Black Politics in New Deal Atlanta
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Black reformers, often working within federal agencies as social workers and administrators, saw the inclusion of African Americans in New Deal social welfare programs as a chance to prepare black Atlantans to take their rightful place in the political and social mainstream. They also worked to build a constituency they could mobilize for civil rights, in the process facilitating a shift from elite reform to the mass mobilization that marked the postwar black freedom struggle.
Although these reformers' efforts were an essential prelude to civil rights activism, Ferguson argues that they also had lasting negative repercussions, embedded as they were in the politics of respectability. By attempting to impose bourgeois behavioral standards on the black community, elite reformers stratified it into those they determined deserving to participate in federal social welfare programs and those they consigned to remain at the margins of civic life.
Karen Ferguson
Karen Ferguson is associate professor of history at Simon Fraser University in Vancouver, British Columbia.
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Black Politics in New Deal Atlanta - Karen Ferguson
Black Politics in New Deal Atlanta
The John Hope Franklin Series in
African American History and Culture
Waldo E. Martin Jr. and Patricia Sullivan, editors
Black Politics in New Deal Atlanta
Karen Ferguson
The University of North Carolina Press
Capel Hill & London
© 2002 The University of
North Carolina Press
All rights reserved
Designed by Jacquline Johnson
Set in Charter
by Tseng Information Systems, Inc.
Manufactured in the United States of America
The paper in this book meets the guidelines for permanence and durability of the Committee on Production Guidelines for Book Longevity of the Council on Library Resources.
This volume was published with the generous assistance of the University Publications Committee of Simon Fraser University.
Chapter 9 was previously published as The Politics of Exclusion: Wartime Industrialization, Civil Rights Mobilization, and Black Politics in Atlanta, Georgia, 1942–1946,
in The Second Wave: Southern Industrialization from the 1940s to the 1970s, edited by Philip Scranton (Athens: University of Georgia Press, 2001), 43–80; reprinted with permission.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-
Publication Data
Ferguson, Karen (Karen Jane)
Black politics in New Deal Atlanta/
Karen Ferguson.
p. cm.—(The John Hope Franklin series
in African American history and culture)
Includes bibliographical references and
index.
ISBN 0-8078-2701-0 (alk. paper)—
ISBN 0-8078-5370-4 (pbk.: alk. paper)
1. African Americans—Georgia—Atlanta—
Politics and government—20th century.
2. African Americans—Georgia—Atlanta—
Social conditions—20th century.
3. African American social reformers—
Georgia—Atlanta—History—20th century.
4. Elite (Social sciences)—Georgia—
Atlanta—History—20th century.
5. Atlanta (Ga.)—Politics and
government—20th century. 6. Atlanta
(Ga.)—Social conditions—20th century.
7. Atlanta (Ga.)—Race relations. 8. New
Deal, 1933–1939—Georgia—Atlanta.
