List of sundown towns in the United States

Last updated

Map showing historical sundown towns in the United States by county. Map only includes places with verifiable instances of discrimination based on race listed in this article. A location's inclusion here is not necessarily indicative of this type of discrimination being present today. Sundown Towns in the United States by County (Oct 2024).png
Map showing historical sundown towns in the United States by county. Map only includes places with verifiable instances of discrimination based on race listed in this article. A location's inclusion here is not necessarily indicative of this type of discrimination being present today.

A sundown town refers to a municipality or neighborhood within the United States that practices or once practiced a form of racial segregation characterized by intimidation, hostility, or violence among White people directed toward non-whites, especially against African Americans. The term "sundown town" derives from the practice of White towns erecting signage alerting non-Whites to vacate the area before sundown. [1] Sundown towns might include entire sundown counties or sundown suburbs and have historically been strengthened by the local presence of the Ku Klux Klan (KKK), a White supremacist organization. [2] Discrimination practices commonly found in sundown towns became federally illegal during the 20th century.

Contents

Though the United States has a history with expulsion of African Americans from certain communities dating to the 18th century, sundown towns became common during the nadir of American race relations after the Reconstruction era ended in 1877 and through the civil rights movement in the mid-twentieth century. The period was marked by the lawful continuation of racial segregation in the United States, known as the Jim Crow era. The Civil Rights Act of 1968 codified enforcement of federal law abolishing restrictive housing covenants.

Sundown towns could issue written warnings to non-Whites by way of signage, city ordinances, housing covenants, and notices posted in local papers or directly on the homes of non-White families and their employers. Violent means of expelling minorities from their communities may include the realization or threat of firing gunshots and dynamite into their homes, burning down their homes, planting burning crosses and bombs in their yards, mobbing them, lynching them, and massacring them.

Definition and scope

A sundown town is an all-White community that shows or has shown hostility toward non-Whites. Sundown town practices may be evoked in the form of city ordinances barring people of color after dark, exclusionary covenants for housing opportunity, signage warning ethnic groups to vacate, unequal treatment by local law enforcement, and unwritten rules permitting harassment. Sundown towns in the United States include present communities that do not "socially accept" people who are not White. Although African Americans are primarily the focus of sundown town claims, Chinese Americans, Jewish Americans, Native Americans, and Mexican Americans have also been subject to this feeling. [3]

Legally, municipalities cannot currently enforce restrictions or discrimination against people by race or other protected classes, but this has not always been the case. The 1948 United States Supreme Court case Shelley v. Kraemer outlawed the legal enforcement of restrictive housing covenants. Although the Civil Rights Act of 1866 prohibited housing discrimination and defined equal protection, enforcement of such provisions would not be codified until the Civil Rights Act of 1968. As such, any location that is listed below is not an indicator of that place practicing traditional sundown town rules today.

Sundown communities by state

Alabama

Arizona

Arkansas

California

Colorado

Connecticut

Florida

Georgia

A headline taken from the February 19, 1913, edition of The Atlanta Georgian about violence in Cumming, Georgia Forsyth County headline of 19 February 1913.jpg
A headline taken from the February 19, 1913, edition of The Atlanta Georgian about violence in Cumming, Georgia

Illinois

Around 10,000 spectators watch the lynching of William "Froggie" James in Cairo, Illinois, on November 11, 1909. Lynching-of-will-james.jpg
Around 10,000 spectators watch the lynching of William "Froggie" James in Cairo, Illinois, on November 11, 1909.

Indiana

1902 New York Times article detailing the last Black man to be forcefully driven out of Decatur, Indiana. Negroes Driven Away.jpg
1902 New York Times article detailing the last Black man to be forcefully driven out of Decatur, Indiana.

Iowa

Kansas

Kentucky

Louisiana

Maryland

Massachusetts

Michigan

Minnesota

Missouri

Nevada

New Jersey

North Carolina

Julian S. Carr, Confederate States Army veteran and namesake of Carrboro, North Carolina. Julian Shakespeare Carr (1845-1924).jpg
Julian S. Carr, Confederate States Army veteran and namesake of Carrboro, North Carolina.

