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Racial segregation in Atlanta

Racial segregation in Atlanta has known many phases after the freeing of the slaves in 1865: a period of relative integration of businesses and residences; Jim Crow laws and official residential and de facto business segregation after the Atlanta Race Riot of 1906; blockbusting and black residential expansion starting in the 1950s; and gradual integration from the late 1960s onwards. A 2015 study conducted by Nate Silver of fivethirtyeight.com, found that Atlanta was the second most segregated city in the U.S. and the most segregated in the South.[1]

Post-Civil War

De facto residential segregation

After the war ended, Atlanta received migrants from surrounding counties, as well as new settlers to the region. Many freedmen moved from plantations to towns or cities for work, including Atlanta; Fulton County went from 20.5 percent black in 1860 to 45.7 percent black in 1870.[2][3] Many refugees were destitute without even proper clothing or shoes; the American Missionary Association (AMA) helped fill the gap, and the Freedmen's Bureau also offered much help, though erratically.[4]

The destruction of the housing stock by the Union army in the Battle of Atlanta, together with the massive influx of refugees, resulted in a severe housing shortage. 18-acre (510 m2) to 14-acre (1,000 m2) lots with a small house rented for $5 per month, while those with a glass pane rented for $20. High rents rather than laws led to de facto segregation due to simple economics, with most blacks settling into areas at the edge of the city like Jenningstown (pop. 2,490), Shermantown (2,486) and Summerhill (pop. 1,512), where housing was substandard but rented at rates that were regarded as inflated. Shermantown and Summerhill sat in low-lying areas, prone to flooding and sewage overflows, which resulted in outbreaks of disease in the late 19th century. Housing was substandard; an AMA missionary remarked that many houses were "rickety shacks" rented at inflated rates.[4]

The Fifth Ward, now the Fairlie-Poplar district and areas north of it, was home to the greatest number of blacks before the war, but dropped to third place (pop. 2,436) among black neighborhoods by 1870. Mechanicsville would develop as an additional black neighborhood in the 1870s.[4]

Race Riot and aftermath

Jim Crow laws

 
Sign at entrance to Ponce de Leon amusement park in 1908 indicating "colored persons admitted as servants only"

Jim Crow laws were passed in swift succession in the years following the Atlanta Race Riot in 1906. The result was in some cases segregated facilities, with nearly always inferior conditions for black customers, but in many cases it resulted in no facilities at all available to blacks, e.g. all parks were designated whites-only (although a private park, Joyland, did open in 1921). In 1910, the city council passed an ordinance requiring that restaurants be designated for one race only, hobbling black restaurant owners who had been attracting both black and white customers. In the same year, Atlanta's streetcars were segregated, with black patrons required to sit in the rear. If not enough seats were available for all white riders, the blacks sitting furthest forward in the trolley were required to stand and give their seats to whites. In 1913, the city created official boundaries for white and black residential areas. And in 1920, the city prohibited black-owned salons from serving white women and children.[5]

Beyond this, blacks were subject to the South's racial protocol, whereby, according to the New Georgia Encyclopedia:[6]

all blacks were required to pay obeisance to all whites, even those whites of low social standing. And although they were required to address whites by the title "sir," blacks rarely received the same courtesy themselves. Because even minor breaches of racial etiquette often resulted in violent reprisals, the region's codes of deference transformed daily life into a theater of ritual, where every encounter, exchange, and gesture reinforced black inferiority.

Gone with the Wind premiere

On December 15, 1939, Atlanta hosted the premiere of Gone with the Wind, the movie based on Atlanta resident Margaret Mitchell's best-selling novel. Stars Clark Gable, Vivien Leigh, and Olivia de Havilland were in attendance. The premiere was held at Loew's Grand Theatre, at Peachtree and Forsyth Streets, current site of the Georgia-Pacific building. An enormous crowd, numbering 300,000 people according to the Atlanta Constitution, filled the streets on this ice-cold night in Atlanta.