I. Title. II. Series.
F294.A89 N438 2002
975.8’23100496073—dc21 2001059836
cloth 06 05 04 03 02 5 4 3 2 1
paper 06 05 04 03 02 5 4 3 2 1
For my parents,
Joan and David Ferguson,
and my sister,
Sandra Ferguson,
with love
Contents
Acknowledgments
Abbreviations
Introduction
Part I Life at the Margins
1 The Wheel within a Wheel: Black Atlanta and the Reform Elite
2 A Road Not Taken: The Radical Response to the Great Depression
Part II The New Deal
3 Carpetbaggers and Scalawags: The New Politics of the New Deal
4 Lifting the Taboo: The Black New Deal in Atlanta
5 Unwanted Attention: Black Workers and the New Deal
6 The New Face of Black Activism
Part III The New Deal and Local Politics in Black and White
7 A Jungle World Breeding Jungle Life: The White Campaign for Slum Clearance and Public Housing
8 A Laboratory for Citizenship: The Black Campaign for Slum Clearance and Public Housing
Part IV Wartime Atlanta and the Struggle for Inclusion
9 The Inner Wheel Breaks Out: Wartime Atlanta and the Urban League
Epilogue: The Politics of Inclusion
Appendix: Tables
Notes
Works Cited
Index
Maps and Illustrations
Maps
1 Atlanta, 1930 26
2 Atlanta's Prewar Slum Clearance and Low-Income-Housing Projects 167
Illustrations
Working-class African American neighborhood 24
W. E. B. Du Bois 39
Lugenia Burns Hope 40
Forrester B. Washington 41
Gay Shepperson 77
Capitol Homes 177
Beaver Slide 189
TIC Club letterhead 194
Harold Ickes and John Hope 197
Aerial photograph of University Homes 215
University Homes manager and staff 217
Editorial cartoon, Atlanta Daily World, 17 October 1943 222
Editorial cartoon, Atlanta Daily World, 22 September 1943 237
Editorial cartoon, Atlanta Daily World, 21 April 1944 238
Defense trainees, Booker T. Washington High School 244
Editorial cartoon, Atlanta Daily World, 8 December 1943 249
Acknowledgments
Writing these acknowledgments and realizing my accumulated debts have been humbling experiences for someone whose self-identity has been, until now, I know, embarrassingly close to the myth of the self-made man or woman. I have benefited enormously from the generosity of family, friends, teachers, and institutions.
Most immediate to this project, I owe a great deal to the expertise and help of the archivists and librarians with whom I spent my days during a very happy year of research in Atlanta. I wish to thank the staff at the Special Collections departments of Clark-Atlanta and Emory Universities, the Atlanta History Center, the Auburn Avenue Research Library, the Georgia Department of Archives and History, and the National Archives Regional Office in East Point, Georgia. Outside of Atlanta, I am particularly appreciative of the extremely knowledgeable staff at the Roosevelt Library in Hyde Park, New York, whose expert navigation of its voluminous holdings led to a very productive research trip.
I also owe a great deal to those who supported me financially throughout graduate school. The history department of Duke University granted me a Sydnor Doctoral Fellowship for my first year of graduate school and the Richard Watson Instructorship for my last. In the interim, I received a Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada doctoral fellowship, which allowed me, among other benefits, to live for that year in Atlanta. A Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt Institute Research Grant funded my visit to the Roosevelt Library. A postdoctoral fellowship at the sorely missed Frederick Douglass Institute for African and African American Studies at the University of Rochester gave me the opportunity to re-conceptualize my doctoral dissertation and to work on turning it into a book. Finally, my parents provided emergency grants at several key junctures throughout my education without once asking me when I was going to get a real job.
I have been exceptionally lucky to encounter teachers throughout my schooling who have guided and inspired me. I was introduced to academic history by two extraordinary high school teachers, Helen Bell and Patricia Hall, who whetted my appetite for primary research and sharpened my critical thinking. They prepared me exceptionally well for honors history at McGill University, where John Herd Thompson's example and encouragement made me realize a career in history was both desirable and possible.
This book began as a dissertation at Duke University. There I lived and breathed African American history, thanks to a remarkable group of scholars and students. Foremost I wish thank two very different mentors, both models of intellectual generosity. First, I express my debt to my adviser, Raymond Gavins, a master graduate teacher who is a legend among a generation of Duke-trained African Americanists in awe of his quiet authority and encyclopedic knowledge. He provided me with a rock-solid foundation in African American history and then demonstrated tremendous discretion in supervising my project; always there to offer superb advice and support when I needed it, Ray showed extraordinary restraint in allowing me to find my own way. Second, I wish to thank Peter Wood, whose infinite intellectual curiosity, confidence, and charisma always inspired me and whose writing and teaching have greatly influenced my own. At Duke, I also treasure my experience as a field interviewer for the Center for Documentary Studies’ Behind the Veil: Documenting African American Life in the Jim Crow South
project. Thanks largely to the support of the project's principal investigators, William Chafe, Raymond Gavins, and Robert Korstad, and to the candor of the sixty remarkable women and men who spoke with me for the project, this was one of the seminal experiences of my life and the crucible of the central questions that inform this work. Equally important to my success were my fellow graduate students, especially Jonathan Abels, Alexander Byrd, Kirsten Delegard, Paul Husbands, Danna Kostroun, Deborah Montgomerie, Evelyn Sterne, and Anne Valk. I owe a great deal to Claudio Saunt, who helped me make it through graduate school through his love, example of perseverance, and intellectual companionship.