Ohio

Oklahoma

Oregon

Pennsylvania

South Dakota

Tennessee

Texas

Washington

Wisconsin

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References

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  49. Loewen, James W. (2018). Sundown Towns: A Hidden Dimension of American Racism (2018 ed.). New York City: The New Press. pp. 1–2. ISBN   9781620974346. signs that usually said "Nigger Don't Let the Sun Go Down on You in ____."Anna-Jonesboro had such signs on Highway 127 as recently as the 1970s.
  50. "Bayonets in Chicago Race Rioting". The Sydney Morning Herald . Chicago. July 15, 1951. p. 1. Archived from the original on September 16, 2024. Retrieved October 3, 2024.
  51. Nolte, Robert (September 8, 1966). "'Victory' Means Little to Cicero". Billings Gazette . Billings, Montana. p. 7. Archived from the original on October 3, 2024. Retrieved October 3, 2024 via Newspapers.com. Although he says the Cicero march was a victory, residents of Cicero probably feel no different about Negroes than they did one week ago. (Negroes are not allowed to live in Cicero, but ironically, 15,000 of them work in the suburb's factories and stores five days a week.){{cite news}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  52. Loewen, James W. (2005). Sundown Towns: A Hidden Dimension of American Racism. New York City: The New Press. p. 100. ISBN   978-1-62097-454-4. Archived from the original on October 3, 2024. Retrieved September 10, 2024 via Google Books. Most of these towns, especially in the Midwest, were not close to any black population concentration and would not have confronted any inundation by African Americans had they failed to pass an ordinance. Consider De Land, for instance, a small village in central Illinois, population 475 in 2000. Present and former members of the De Land board of trustees agreed in 2002 that it had passed such an ordinance decades ago.
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  60. 1 2 "Professional Witnesses". The Ohio Democrat. Logan, Ohio. August 26, 1898. p. 6. Archived from the original on February 18, 2019. Retrieved February 18, 2019 via Chronicling America. The citizens of Sandoval, Ill., will not allow any negro to live in their town. Several weeks ago two strange negroes were employed by a new carpenter who was not acquainted with the color-line law of the place, but it did not take him long to learn it when seventy-five of the 'best people' of the town waiting upon him and threatened to lynch the negroes if they did not leave at once.
  61. "And This in Illinois". Rock Island Daily Argus . Rock Island, Illinois. July 17, 1893. p. 4. Archived from the original on April 5, 2023. Retrieved February 18, 2019 via Chronicling America. At Sandoval, thirteen miles east of here, owing to the scarcity of labor, two strange negroes were engaged by some carpenters to help finish a house. Negroes are not allowed to live in that place, consequently a party of seventy-five waited upon them, threatening to lynch them if they did not move at once. Things were finally compromised, the men agreeing to leave town as soon as the building is finished.
  62. Booher, L. L. (September 9, 1937). "Do You Know?". The Aurora Journal . p. 8. Retrieved September 9, 2024 via Newspapers.com.
  63. 1 2 3 El Nasser, Haya (August 4, 2006). "Small Indiana Town Singing Tune of Racial, Ethnic Harmony". USA Today . Archived from the original on October 23, 2012. Retrieved October 9, 2024.
  64. 1 2 3 4 "Negroes Driven Away". The New York Times . Richmond, Indiana. July 14, 1902. Archived from the original on October 6, 2024. Retrieved October 13, 2024 via ByMattRuff.com.
  65. "Race Troubles in Indiana". The Evening Times . Washington, D.C. August 27, 1897. p. 5. Archived from the original on February 18, 2019. Retrieved February 18, 2019 via Chronicling America. There is a race war brewing in Ellwood [sic]. The citizens always have been averse to allowing negroes to live there. For the past twenty years occasionally a colored man or woman would come, but he would not be permitted to remain any length of time. Recently a number of negro families have located here. Within the last few days the entire negro population would have been notified to leave the city. Four of them, have been driven out this week, and the remainder have been given until Saturday night to move. Trouble is anticipated should any families refuse to comply with the demands.
  66. Bibbs, Rebecca R. (April 3, 2016). "Madison County Communities Strive to Overcome 'Sundown Town' Reputation". The Herald Bulletin . Archived from the original on July 20, 2022. Retrieved April 28, 2022.
  67. Bergman, Peter M.; Bergman, Mort N. (1969). The Chronological History of the Negro in America. New York City: Harper & Row. p. 347. ISBN   978-1199128683.
  68. Fort Wayne Daily News. Fort Wayne, IN: 1 May 1907: 3.
  69. James Loewen. Sundown Towns: A Hidden Dimension of American Racism, New York: New Press, 2005.
  70. Reed, Robert (March 28, 1965). "Report Shows Greenwood Had a 'Sundown' Law . . ". The Daily Journal . Archived from the original on July 27, 2024. Retrieved October 13, 2024 via Newspapers.com.