Absence of film's black stars at event

Noticeably absent was Hattie McDaniel, who would win the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for her role as Mammy, as well as Butterfly McQueen (Prissy). The black actors were barred from attending the premiere, from appearing in the souvenir program, and from all the film's advertising in the South. Director David Selznick had attempted to bring McDaniel to the premiere, but MGM advised him not to. Clark Gable angrily threatened to boycott the premiere, but McDaniel convinced him to attend anyway.[7] McDaniel did attend the Hollywood debut thirteen days later, and was featured prominently in the program.[8]

Controversial participation of Martin Luther King

Martin Luther King Jr. sang at the gala as part of a children's choir of his father's church, Ebenezer Baptist.[9] The boys dressed as pickaninnies and the girls wore "Aunt Jemima"-style bandanas, dress seen by many blacks as humiliating.[10][11] John Wesley Dobbs tried to dissuade Rev. King Sr. from participating at the whites-only event, and Rev. King Sr. was harshly criticized in the black community.

Blockbusting and racial transition in neighborhoods

In the late 1950s, after forced-housing patterns were outlawed, violence, intimidation and organized political pressure was used in some white neighborhoods to discourage blacks from buying homes there. However, by the late 1950s, such efforts proved futile as blockbusting drove whites to sell their homes in neighborhoods such as Adamsville, Center Hill, Grove Park in northwest Atlanta, and white sections of Edgewood and on the east side. In 1962, the city attempted to thwart blockbusting by erecting road barriers in Cascade Heights, countering the efforts of civic and business leaders to foster Atlanta as the "city too busy to hate."[12][13] This incident would come to be known as "Atlanta's Berlin Wall" or the "Peyton Road Affair."

But efforts to stop transition in Cascade failed too. Neighborhoods of new black homeowners took root, helping alleviate the enormous strain of the lack of housing available to African Americans. Atlanta's western and southern neighborhoods transitioned to majority black — between 1950 and 1970 the number of census tracts that were at least ninety percent black tripled. East Lake, Kirkwood, Watts West Road, Reynoldstown, Almond Park, Mozley Park, Center Hill and Cascade Heights underwent an almost total transition from white to black. From 1960 to 1970, the black proportion of the city's population rose from 38 to 51 percent. Meanwhile, during the same decade, the city lost sixty thousand white residents, a 20 percent decline.[14]

White flight and the building of malls in the suburbs triggered a slow decline of downtown as a central shopping district;[12] however, it would continue its role as a government center and add the role of lodging and entertainment center for convention traffic.

1956 Sugar Bowl

In January of 1956, Bobby Grier became the first black player to participate in the Sugar Bowl. He is also regarded as the first black player to compete at a bowl game in the Deep South, though others such as Wallace Triplett had played in games like the 1948 Cotton Bowl in Dallas. Grier's team, the Pittsburgh Panthers, was set to play against the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets. However, Georgia's Governor Marvin Griffin beseeched Georgia Tech to not participate in this racially integrated game. Griffin was widely criticized by news media leading up to the game, and protests were held at his mansion by Georgia Tech students. Despite the governor's objections, Georgia Tech upheld the contract and proceeded to compete in the bowl. In the game's first quarter, a pass interference call against Grier ultimately resulted in Yellow Jackets' 7-0 victory. Grier stated that he has mostly positive memories about the experience, including the support from teammates and letters from all over the world.[15]

Civil Rights Movement

In the wake of the landmark U.S. Supreme Court decision Brown v. Board of Education, which helped usher in the Civil Rights Movement, racial tensions in Atlanta erupted in acts of violence. For example, on October 12, 1958, a Reform Jewish temple on Peachtree Street was bombed. The "Confederate Underground" claimed responsibility. Many believed that Jews, especially those from the northeast, were advocates of the Civil Rights Movement.[citation needed]

In the 1960s, Atlanta was a major organizing center of the Civil Rights Movement, with Martin Luther King Jr. and students from Atlanta's historically black colleges and universities playing major roles in the movement's leadership. On October 19, 1960, a sit-in at the lunch counters of several Atlanta department stores led to the arrest of Dr. King and several students. This drew attention from the national media and from presidential candidate John F. Kennedy.