After graduate school, I was extremely fortunate to be hired by the history department of Simon Fraser University, where faculty research is encouraged and supported (in my case by a grant from University Publications Grants). In the history department I have been delighted and stimulated by my colleagues since the day of my interview, when chair Richard Boyer engaged me in an hour-long conversation about W. E. B. Du Bois's Black Reconstruction instead of filling me in on faculty benefits. William Cleveland, Michael Fellman, and Mary Lynn Stewart offered invaluable advice about the publishing process. My predecessor Don Kirschner's hard questions forced me to broaden my perspective and think more carefully about the national context of this study. Tina Loo offered a model of conceptual rigor, cheerful professionalism, and diligence that I have worked to adopt as my own. Tina, along with Paige Raibmon, Lawrin Armstrong, Chris Dummitt, Mark Leier, Michael Prokopow, and Leo Shin, read parts of this manuscript and helped me to polish it for final submission. I also owe a debt to my students of African American history, whose incredible engagement reminds me every day about the importance of this field to understanding American society.
Outside of my home institutions, many other scholars have contributed to this work. Sarah Judson has been my sounding board on all matters related to Atlanta history since we first met in the Clark-Atlanta University archives, and I look forward to reading her forthcoming book. As I worked on this manuscript, I benefited greatly from participating in two small conferences. The Black History Workshop at the University of Houston offered an extraordinary opportunity to share research and develop new ideas with junior and senior scholars in an extremely supportive and productive setting. I wish particularly to thank organizers Richard Blackett and Linda Reed and participants Alison Dorsey and Beth Bates. At the Georgia Institute of Technology, The Second Wave: Southern Industrialization after World War II
conference proved an equally valuable experience and introduced me to Merl Reed, whose commentary on my paper helped me to refine my chapter on the Second World War, and Philip Scranton, whose extraordinary editing of the volume of essays that emerged from this conference greatly improved my writing. I also wish to thank participants and audience members in the sessions at which I presented my work at the North American Labor History conference, the Organization of American History conference, and the Southern Historical Association conference. Patricia Sullivan and the other, anonymous reader of this manuscript pushed me to refine my argument and to place this study in a broader context, both of which have resulted in a subtler, and more sophisticated and relevant, work. Despite the enormous contribution of all of these scholars, I remain responsible for any errors or omissions that remain.
My experience with the University of North Carolina Press has been felicitous from the beginning. I wish to thank Lewis Bateman for encouraging this project and his successor, Charles Grench, for shepherding my manuscript attentively and offering such savvy advice. Thanks also to Ruth Homrighaus for all of her patience and help and for answering all of my frantic emails so promptly. Suzanne Comer Bell copyedited the manuscript with meticulous care. I never expected the publication process to be as rewarding as it has proven to be.
Friends sustained me throughout the writing of this book. I wish particularly to thank my Vancouver circle, who have opened my world in so many ways. Native Vancouverites Paulina Chow, Susan Nance, and Paige Raibmon have constantly amazed and motivated me with their cultural sophistication, physical and emotional daring, and intense relationship with British Columbia's awesome mountainous terrain. Tina Loo and Meg Stanley have shown me, at last, how to play well with others. Jane Power and Jack O'Dell's extraordinary example and gentle encouragement have inspired me to edge toward political engagement and activism, despite my innate caution and cynicism. Chris Dummitt has guided me on my search for the middle way. Most important, Debby Meyer has shown me how close and supportive friendship can be.
My greatest debt is to my family. My parents, Joan and David Ferguson, have given me the priceless gift of unconditional love. I devote myself to integrating in my own life the yin and yang of my mother's loving compassion and my father's equally loving pragmatism. My sister Sandra has been a constant support and inspiration and has kept me laughing all the way. I dedicate this book to the three of you.
