cooked meals and washed dishes in cramped and rolling quarters 33 Amtrak invited five retired members of The Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters to speak at the event The eldest of the five Lee Gibson 34 age 98 spoke of his journey to the event by rail saying It was nice I got the service I used to give He spoke of his years as porter with fondness saying It was a wonderful life 35 In 2009 Philadelphia honored about 20 of the 200 former Pullman employees who were still alive at that time as part of National Train Day Speaking to Michele Norris of NPR former cook and porter Frank Rollins 93 said the railway wanted Southern boys to run the dining cars because they thought they had a certain personality and a certain demeanor that satisfied the Southern passengers better than the boys who came from Chicago Rollins also spoke of the racist comments that black men experienced but commented on positive experiences as well He recalled I used to have a little speech that I d make I would walk into the car and I would say May I have your attention please My name is Frank Rollins If you can t remember that that s OK You can call me porter it s right here on the cap you can be able to remember that Just don t call me boy and don t call me George 36 In August 2013 the A Philip Randolph Pullman Porter Museum celebrated the 50 year anniversary of the historic March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom also known as The Great March on Washington one of the largest political rallies for human rights in United States history 37 Interviewed in a neighborhood newspaper founder Lyn Hughes suggested that some people in the Chicago area may prefer to celebrate the anniversary of the march in their own community rather than travel to Washington She added that many people are unaware that Asa Philip Randolph was the initial activist who inspired the March on Washington Movement 24 38 Scheduled activities included speakers and screenings of films related to black labor history Two organizers said that two former Pullman porters Milton Jones 39 age 98 and Benjamin Gaines 40 age 90 were expected to attend 24 Notable Pullman porters editBig Bill Broonzy Nat Love Oscar Micheaux E D Nixon Mancel Warrick father of Dionne WarwickSee also edit10 000 Black Men Named George 2002 Movie Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters The first African American trade union Gandy dancer Miles of Smiles Years of Struggle 1982 A documentary about the organization of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters Pullman Company Pullman loaf A type of long square bread developed to be baked in the small kitchens of rail cars Pullman Strike Pullman train UK Sleeping car The Road Taken 1996 A documentary about Black railway porters in Canada The Porter 2022 A CBC television series which depicts the history of Black Canadian and African American men who worked as Pullman porters as well as the creation of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car PortersReferences edit a b c d Pullman Porters Helped Build Black Middle Class NPR org National Public Radio May 7 2009 Retrieved 12 March 2018 a b Service and Grace amid a Class Struggle The Story of the Pullman Porter Museum of the American Railroad Archived from the original on 13 March 2018 Retrieved 12 March 2018 Powe Jr Lucas A 2018 America s Lone Star Constitution How Supreme Court Cases from Texas Shape the Nation Oakland University of California Press p 111 ISBN 978 0520297814 Retrieved 12 March 2018 Porterfield James D 1993 Dining By Rail The History and Recipes of America s Golden Age of Railroad Cuisine New York St Martin s Griffin p 79 ISBN 9780312187118 Retrieved 12 March 2018 Quinzio Jeri 2014 Food on the Rails The Golden Era of Railroad Dining Lanham Maryland Rowman amp Littlefield p 27 ISBN 978 1442227330 Retrieved 12 March 2018 Chateauvert Melinda 1998 Marching Together Women of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters Urbana and Chicago University of Illinois Press pp 22 27 ISBN 0252066367 Retrieved 12 March 2018 maid Tye Larry Interview with Larry Tye Npr org Retrieved 2011 11 09 Cavanaugh Maureen 23 March 2010 The African American Railroad Experience KPBS org Retrieved 2013 07 19 a b c http www goodmantheatre org Global PPB 20Study 20Guide 20for 20web pdf permanent dead link a b c Lawrence Tye 2011 05 05 Choosing Servility