  71. "Negro in Indiana". The Nashville American. Evansville, Indiana. July 7, 1904. p. 12. Archived from the original on August 27, 2024. Retrieved March 3, 2019 via Newspapers.com. Feeling against the negroes in Southern Indiana is becoming more intense each day, especially since the assault on a White girl last week. There are thousands of negroes in this city, and those living along the river refuse to work. In Howell, a small station below here, negroes are not allowed to live, all strange negroes being driven out of the town by the marshal. The color line has been drawn tightly since the race riot of one year ago to-day, when several White people were killed.
  72. "One Place on Earth too Hot for a Negro". The Richmond Climax . Richmond, Kentucky. August 5, 1903. p. 2. Archived from the original on November 2, 2023. Retrieved October 13, 2024 via Chronicling America. At Linton, Ind., in 1896, a coal company imported 300 negroes to take the places of strikers in one of the mines there. The negroes organized a company and drilled with rifles on the streets. One of them shot a White boy and the entire White population, aroused at midnight by fire bell, raided the negro quarters and drove every one of them from the city. Several of them were shot. Since that time not a negro has been allowed to live in the town. On July 6, Alex. Sanderson, a Terre Haute caterer, was employed to serve the banquet at the institution of a new lodge of the Elks. He took his cook and waiters with him and while the lodge work in the hall was going on several hundred miners assembled in the street and threatened to dynamite the hall unless the negroes were sent out of town. They were hurried into a cab and driven to Jasonville, where they were put on the train for Terre Haute. Six policemen hung on the carriage and beat back the crowd while the negroes were driven out of town.
  73. "Alliance". The Indianapolis Star . April 2, 2017. p. A6.
  74. 1 2 3 "Race Feeling Running High". The Plymouth Tribune . Muncie, Indiana. June 30, 1904 [Originally published June 28, 1904]. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  75. "No Colored Men There". Indianapolis Journal . October 22, 1894. p. 8 via Chronicling America. During a month's sojourn in Ripley county I visited several towns without seeing a single Afro-American, and at Osgood, the largest town in the county, was informed that negroes were not allowed to live there, and that there was not a colored family within quite a number of miles of the town.
  76. "John Hay". Richmond Daily Palladium . Richmond, Indiana. August 20, 1898. p. 2. Archived from the original on October 26, 2021. Retrieved April 28, 2022 via Chronicling America. John Hay, the new secretary of state, was born in Salem, this state, about sixty years ago. That place has the unenviable distinction of being the only town in Indiana where negroes are not allowed to live.
  77. "Removal". The Richmond Item . New Albany, Indiana. October 24, 1903. p. 10. Retrieved April 28, 2022 via Newspapers.com. She had seen many Indians in the pioneer days, but until she reached this city had never seen any person of African descent, as negroes are not allowed to live in Washington county.
  78. 1 2 3 4 Kilen, Mike (January 22, 2006). "Racism Lurking at Sundown". The Des Moines Register . p. E1.
  79. "News and Comment". The Coffeyville Daily Journal . Coffeyville, Kansas. October 12, 1916. p. 3. Archived from the original on October 9, 2024. Retrieved March 3, 2019 via Newspapers.com. In trying to prove that a negro wasn't killed in Altoona last week Editor Butcher of the Tribune says 'Negroes are not allowed to live in Altoona.' Clad Thompson believes that one wasn't.
  80. "Wise and Otherwise". The Freedonia Daily Herald . Fredonia, Kansas. October 14, 1916. p. 2. Archived from the original on October 9, 2024. Retrieved March 3, 2019 via Newspapers.com. Commenting on the complaint of the Altoona Tribune that a negro killing had been credited to Altoona when it should have read North Altoona, and the further suggestion by the Tribune that negroes are not allowed to live in Altoona, the Kansas City Star says neither are they allowed to live in North Altoona, evidently.
  81. 1 2 "The Atchison (Kan.) Globe". The Evening Bulletin . August 16, 1902. Archived from the original on July 9, 2023. Retrieved October 23, 2024 via Chronicling America.
  82. "Negroes Hold a Town". The Minneapolis Journal . October 3, 1901. p. 1 via Newspapers.com. The little town of Centralia, Kan., is in the hands of a mob of negroes. The cause of the trouble grew out of the action of a number of citizens of Centralia, making an attack on the home of a negro by the name of Whitmire and firing several shots through the roof of his house and finally destroying his home and compelling the negroes to flee in the night for safety. No negroes are allowed to live in the vicinity of Centralia. The negroes returned in large numbers and rode up and down the streets firing their guns at random, driving all the whites indoors.