Abbreviations
Introduction
Today it makes little difference to Atlanta, to the South, what the Negro thinks or dreams or wills. In the soul-life of the land he is today, and naturally will long remain, unthought of, half forgotten; and yet when he does come to think and will and do for himself—and let no man dream that day will never come—then the part he plays will not be one of sudden learning, but words and thoughts he has been taught to lisp in his race-childhood. Today the ferment of his striving toward self-realization is to the strife of the white world like a wheel within a wheel: beyond the Veil are smaller but like problems of ideals, of leaders and the led, of serfdom, of poverty, of order and subordination, and, through all, the veil of race. Few know of these problems, few who know notice them; and yet there they are, awaiting student, artist, and seer—a field for somebody sometime to discover.
—W. E. B. Du Bois, The Souls of Black Folk
This book is about the fulfillment of Du Bois's prophecy. It is a study of a group of black Atlantans and their struggle to lift the veil of racial subordination and to move the city's African American community from the margins to the center of civic life. It is also an investigation of how that struggle and its achievements were inexorably shaped by the parallel society that Jim Crow forced black Atlantans to build behind the veil. For, while black Atlantans were bound together by their shared experience of race in a society that segregated and oppressed them according to their ancestry, within the inner wheel of the black community their lives were as various as white Atlantans’, whose color united them in white supremacy. Given their diversity, African Americans in the city chose a variety of often conflicting paths to release themselves from the subjugation of Jim Crow. Struggles over the legitimacy and efficacy of these manifold strategies consumed the internal politics of the black community during the Jim Crow era. The resolution of these conflicts would help define the contours of the postwar black freedom struggle, its strategies and objectives, and its achievements. It would also set the stage for the widening gulf between those African Americans who have been able to take advantage of positive recognition from the state since the New Deal and those consigned to remain at the margins of civil society.
It was with a question about the origins of this gulf, so visible and remarked upon today, that I began this study. Why was it, I pondered, that some African Americans had done so well despite the continuing inequalities they and other black people faced in the United States, while others had been left behind, equally marginal in American society as they had been before civil rights achievements and Supreme Court victories? In order to answer this question, I took my cue from Du Bois, both by examining the internal dynamics of the wheel within the wheel
of the black community and by studying Atlanta. As it was for Du Bois, Atlanta continues to be a bellwether. Even more a black middle-class mecca than at the turn of the last century, Hotlanta
today is a national center of African American education, culture, and politics. It has been ruled by a black mayor since the election of Maynard Jackson in 1973, and since 1970 its population has been majority black. Nevertheless, it continues to be home to some of the poorest African American urban neighborhoods in the United States.
What I found as I began to seek to resolve this paradox was that the New Deal marked a crucial era by favoring the members and program of a group of black reformers who aimed to incorporate African Americans fully in American society through the vast social reordering promised by the Roosevelt administration. Professionally trained as social workers, sociologists, teachers, economists, and lawyers, and most of them under forty-five years of age, this group of social engineers,
¹ as some of them described themselves, became a crucial element in the New Deal's progressive left wing, which sought to overturn the South's extreme racial and class exploitation. While members of the Washington, D.C., black cabinet
were the best known of this group, in states and cities across the region, African American bureaucrats and activists worked on the ground to achieve this aim.²
No other city matched Atlanta, however, home to the South's largest population of college-educated African Americans and a crucial birthplace of the reform vision that drove the new generation of black elites. The city's numerous black postsecondary institutions, led by Atlanta University (AU), provided a base that acted as a nationwide magnet for social workers and social scientists. Students and graduates of W. E. B. Du Bois's department of sociology at AU and Forrester B. Washington's respected Atlanta School of Social Work (ASSW), members of Lugenia Burns Hope's settlement-house agency, the Neighborhood Union (NU), and black employees and volunteers of a full complement of black-and white-run social-work agencies, formed an unusually large and influential reform group unified in its devotion to uplifting black Atlantans.
