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Lending a Hand: Black Business Owners’ Complex Role in the Civil Rights Movement
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 February 2020
Abstract
This article explores the powerful ways in which black business owners supported the Civil Rights movement. Business owners such as Leah Chase, Gus Courts, A. G. Gaston, and Amzie Moore, among others, contributed resources and organizational skills to the fight for racial justice. But the relationship between business owners and activists within the movement was at times characterized by tension. Although business owners sometimes found the approach of activists to be too radical and activists sometimes found the business owners’ approach to be too conservative, they found ways to compromise in order to work cooperatively toward racial justice.
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- © The Author 2020. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the Business History Conference. All rights reserved.
Footnotes
This article was supported by a research grant from the Institute for New Economic Thinking. The authors appreciate the helpful suggestions made by Andrew Popp, Thomas Ferguson, Lynn Parramore, and the two anonymous referees. The authors are also grateful for feedback received on earlier versions of the paper presented at the World Economic History Congress in August 2018 and at the New Directions in Modern US History Workshop at Boston University in May 2018.
References
Bibliography of Works Cited
Black Enterprise
New Yorker
New York Times
Washington Monthly
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