Despite this incident, Atlanta's political and business leaders fostered Atlanta's image as "the city too busy to hate."[16] While the city mostly avoided confrontation, minor race riots did occur in 1965 and in 1968.

Desegregation

Desegregation of the public sphere came in stages, with buses and trolleybuses desegregated in 1959,[17] restaurants at Rich's department store in 1961[18] (though Lester Maddox's Pickrick restaurant famously remained segregated through 1964),[19] and movie theaters in 1962-3.[20][21] In 1961, Mayor Ivan Allen Jr. became one of the few Southern white mayors to support desegregation of his city's public schools, although initial compliance was token, and in reality desegregation occurred in stages from 1961 to 1973.[22]

Current state of residential segregation

 
2000 map of race and ethnicity in Atlanta; whites still live largely in the north side of the metro area; blacks in the south

There is no one definitive method for measuring residential segregation, and differing methods reveal different results. In general, the metro area is more integrated than the city of Atlanta. According to the 2000 Census Bureau study, among the fifty largest U.S. cities, Atlanta ranks just below average, with 8.8 percent of residents living on integrated blocks vs. 9.4 percent on average. However, among the twenty cities with the highest proportion of blacks in their populations (Atlanta having the fifth highest percentage), Atlanta ranks second to last, with only Chicago having fewer residents (5.7 percent) living on integrated blocks.[23]

Metro Atlanta ranked high in a 2000 measure of residents living on integrated blocks, at 18.4 percent ranking 14th among the 100 largest U.S. metropolitan areas. However measured by a longstanding "dissimilarity index", Metro Atlanta ranked 63rd out of 100. In a study that measured how many Metro Atlanta blacks lived on blocks that were at least 20 percent black and 20 percent white, Metro Atlanta ranked at the lower end of the group of more heavily black metro areas, at 25.8 percent. Nevertheless, Metro Atlanta had one of the highest proportions of whites living on blocks that were at least 20 percent black and 20 percent white, with its tally of 14.1 percent ranking eleventh out of 100.[23]

Within metropolitan Atlanta, racial residential segregation tends to be more prominent in highly urbanized counties in comparison to more suburban counties. DeKalb county and Fulton county, which are the most urban counties in metro Atlanta are the most segregated of the ten counties that constitute the metro area according to the Atlanta Regional Commission.[24] Atlanta's Black population continues to be centralized in older urban neighborhoods and isolated from the growing number of employment opportunities that are becoming increasingly available in the suburban regions of the city as urban sprawl in the metro area increases.[25] The continued racial residential segregation in Atlanta is also affected by racial stereotyping and race based perceptions. In regards to prejudice and racial segregation, negative racial stereotypes and the fear of group threat from Black residents contribute to white resistance to integration while negative racial stereotypes and the perception of whites as being discriminatory contribute to black resistance to integrate.[26] Racial residential segregation in metro Atlanta is also highly correlated to economic residential segregation. For census tract groups within Clayton, Cobb, DeKalb, Fulton, and Gwinnett counties, 22.14% of the population is below the poverty level for the block groups that are 81-90% black whereas, for block groups that are 81-90% white, only 1.40% of the population is below the poverty level. For the Hispanic and Asian populations, block groups that are around 31-40% Asian or 41-50% Hispanic tend to have higher poverty rates than blocks with a higher or lower percentage of Hispanic or Asian residents.[27]

Nevertheless, in some ways metro Atlanta has become increasingly more integrated as the dissimilarity index for blacks or African Americans has decreased by 12.5% from 1980 to 2000 and the isolation index has decreased by 4.5%. On the other hand, the dissimilarity index and isolation index increased for Hispanics or Latinos as Atlanta had the second largest increase in residential segregation for Hispanics and Latinos out of the metropolitan statistical areas studied by the US Census Bureau. While Atlanta still maintains a dissimilarity and isolation index for African Americans and a dissimilarity index for Latinos that is higher than average for metropolitan areas in the US, the city's dissimilarity index for black residents is also decreasing at a higher than average rate which reflects the city's growing rate of integration.[28]