Atlanta's environment of Jim Crow white supremacy inextricably shaped this group's perspective and program. In the year of Roosevelt's election, which marks the beginning of this study, black Atlantans were almost entirely excluded from public life. This exclusion was the product of a decades-long effort in Atlanta, in Georgia, in the South, and in the nation to oppress and marginalize black citizens by any means necessary. During this post-Reconstruction period, aptly called the nadir
by one-time Atlanta University historian Rayford Logan, whites sought to circumscribe the meaning of black freedom to the narrowest of possible definitions. Officials disfranchised black Atlantans through the white primary and poll tax and separated them from whites through local statute and U.S. Supreme Court decree. This legal subjugation was reinforced by custom and by extralegal means. Racial tradition
compelled social, economic, and residential segregation. White vigilantes regularly and effectively sought to maintain the racial order through antiblack intimidation and mob violence. As a result of these actions, black Atlantans lived beyond the pale of civil society. African Americans were largely unacknowledged except punitively by public Officials who denied their citizenship and their contribution to city life.³
Elite black reformers shared this exclusion with all other African Americans during this period. Despite their superior schooling and credentials, white society lumped them with all other black people, meaning that their lives were circumscribed to the inner wheel of the black community, where they were forced to live, work, and conduct virtually all of their affairs among the penurious, unschooled, and overworked of their race. This shared exclusion was the basis of black reformers’ efforts on the black community's behalf. Whether they liked it or not, they knew that their fate was intertwined with the majority of African Americans, and consequently, as one famous black reform slogan put it, they would have to lift if they wished to climb. Hence, for years before the New Deal, these leaders had worked to force local Officials to acknowledge the citizenship of black Atlantans and to incorporate the black community into city affairs. Their frustrating, decades-long struggle for parks and schools, sewers and electricity for black neighborhoods, and black police and higher teachers’ salaries, as well as efforts to prepare black Atlantans to assume full citizenship, attested to their confidence that the struggle would someday result in African Americans taking their rightful place at the center of civic life.⁴
However beneficial these efforts were, they were not democratic. Beginning with Jim Crow's effective disfranchisement of African Americans at the turn of the century, black politics were limited to brokerage by a tiny group of literate spokespeople who negotiated on behalf of the black community with white elites. This group's stranglehold on influence with the outer wheel meant that its particular ideology and program for liberation began to represent all African Americans to the outer wheel with little or no accountability to the rest of the black community and with disregard to or dismissal of other strategies for freedom.⁵
Atlanta is an ideal site to examine this elite's ideology and program, for in important ways the city was a well-spring for the talented tenth.
In fact, Atlanta was the birthplace of the term, coined by white Baptist educator Henry T. Morehouse in 1896 during the depths of the nadir. He believed that the masses of African Americans could best be controlled by liberally educated black race managers
who would form a buffer between non-elite blacks and the white community. Eventually the school he helped found to achieve this aim, Atlanta Baptist College, would be renamed after him. Du Bois, who went on to found the NAACP, then subverted the accommodationism implied in Morehouse's meaning to refer to the group he believed would lead African Americans to full American citizenship through militant protest.⁶
The contradictions of these two definitions, and the racial custodianship essential to both, had enormous implications for black reform efforts in the Jim Crow period. The ambiguity of black reformers’ self-defined position as both controllers and liberators was encapsulated in uplift ideology, the most pervasive elite social philosophy of the first half of the twentieth century. As Jim Crow shut African Americans out of the political, economic, and social life of the outer wheel, black reformers in Atlanta sought to prove the citizenship of black people through the only expression available to them—their behavior. By demonstrating that African Americans lived by and aspired to the same moral and behavioral codes as the white middle class, black reformers sought to show that black Atlantans were deserving of full citizenship.
This outward-looking behavioral code evolved into what Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham has called the politics of respectability.
By teaching African Americans to live lives of bourgeois respectability, black reformers sought to find common ground on which to live as Americans with Americans of other racial and ethnic backgrounds.