To Staff America s Trains Alicia Patterson Foundation Aliciapatterson org Retrieved 2013 07 19 Ito Gail Arlene 2008 04 16 Stanley G Grizzle 1918 The Black Past Remembered and Reclaimed Retrieved 2021 02 26 a b Pullman Porters The From Servitude to Civil Rights WTTW Retrieved 2013 07 19 The Sad Plight of Passenger Service The Meriden Journal 6 January 1969 Retrieved 14 November 2013 Miles of Smiles About Pullman Porters Paul Wagner Films Retrieved 2013 07 19 The Pullman Porter PDF New York Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters 1926 Archived from the original PDF on 14 March 2018 Retrieved 14 March 2018 a b Pullman Porters The From Servitude to Civil Rights WTTW interactive wttw com Retrieved 2021 08 15 The Columbus Free Press Reflections on Black History Freepress org Retrieved 2013 07 19 a b c Ron 2012 04 26 US Slave Pullman Porters Usslave blogspot de Retrieved 2014 02 15 a b Tye Larry 2004 Rising from the Rails Pullman Porters and the Making of the Black Middle Class 1st ed Henry Holt pp 75 112 Stewart Estelle May 1936 Handbook of American trade unions 1936 edition U S Govt Print Off for the United States Bureau of Labor Statistics pp 252 253 Retrieved 2013 08 07 Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters Windsor Mosaic Website Retrieved 2013 08 07 Miles of Smiles About Pullman Porters Paul Wagner Films www paulwagnerfilms com Retrieved 2021 08 15 a b c Pullman Porter Museum to Celebrate 50th Anniversary of Historic March Chicago Dnainfo com 2013 08 07 Archived from the original on 2014 02 25 Retrieved 2014 02 15 Harry Bruinius 2008 02 29 Pullman porters tell tales of a train ride through history CSMonitor com Retrieved 2014 02 15 History Art amp Archives U S House of Representatives DELLUMS Ronald V 2023 04 23 DELLUMS Ronald V U S House of Representatives Retrieved 2023 04 22 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link A Philip Randolph Pullman Porter Museum Archived from the original on 2008 05 15 Retrieved 2009 03 09 Chicago Chicago News Politics Things To Do Sports Chicago Sun Times Lyn Hughes Encore org Archived from the original on 2013 12 02 Retrieved 2014 02 15 Pullman Porter Museum abc7chicago com Archived from the original on 2014 03 29 Retrieved 2014 03 28 Outskirts Press Self Publishing Presents An Anthology Of Respect The Pullman Porters National Historic Registry by Lyn Hughes Amtrak Celebrates National Train Day with Ceremony Honoring Pullman Porters in Chicago Cruising the Past Retrieved March 14 2018 Zielenziger Michael Pullman Porters Take Their Place in History AARP Retrieved March 13 2018 Lowe Frederick Oldest Pullman Porter dies in Los Angeles BlackMansStreetToday Archived from the original on March 15 2018 Retrieved March 14 2018 The Oakland Tribune tells the story of Pullman Porters These gracious and hard working men paved the way for the African American middle class and provided first class professional service aboard the largest hotel system ever created on wheels Cruising the Past Retrieved March 14 2018 Former Pullman Porter Subtly Confronted Racism NPR org Retrieved March 13 2018 Bayard Rustin Papers 1963 08 28 March on Washington Program National Archives and Records Administration retrieved 2013 05 21 A Philip Randolph Museum Programs Events and News aprppmprogramsandnews org Archived from the original on 2014 03 29 Milton William Jones 98 one of last Pullman porters Chicago Sun Times February 27 2014 Lyn Hughes 2007 Southern Registrant ID 1359 Benjamin Franklin Gaines City State Evanston IL Position Club car An Anthology of Respect The Pullman Porters National Historic Registry of African American Railroad Employees Hughes Peterson Publishing ISBN 9780979394119 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Pullman porters A Philip Randolph Pullman Porter Museum A Philip Randolph Sleeping Car Porters The Abraham Lincoln 1910 Heavyweight Pullman Business Car Pullman Porter Lives on the Railroad Pullman Labor Race and the Urban Landscape in a Company Town online exhibition by the Newberry Library of documents relating to the Pullman Company s industrial relations including porters working conditions and grievances Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pullman porter amp oldid 1189856729 A Philip Randolph Pullman Porter Museum, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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