Certain areas of the city are predominantly black or white (See also Demographics of Atlanta:Neighborhoods):[29]

Federal complaint filed with Dept of Education , after a Mother learnt her child's principal (Principal Sharyn Briscoe) was segregating children based upon their skin color.[30]

References

  1. ^ Silver, Nate; ‘The Most Diverse Cities Are Often The Most Segregated’; FiveThirtyEight; May 1, 2015 at 8:28 AM
  2. ^ [1][dead link]
  3. ^ [2][dead link]
  4. ^ a b c Allison Dorsey, To Build Our Lives Together, p. 34ff.
  5. ^ Lawrence Otis Graham, Our Kind of People: inside America's Black upper class, p. 335
  6. ^ ‘Segregation’, New Georgia Encyclopedia
  7. ^ Harris, Warren G. Clark Gable: A Biography, Harmony, (2002), p. 203; ISBN 0-307-23714-1
  8. ^ Watts, Jill. Hattie McDaniel: Black Ambition, White Hollywood, 2005, page 172 - ISBN 0-06-051490-6
  9. ^ Atlanta Premiere of Gone With The Wind
  10. ^ John Egerton, Speak now against the day, p.240
  11. ^ "The little known story of MLK's 'drum major for justice'", Atlanta Journal-Constitution, October 16, 2011
  12. ^ a b Kruse, Kevin Michael (February 1, 2008). White flight: Atlanta and the making of modern conservatism By Kevin Michael Kruse. ISBN 978-0691092607. Retrieved June 27, 2011.
  13. ^ . Time magazine. January 18, 1963. Archived from the original on December 20, 2008. Retrieved June 27, 2011.
  14. ^ David Andrew Harmon, Beneath the image of the Civil Rights Movement and race relations, p. 177ff.
  15. ^ Thamel, Pete (2006-01-01). "Grier Integrated a Game and Earned the World's Respect". New York Times. Retrieved 2009-04-15.
  16. ^ Allen, Ivan; Hemphill, Paul (1971). Mayor: Notes on the Sixties. Simon and Schuster. ISBN 978-0-671-20889-9.
  17. ^ "Bus desegregation in Atlanta", Digital Library of Georgia
  18. ^ "Rich's Department Store" New Georgia Encyclopedia
  19. ^ "Lester Maddox", New Georgia Encyclopedia
  20. ^ “Negroes Attend Atlanta Theaters,” Atlanta Journal, 15 May 1962
  21. ^ Daily Report 2014-12-18 at the Wayback Machine
  22. ^ . Archived from the original on 2016-01-13. Retrieved 2012-01-28.
  23. ^ a b Lois M. Quinn et al., "Racial Integration in Urban America: A Block Level Analysis of African American and White Housing Patterns", University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee
  24. ^ Dawkins, Casey J. (September 2003). "Measuring the Spatial Pattern of Residential Segregation". Urban Studies. 41 (4): 833–851. doi:10.1080/0042098042000194133. S2CID 154287942.
  25. ^ The Black metropolis in the twenty-first century : race, power, and politics of place. Bullard, Robert D. (Robert Doyle), 1946-. Lanham. 10 May 2007. ISBN 9780742571778. OCLC 857769803.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  26. ^ Charles, Camille Zubrinsky (2003). "The dynamics of racial residential segregation". Annual Review of Sociology. 29: 167–207. doi:10.1146/annurev.soc.29.010202.100002.
  27. ^ Hayes, Melissa Mae (August 2006). "The Building Blocks of Atlanta: Racial Residential Segregation and Neighborhood Inequity".
  28. ^ "Racial and Ethnic Residential Segregation in the United States: 1980-2000" (PDF).
  29. ^ U. S. Census Bureau data as tabulated on Demographics of Atlanta:Neighborhoods
  30. ^ "'It Was Just Disbelief': Parent Files Complaint Against Atlanta Elementary School After Learning the Principal Segregated Students Based on Race". 10 August 2021.