Through these shared moral and behavioral standards, black reformers fought to be seen as both black and American,
working against white rhetoric which would deny this possibility by isolating the ‘Negro's place’ within physical and symbolic spaces of inferiority.
⁷ If African Americans were respectable in every way, they could refute the racist stereotypes that whites used to justify black subordination. The rhetoric of respectability, then, was a liberationist tactic to demonstrate African Americans’ citizenship, deny white justifications for their imposed marginality, and move toward full inclusion in public life.
Yet by defining black citizenship in terms of behavior and morality, the politics of respectability was decidedly limited as an ideology of racial liberation. Most obvious, it excluded the legions of African Americans who did not and could not conform to the gender roles, public behavior, and economic activity deemed legitimate by bourgeois America but which the forces of Jim Crow white supremacy sought to prevent black people from achieving.
However, instead of simply excluding this group from their purview, black proponents of respectability asserted their citizenship in opposition to and at the expense of the black masses,
thus marginalizing the un-respectable
even further. Identifying themselves as bourgeois missionaries of respectability, black elites claimed moral superiority and sought recognition of their citizenship by placing themselves above and as the natural leaders of what they considered the uncivilized and undeveloped majority of African Americans. Further, their efforts to uplift and liberate other black people would depend on their followers’ adopting respectable behavior as a prerequisite for full citizenship.⁸
As a flowering of recent scholarship has shown us, the rhetoric of respectability infused the language of elite black reformers of every stripe during the first decades of the twentieth century. Its ubiquity pointed to the hegemonic power of the racial ideologies undergirding Jim Crow. However, during the nadir of the early twentieth century, the focus of most respectability literature, this ideology had few implications. Marginalized politically, economically, and socially, black reformers lacked the resources and power that would allow them to pursue their ambitious agenda. They found it impossible to develop large or influential constituencies for their program among whites or the black people they intended to serve. Instead they found themselves trapped within the accommodation of race management. Nor would the forces of Jim Crow allow them to distance themselves physically or symbolically from the poor. Born of futility, uplift ideology reflected the marginality of all African Americans to the polity in the early part of the twentieth century.
Only with the recognition of African Americans by the state during the New Deal did blacks begin to escape this marginality and uplift ideology begin to have material implications for African Americans. Atlanta's black reform elite immediately recognized the New Deal's potential as a tool to escape its borderline position and to advance black citizenship. Hired into federal agencies as social workers, adult education teachers, and Negro Division
directors, these black bureaucrats worked from within the New Deal's social work meritocracies, manipulating them as much as they could to advance their long-held goals for the black community. Thus black reformers were not simply recipients of federal programs; rather, they shaped federal activity to help bring some black Atlantans from the social, economic, and political margins in ways never intended or dreamt of by white New Deal administrators. To borrow from historian Lizabeth Cohen, they made their own New Deal.⁹
Atlanta's black reformers were in a particularly good position to take advantage of these opportunities. Dominated by university-trained professionals eligible for work in federal bureaucracies, this group's position within the black community and the city strengthened during the 1930s. In other places in the South and the nation where entrepreneurs and professionals like physicians and lawyers figured prominently, the black elite's influence declined due to economic hardship during the Depression. These groups also had fewer opportunities to use the New Deal than Atlanta's social workers, teachers, and economists. Further, in industrial cities nationwide, elite African Americans faced an insurgent working class that threatened their claims to race leadership. While Atlanta's black workers certainly were not quiescent and supported radical movements such as Communism, the vast majority lacked the mobilizing opportunities of industrial work. Hence, the black reform elite's vision and program was unusually dominant in Atlanta.¹⁰
The relative security of Atlanta's educated elite meant that they responded positively to a shift in strategy among national black leaders away from Morehouse's accommodationism toward Du Bois's militance. Responding to working-class demands and the New Deal's interest-group politics, a new generation of reformers called for a program of assertive and independent action on the part of the black community, rejecting the conciliatory tactics of an earlier generation. This important turn was reflected in the pages of the NAACP'S mouthpiece, The Crisis, the National Urban League's Opportunity, and much of the black press. As the NUL'S Lester Granger put it, although the black intellectual class had lost touch with working-class issues and concerns, in the state of confused despair and bitter disillusionment
that characterized the Depression, lay the seeds of a new racial attitude and leadership.
