Published on Charlotte Mecklenburg Story (https://www.cmstory.org)

Home > 1950s - Residential Segregation

1950s - Residential Segregation

According to the 1950 Census figures, Charlotte becomes one of the most residentially segregated cities in the US.

  • Divided by both race and class, blacks now live primarily in the northwest section of town. 
  • Upper-middle-class whites live in the southeast, and lower-middle-class whites move into the southwest and northeast. 
  • Blacks and whites live in separate worlds. Most black men are manual laborers; half of the black women in Charlotte work as domestics in white households. 
  • The average white person completes 12 years of schooling; the average black only six grades. High school education for a black child is not yet widely available in North Carolina. 
  • In accordance with state and local laws, Charlotte has segregated schools, parks, swimming pools, playgrounds, and cemeteries. 
  • No black person has held any significant position in local government since the 1890s. 
Event Type: 
Modern Era Begins 1946-1959
Exhibit & Section: 
African American Album Volume 2 [1]
Main Image: 
C. Metz, custodian at all-white Central High School
Node Order: 
300
Tags: 
African American Album 2 - Events Timeline [2]
This node displays related exhibits: 
No
Event Date Field: 
Friday, December 22, 2017
Date of Event:


Source URL:https://www.cmstory.org/exhibits/african-american-album-volume-2/1950s-residential-segregation

Links
[1] https://www.cmstory.org/exhibits/african-american-album-volume-2 [2] https://www.cmstory.org/tags/african-american-album-2-events-timeline