racial, segregation, atlanta, known, many, phases, after, freeing, slaves, 1865, period, relative, integration, businesses, residences, crow, laws, official, residential, facto, business, segregation, after, atlanta, race, riot, 1906, blockbusting, black, resi. Racial segregation in Atlanta has known many phases after the freeing of the slaves in 1865 a period of relative integration of businesses and residences Jim Crow laws and official residential and de facto business segregation after the Atlanta Race Riot of 1906 blockbusting and black residential expansion starting in the 1950s and gradual integration from the late 1960s onwards A 2015 study conducted by Nate Silver of fivethirtyeight com found that Atlanta was the second most segregated city in the U S and the most segregated in the South 1 Contents 1 Post Civil War 1 1 De facto residential segregation 2 Race Riot and aftermath 2 1 Jim Crow laws 2 2 Gone with the Wind premiere 2 2 1 Absence of film s black stars at event 2 2 2 Controversial participation of Martin Luther King 2 3 Blockbusting and racial transition in neighborhoods 2 4 1956 Sugar Bowl 2 5 Civil Rights Movement 2 6 Desegregation 3 Current state of residential segregation 4 ReferencesPost Civil War EditDe facto residential segregation Edit After the war ended Atlanta received migrants from surrounding counties as well as new settlers to the region Many freedmen moved from plantations to towns or cities for work including Atlanta Fulton County went from 20 5 percent black in 1860 to 45 7 percent black in 1870 2 3 Many refugees were destitute without even proper clothing or shoes the American Missionary Association AMA helped fill the gap and the Freedmen s Bureau also offered much help though erratically 4 The destruction of the housing stock by the Union army in the Battle of Atlanta together with the massive influx of refugees resulted in a severe housing shortage 1 8 acre 510 m2 to 1 4 acre 1 000 m2 lots with a small house rented for 5 per month while those with a glass pane rented for 20 High rents rather than laws led to de facto segregation due to simple economics with most blacks settling into areas at the edge of the city like Jenningstown pop 2 490 Shermantown 2 486 and Summerhill pop 1 512 where housing was substandard but rented at rates that were regarded as inflated Shermantown and Summerhill sat in low lying areas prone to flooding and sewage overflows which resulted in outbreaks of disease in the late 19th century Housing was substandard an AMA missionary remarked that many houses were rickety shacks rented at inflated rates 4 The Fifth Ward now the Fairlie Poplar district and areas north of it was home to the greatest number of blacks before the war but dropped to third place pop 2 436 among black neighborhoods by 1870 Mechanicsville would develop as an additional black neighborhood in the 1870s 4 Race Riot and aftermath EditJim Crow laws Edit Sign at entrance to Ponce de Leon amusement park in 1908 indicating colored persons admitted as servants only Jim Crow laws were passed in swift succession in the years following the Atlanta Race Riot in 1906 The result was in some cases segregated facilities with nearly always inferior conditions for black customers but in many cases it resulted in no facilities at all available to blacks e g all parks were designated whites only although a private park Joyland did open in 1921 In 1910 the city council passed an ordinance requiring that restaurants be designated for one race only hobbling black restaurant owners who had been attracting both black and white customers In the same year Atlanta s streetcars were segregated with black patrons required to sit in the rear If not enough seats were available for all white riders the blacks sitting furthest forward in the trolley were required to stand and give their seats to whites In 1913 the city created official boundaries for white and black residential areas And in 1920 the city prohibited black owned salons from serving white women and children 5 Beyond this blacks were subject to the South s racial protocol whereby according to the New Georgia Encyclopedia 6 all blacks were required to pay obeisance to all whites even those whites of low social standing And although they were required to address whites by the title sir blacks rarely received the same courtesy themselves Because even minor breaches of racial etiquette often resulted in violent reprisals the region s codes of deference transformed daily life into a theater of ritual where every encounter exchange and gesture reinforced black