¹¹ George Streator, W. E. B. Du Bois's 1930s assistant, characterized this new spirit as one attuned to the concerns of the majority of black Americans and based on mass initiative, mass organization, and mass pressure,
including more democracy, more local control, and wider participation by an ever-growing number of people in the affairs of any and every organization.
¹² This strategy marked a sea change in elite reformers’ perspective. Badly burned in the 1920s by coalition politics with whites, and suffering even greater exclusion from white-controlled society and economy during the privations of the Depression, many younger (and some older) black reformers turned inward in the 1930s, focusing on what Du Bois called the internal self-organization
¹³ of the black community. This strategy required educated black reformers to make common cause with all African Americans in order to achieve their citizenship aims. While they still would be engineered and led by the talented tenth,
the boycotts, protest meetings, civil court cases, and electoral strategies of this new program all relied upon mass support, both physical and financial.¹⁴
In Atlanta this new militancy was motivated largely by black reformers’ hopes for the New Deal, best articulated by Du Bois. In his Depression-era articles and essays and in his 1935 masterwork on the subject, Du Bois hearkened back to the radical democratic experiment of Reconstruction, in which for the first and only time in the South, state power was subject to wide democratic control
and exercised for the benefit of the masses.
¹⁵ Du Bois saw the same potential in the New Deal, where federal programs fundamentally altered the function of the state in the South by expanding government's reach far beyond the protection of the interests of a tiny white elite to include the interests of the poorest southerners. Further, by recognizing the economic interests of the majority, the federal government demonstrated that in a truly representative democracy, political power would extend over all manner of work and industry,
thereby uplifting the mudsills
on whose utter poverty and exploitation the region's economic system depended.¹⁶ Thus, for Du Bois, racial uplift was only possible with a fundamental shift in the political and economic foundations of American society. This vision contrasted sharply with earlier black reformers who placed the burden of responsibility for racial uplift squarely on the shoulders of individual African Americans, rather than the polity. While Du Bois made moralistic statements about the lives and behavior of the masses of black people, he did not blame them for their condition; he condemned the political and economic system undergirding Jim Crow. For Du Bois, respectability and full citizenship could come to African Americans only with a second Reconstruction, in which the black masses
were not only included as full participants in the polity but indeed were at its center. And while his vision still saw the black elite as guiding and directing the uplift that was to result, the main beneficiaries would be the poorest members of the black community, who had suffered the most from capitalist and racial exploitation. Thus, for Du Bois, the New Deal represented a fundamental democratizing shift in American society that would finally allow all African Americans to achieve racial uplift.
However great its promise, the New Deal was just as limited as the first Reconstruction in its definition of democracy and citizenship for African Americans. Black bureaucrats thus operated within a program that included African Americans and tried to ameliorate their condition but without effecting the fundamental social reordering that was required to recognize their citizenship fully. As George Lipsitz has pointed out, the New Deal represented the beginning of America's racialized social democracy through which powerful new forms of structural racial discrimination began to replace the overt segregation of the Jim Crow era. Atlanta, the city that was too busy to hate,
in the words of its long-time mayor William Hartsfield, was no exception.¹⁷
What this important history of racial exclusion and exploitation leaves out is the considerable support that even the most discriminatory federal programs, such as the slum-clearance and low-income-housing program, received from black reformers. In Atlanta, such support came from the fact that the New Deal permitted a group of black bureaucrats and lobbyists associated with AU unprecedented opportunities to influence and shape the African American community according to their uplift objectives. Their active participation in social welfare programs forces a reconsideration of the New Deal's impact on African Americans—one which takes into account black as well as white leaders’ visions for African American urban communities, and black as well as white initiative in bringing those visions to fruition. More broadly, the black influence on Atlanta's New Deal refines our notions of America's social democracy and its beneficiaries. While the racialized exclusions and hierarchies of the welfare state undoubtedly continued and extended the marginalization of African Americans generally while elevating other ethnic groups to the privileges of whiteness,
it is also indisputable that beginning with the New Deal a tiny but growing minority of African Americans achieved upward mobility and fuller citizenship through federal initiatives. Exploring the varied consequences of the New Deal among black Americans is essential to a full understanding of the growing gulf within the African American community between haves and have-nots, which has grown progressively wider since the Second World War, and which complicates our understanding of the New Deal's racial
impact.
