LETTERS READ: The Desegregation of New Orleans Public Libraries

Published: Feb. 19, 2019, 11:43 p.m.

b'

Wednesday, February 13, 2019
\\n6:00 to 7:30 pm
\\nNora Navra Library, 1902 St. Bernard Avenue
\\nFree and open to the public.

\\n

Mack Guillory III, Emcee.
\\n
Julie Dietz, Reader.

\\n

The historic fight for civil rights in New Orleans is more complicated than most movements in the other 49 United States. Prior to Reconstruction, and the Jim Crow era, free people of color here could legally own property. Free persons of color could even own slaves.

\\n

Another anomaly, albeit post-Jim Crow, is how and when our libraries changed from a separate but equal policy to total desegregation. Without fanfare, our libraries desegregated almost a decade prior to most of the rest of the deep South. An amazing accomplishment for a small, deeply southern town rooted in antebellum sensibilities and unique, international roots.

\\n

This event was made possible by Friends of the New Orleans Public Library and this recording was created live during the event.

\\n

To read more about desegregation in the Jim Crow era South, go here.

\\n\\n--- \\n\\nSend in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/letters-read/message'