inferiority Gone with the Wind premiere Edit On December 15 1939 Atlanta hosted the premiere of Gone with the Wind the movie based on Atlanta resident Margaret Mitchell s best selling novel Stars Clark Gable Vivien Leigh and Olivia de Havilland were in attendance The premiere was held at Loew s Grand Theatre at Peachtree and Forsyth Streets current site of the Georgia Pacific building An enormous crowd numbering 300 000 people according to the Atlanta Constitution filled the streets on this ice cold night in Atlanta Absence of film s black stars at event Edit Noticeably absent was Hattie McDaniel who would win the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for her role as Mammy as well as Butterfly McQueen Prissy The black actors were barred from attending the premiere from appearing in the souvenir program and from all the film s advertising in the South Director David Selznick had attempted to bring McDaniel to the premiere but MGM advised him not to Clark Gable angrily threatened to boycott the premiere but McDaniel convinced him to attend anyway 7 McDaniel did attend the Hollywood debut thirteen days later and was featured prominently in the program 8 Controversial participation of Martin Luther King Edit Martin Luther King Jr sang at the gala as part of a children s choir of his father s church Ebenezer Baptist 9 The boys dressed as pickaninnies and the girls wore Aunt Jemima style bandanas dress seen by many blacks as humiliating 10 11 John Wesley Dobbs tried to dissuade Rev King Sr from participating at the whites only event and Rev King Sr was harshly criticized in the black community Blockbusting and racial transition in neighborhoods Edit In the late 1950s after forced housing patterns were outlawed violence intimidation and organized political pressure was used in some white neighborhoods to discourage blacks from buying homes there However by the late 1950s such efforts proved futile as blockbusting drove whites to sell their homes in neighborhoods such as Adamsville Center Hill Grove Park in northwest Atlanta and white sections of Edgewood and on the east side In 1962 the city attempted to thwart blockbusting by erecting road barriers in Cascade Heights countering the efforts of civic and business leaders to foster Atlanta as the city too busy to hate 12 13 This incident would come to be known as Atlanta s Berlin Wall or the Peyton Road Affair But efforts to stop transition in Cascade failed too Neighborhoods of new black homeowners took root helping alleviate the enormous strain of the lack of housing available to African Americans Atlanta s western and southern neighborhoods transitioned to majority black between 1950 and 1970 the number of census tracts that were at least ninety percent black tripled East Lake Kirkwood Watts West Road Reynoldstown Almond Park Mozley Park Center Hill and Cascade Heights underwent an almost total transition from white to black From 1960 to 1970 the black proportion of the city s population rose from 38 to 51 percent Meanwhile during the same decade the city lost sixty thousand white residents a 20 percent decline 14 White flight and the building of malls in the suburbs triggered a slow decline of downtown as a central shopping district 12 however it would continue its role as a government center and add the role of lodging and entertainment center for convention traffic 1956 Sugar Bowl Edit Main article 1956 Sugar Bowl In January of 1956 Bobby Grier became the first black player to participate in the Sugar Bowl He is also regarded as the first black player to compete at a bowl game in the Deep South though others such as Wallace Triplett had played in games like the 1948 Cotton Bowl in Dallas Grier s team the Pittsburgh Panthers was set to play against the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets However Georgia s Governor Marvin Griffin beseeched Georgia Tech to not participate in this racially integrated game Griffin was widely criticized by news media leading up to the game and protests were held at his mansion by Georgia Tech students Despite the governor s objections Georgia Tech upheld the contract and proceeded to compete in the bowl In the game s first quarter a pass interference call against Grier ultimately resulted in Yellow Jackets 7 0 victory Grier stated that he has mostly positive memories about the experience including the support from teammates and letters from all over the world 15 Civil Rights Movement Edit Martin Luther King Jr In the wake of the landmark U S Supreme Court decision Brown v Board of Education which helped usher in the