Groping toward Democracy

Groping toward Democracy
Author: Priscilla A. Dowden-White
Publisher: University of Missouri Press
Total Pages: 321
Release: 2011-03-23
Genre: History
ISBN: 0826272266

Decades before the 1960s, social reformers began planting the seeds for the Modern Civil Rights era. During the period spanning World Wars I and II, St. Louis, Missouri, was home to a dynamic group of African American social welfare reformers. The city’s history and culture were shaped both by those who would construct it as a southern city and by the heirs of New England abolitionism. Allying with white liberals to promote the era’s new emphasis on “the common good,” black reformers confronted racial segregation and its consequences of inequality and, in doing so, helped to determine the gradual change in public policy that led to a more inclusive social order. In Groping toward Democracy: African American Social Welfare Reform in St. Louis, 1910–1949, historian Priscilla A. Dowden-White presents an on-the-ground view of local institution building and community organizing campaigns initiated by African American social welfare reformers. Through extensive research, the author places African American social welfare reform efforts within the vanguard of interwar community and neighborhood organization, reaching beyond the “racial uplift” and “behavior” models of the studies preceding hers. She explores one of the era’s chief organizing principles, the “community as a whole” idea, and deliberates on its relationship to segregation and the St. Louis black community’s methods of reform. Groping toward Democracy depicts the dilemmas organizers faced in this segregated time, explaining how they pursued the goal of full, uncontested black citizenship while still seeking to maximize the benefits available to African Americans in segregated institutions. The book’s nuanced mapping of the terrain of social welfare offers an unparalleled view of the progress brought forth by the early-twentieth-century crusade for democracy and equality. By delving into interrelated developments in health care, education, labor, and city planning, Dowden-White deftly examines St. Louis’s African American interwar history. Her in-depth archival research fills a void in the scholarship of St. Louis’s social development, and her compelling arguments will be of great interest to scholars and teachers of American urban studies and social welfare history.

Urban League of Saint Louis, Inc. Collection

Urban League of Saint Louis, Inc. Collection
Author:
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Presents the Urban League of Saint Louis, Inc. Collection (1938-1982) of the Western Historical Manuscripts Collection at the University of Missouri at Saint Louis. Explains that the Urban League of Saint Louis, Inc. was began as a result of the 1918 race riots in East Saint Louis, Illinois. Describes the scope and content of the collection.

History of the Urban League of Metropolitan St. Louis

History of the Urban League of Metropolitan St. Louis
Author: John Aaron Wright
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2020
Genre: African Americans
ISBN: 9781681842608

"This book reflects the deliberate initiatives of the Urban League of Metropolitan St. Louis that address social services from challenges to workable solutions. Since 1918, the Board, staff, members, and volunteers of the Urban League of Metropolitan St. Louis have worked diligently in this community to serve generations of residents of all ages with programs of community empowerment, economic opportunity, educational excellence, civil rights, and advocacy. Formed to address racial issues following the devastating East St. Louis race riots, the Urban League has been a stabilizing force and a catalyst for change for a century. It is the Urban League's mission to empower African Americans and others throughout the region in securing economic self-reliance, social equality, and civil rights"--