One of the foundations of this division lay in the choices the New Deal's limits forced black reformers to make about the battles they would fight and the segments of the black community on whom they would focus their efforts for inclusion and citizenship. Given the black reform elite's dominance, it is not surprising that in Atlanta they chose to start their program from the high ground of the black-controlled campuses of Atlanta University and the city's four black colleges, where they felt safest. From there they worked their way down as far as they could, bringing many black Atlantans into their social and economic sphere but never reaching the majority living in the hollows and bottoms of Atlanta's hilly terrain. While this limitation was first a product of black reformers’ circumscribed authority and resources, it was also a continuing legacy of uplift ideology. When they had the opportunity to determine the recipients of New Deal largesse, they did not choose the mudsills
of the black working class but rather more prosperous elements who were most able to be respectable according to the reformers’ vision. This triage had enormous implications in dividing the black community into those who conformed to the reformers’ vision and thus benefited (and continued to benefit) from government programs and those who were left behind.
Uplift ideology continued to have legitimacy among black reformers because, despite appearances, they had not abandoned it. Historians have rightly noted a fundamental shift in black activism in the 1930s. Throughout the Depression and World War II, a younger generation of leaders urged a new model of inclusion and militancy even in elite-led organizations like the NAACP and NUL. This group asked educated African Americans to support the struggles of the masses,
reasoning that since [the Negro's] is predominantly a race of workers, his interests are those of the working class.
¹⁸ Across the United States, local chapters of these organizations, including Atlanta's, became more assertive in their demands, shunning the accommodationist tactics of an older generation of leaders.
It is important, however, not to mistake this militancy for democracy; while this new generation sought to advocate for and mobilize black workers in its struggle for full citizenship, it also continued to presume that the educated would shape and lead this movement. For most of this group, race determined class
¹⁹ in relation to the outer wheel
of white America, and thus educated African Americans would be the natural leaders of a united black community, all exploited, none exploiters. As Lester Granger put it, Negroes are learning that we have common interests, not because our skins are tinged with the same dark hue, but because we are poor, exploited workers.
²⁰ Thus even many spokespeople on the left continued to take it as a given that the learned elite would lead the black community, even in struggles unique to black workers, such as the fight for union representation. As socialist Bettie Parham wrote of the Negro bourgeoisie's
need to support black workers’ struggles: The laissez faire attitude of the educated Negro toward the laborer can do no other than lead to racial deterioration. It is he who must teach the workers the best methods of handling their grievances and of organizing their unions.
²¹ In fact, black reformers’ convictions as to their essential leadership role became even more powerful in the 1930s as they began to look to techniques of mass mobilization and group pressure to end Jim Crow.
Consequently, nationwide they responded with incredulity whenever their leadership was challenged, as it often was by black radicals during the 1930s. As W. E. B. Du Bois retorted in 1931 to Communist criticism of the black bourgeoisie
and its supposed exploitation of the African American working class, the number of genuine black capitalists
in the United States was infinitesimal, and in fact, he observed, there is probably no group of 12 million persons in the modern world which exhibits smaller contrasts in personal income than the American Negro group.
Furthermore, he wrote, There is no group of leaders on earth who have so largely made common cause with the lowest of their race as educated American Negroes, and it is their foresight and sacrifice and theirs alone that has saved the American freedman from annihilation and degradation.
²² In other words, the new leadership of the 1930s made common cause with the masses with whom they shared a caste position imposed from the outer wheel. However, they continued to accept the social hierarchies of the inner