Civil Rights Movement racial tensions in Atlanta erupted in acts of violence For example on October 12 1958 a Reform Jewish temple on Peachtree Street was bombed The Confederate Underground claimed responsibility Many believed that Jews especially those from the northeast were advocates of the Civil Rights Movement citation needed Further information Atlanta sit ins In the 1960s Atlanta was a major organizing center of the Civil Rights Movement with Martin Luther King Jr and students from Atlanta s historically black colleges and universities playing major roles in the movement s leadership On October 19 1960 a sit in at the lunch counters of several Atlanta department stores led to the arrest of Dr King and several students This drew attention from the national media and from presidential candidate John F Kennedy Despite this incident Atlanta s political and business leaders fostered Atlanta s image as the city too busy to hate 16 While the city mostly avoided confrontation minor race riots did occur in 1965 and in 1968 Desegregation Edit Desegregation of the public sphere came in stages with buses and trolleybuses desegregated in 1959 17 restaurants at Rich s department store in 1961 18 though Lester Maddox s Pickrick restaurant famously remained segregated through 1964 19 and movie theaters in 1962 3 20 21 In 1961 Mayor Ivan Allen Jr became one of the few Southern white mayors to support desegregation of his city s public schools although initial compliance was token and in reality desegregation occurred in stages from 1961 to 1973 22 Current state of residential segregation Edit 2000 map of race and ethnicity in Atlanta whites still live largely in the north side of the metro area blacks in the south There is no one definitive method for measuring residential segregation and differing methods reveal different results In general the metro area is more integrated than the city of Atlanta According to the 2000 Census Bureau study among the fifty largest U S cities Atlanta ranks just below average with 8 8 percent of residents living on integrated blocks vs 9 4 percent on average However among the twenty cities with the highest proportion of blacks in their populations Atlanta having the fifth highest percentage Atlanta ranks second to last with only Chicago having fewer residents 5 7 percent living on integrated blocks 23 Metro Atlanta ranked high in a 2000 measure of residents living on integrated blocks at 18 4 percent ranking 14th among the 100 largest U S metropolitan areas However measured by a longstanding dissimilarity index Metro Atlanta ranked 63rd out of 100 In a study that measured how many Metro Atlanta blacks lived on blocks that were at least 20 percent black and 20 percent white Metro Atlanta ranked at the lower end of the group of more heavily black metro areas at 25 8 percent Nevertheless Metro Atlanta had one of the highest proportions of whites living on blocks that were at least 20 percent black and 20 percent white with its tally of 14 1 percent ranking eleventh out of 100 23 Within metropolitan Atlanta racial residential segregation tends to be more prominent in highly urbanized counties in comparison to more suburban counties DeKalb county and Fulton county which are the most urban counties in metro Atlanta are the most segregated of the ten counties that constitute the metro area according to the Atlanta Regional Commission 24 Atlanta s Black population continues to be centralized in older urban neighborhoods and isolated from the growing number of employment opportunities that are becoming increasingly available in the suburban regions of the city as urban sprawl in the metro area increases 25 The continued racial residential segregation in Atlanta is also affected by racial stereotyping and race based perceptions In regards to prejudice and racial segregation negative racial stereotypes and the fear of group threat from Black residents contribute to white resistance to integration while negative racial stereotypes and the perception of whites as being discriminatory contribute to black resistance to integrate 26 Racial residential segregation in metro Atlanta is also highly correlated to economic residential segregation For census tract groups within Clayton Cobb DeKalb Fulton and Gwinnett counties 22 14 of the population is below the poverty level for the block groups that are 81 90 black whereas for block groups that are 81 90 white only 1 40 of the population is below the poverty level For the Hispanic and Asian populations block groups that are around 31 40 Asian or 41 50 Hispanic tend to have higher poverty rates than blocks with a higher or lower percentage of Hispanic or Asian residents 27 Nevertheless in some ways metro Atlanta has become increasingly more integrated as the dissimilarity index for blacks or African Americans has decreased by 12 5 from 1980 to 2000 and the isolation index has decreased by 4 5 On the other hand the dissimilarity index and isolation index increased for Hispanics or Latinos as Atlanta had the second largest increase in residential segregation for Hispanics and Latinos out of the metropolitan statistical areas studied by the US Census Bureau While Atlanta still maintains a dissimilarity and isolation index for African Americans and a dissimilarity index for Latinos that is higher than average for metropolitan areas in the US the city s dissimilarity index for black residents is also decreasing at a higher than average rate which reflects the city s growing rate of integration 28 Certain areas of the city are predominantly black or white See also Demographics of Atlanta Neighborhoods 29 sixty percent of the city s area consists of largely black neighborhoods together Northwest Southwest and Southeast Atlanta are 92 percent black there are some areas that are predominantly white notably Buckhead and Northeast Atlanta NPUs F and N Virginia Highland Morningside Lenox Park Inman Park Candler Park Poncey Highland Reynoldstown Cabbagetown Lake Claire which are on average 80 whiteFederal complaint filed with Dept of Education after a Mother learnt her child s principal Principal Sharyn Briscoe was segregating children based upon their skin color 30 References Edit Silver Nate The Most Diverse Cities Are Often The Most Segregated FiveThirtyEight May 1 2015 at 8 28 AM 1 dead link 2 dead link a b c Allison Dorsey To Build Our Lives Together p 34ff Lawrence Otis Graham Our Kind of People inside America s Black upper class p 335 Segregation New Georgia Encyclopedia Harris Warren G Clark Gable A Biography Harmony 2002 p 203 ISBN 0 307 23714 1 Watts Jill Hattie McDaniel Black Ambition White Hollywood 2005 page 172 ISBN 0 06 051490 6 Atlanta Premiere of Gone With The Wind John Egerton Speak now against the day p 240 The little known story of MLK s drum major for justice Atlanta Journal Constitution October 16 2011 a b Kruse Kevin Michael February 1 2008 White flight Atlanta and the making of modern conservatism By Kevin Michael Kruse ISBN 978 0691092607 Retrieved June 27 2011 The South Divided City Time magazine January 18 1963 Archived from the original on December 20 2008 Retrieved June 27 2011 David Andrew Harmon Beneath the image of the Civil Rights Movement and race relations p 177ff Thamel Pete 2006 01 01 Grier Integrated a Game and Earned the World s Respect New York Times Retrieved 2009 04 15 Allen Ivan Hemphill Paul 1971 Mayor Notes on the Sixties Simon and Schuster ISBN 978 0 671 20889 9 Bus desegregation in Atlanta Digital Library of Georgia Rich s Department Store New Georgia Encyclopedia Lester Maddox New Georgia Encyclopedia Negroes Attend Atlanta Theaters Atlanta Journal 15 May 1962 Daily Report Archived 2014 12 18 at the Wayback Machine APS Timeline Atlanta Regional Council for Higher Education Archived from the original on 2016 01 13 Retrieved 2012 01 28 a b Lois M Quinn et al Racial Integration in Urban America A Block Level Analysis of African American and White Housing Patterns University of Wisconsin Milwaukee Dawkins Casey J September 2003 Measuring the Spatial Pattern of Residential Segregation Urban Studies 41 4 833 851 doi 10 1080 0042098042000194133 S2CID 154287942 The Black metropolis in the twenty first century race power and politics of place Bullard Robert D Robert Doyle 1946 Lanham 10 May 2007 ISBN 9780742571778 OCLC 857769803 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Charles Camille Zubrinsky 2003 The dynamics of racial residential segregation Annual Review of Sociology 29 167 207 doi 10 1146 annurev soc 29 010202 100002 Hayes Melissa Mae August 2006 The Building Blocks of Atlanta Racial Residential Segregation and Neighborhood Inequity Racial and Ethnic Residential Segregation in the United States 1980 2000 PDF U S Census Bureau data as tabulated on Demographics of Atlanta Neighborhoods It Was Just Disbelief Parent Files Complaint Against Atlanta Elementary School After Learning the Principal Segregated Students Based on Race 10 August 2021 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Racial segregation in Atlanta amp oldid 1139763058, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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