  83. "A.P. Roundtree Esq". The Kansas Baptist Herald . May 20, 1912. p. 1 via Newspapers.com. One of the leading colored men in southeastern Kansas is Mr. A. P. Roundtree, formerly of Topeka, Kans. He now resides at Groweburg [ sic ], a mining camp in which no negroes were allowed to live. Mr. Roundtree learned of this condition, went immediately to the company and agreed to furnish them all of the skilled colored miners needed, and that they would move into the camps, at once, if the company consented. Consent was given and Mr. Roundtree lead [ sic ] the colored miners to victory.
  84. Bates, Angela (February 17, 2005). "Black History Month: Postcard from Kansas". Talk of the Nation (Interview). Interviewed by Frank Stasio. Washington, D.C.: NPR. Archived from the original on April 8, 2023. Retrieved October 24, 2024. Ellis ... did have the Jim Crow laws that actually existed in the West, also. They did have what was called sundown laws.
  85. Imagine the Free State (PDF). p. 43. Archived (PDF) from the original on April 3, 2023. Retrieved October 13, 2024 via KSHS.org.
  86. Ackerman, Jan Katz (October 11, 2002). "Wooster's Son Recalls Formative Years". Hays Daily News . p. 5 via Newspapers.com.
  87. "Kansas Items". Fairview Enterprise . Fairview, Kansas. February 9, 1901. p. 3 via Newspapers.com. Nortonville and Howard are two Kansas towns where negroes are not allowed to live.
  88. "Niggers Read and Run". The Chanute Times . Wichita, Kansas. December 2, 1910. p. 2. Retrieved November 4, 2024 via Newspapers.com.
  89. "Letter from Kansas". Daily State Chronicle . Burlingame, Kansas. September 30, 1890 [Originally published September 17, 1890]. p. 1. Archived from the original on February 18, 2019. Retrieved November 3, 2024 via Chronicling America. Among other things, I asked a burly fellow why there was not a single negro in the town of Scranton. He said: "Because we made it too hot for 'em here." I asked him how they managed it. He replied: "We jist tell 'em to GIT and they GITS."
  90. Bates, Angela (February 17, 2005). "Black History Month: Postcard from Kansas". Talk of the Nation (Interview). Interviewed by Frank Stasio. Washington, D.C.: NPR. So the only remaining dugout in the area that was used by the people that traveled from Stockton—traveled to Stockton from Nicodemus to do their trading and all, had to stay in that dugout, and it's still there, and it's because they had a sundown law.
  91. 1 2 "Three Families Last to Leave Benton Arrived Here Last Night; Few Colored Folks Left in Marshall County—How Calvert City Acted Years Ago". The Paducah Evening Sun . Paducah, Kentucky. March 27, 1908. p. 6 via Chronicling America. The women folk of the last three negro families remaining in Benton arrived in Paducah last night to join the men and heads of the families who have been here several days seeking homes. The refugees say that Sallie Pryor and her family, the woman on whose doors the notice for all negroes to leave Benton, comprise the only colored family now in Benton and that she says she intends to stay no matter what the consequences. The exodus of the negroes from Benton and Birmingham takes about all the negroes out of Marshall county, as there have been no refugees in certain sections of the county for many years, having been driven out on other occasions.
  92. "Race Troubles: Whites and Blacks Not Living Harmoniously in Kentucky". Indianapolis Journal . Indianapolis. December 27, 1896. p. 4. Archived from the original on May 28, 2023. Retrieved November 3, 2024 via Chronicling America. There came near being a general fight between whites and negroes at Elva, Marshall county, last night. Elva is near the Calvert City section, where no negroes are allowed to live, and where seven or eight were recently shot by a mob of white men. The negroes were employed by the Standard Oil Company. Last night two negro tramps met a white man in the road and asked him if he knew where Calvert City was. He said that he did, but it was not very healthy there for negroes. This enraged him, and they both assaulted him with clubs and seriously hurt him.
  93. "Three Families Last to Leave Benton Arrived Here Last Night; Few Colored Folks Left in Marshall County—How Calvert City Acted Years Ago". The Paducah Evening Sun . Paducah, Kentucky. March 27, 1908. p. 6 via Chronicling America. The exodus of the negroes from Benton and Birmingham takes about all the negroes out of Marshall county, as there have been no refugees in certain sections of the county for many years, having been driven out on other occasions. Around Calvert City there is a greeting of 'Negro, don't let the sun go down on you here,' for every colored man that goes there and it is always heeded, since several have been killed for attempting to stay. The cause of the feeling at Calvert City was a crime committed on a White girl by a negro man years ago. It is said that the negro captured the daughter of a well known farmer and carried her to a dense wood and tied her to a tree, keeping her many days and finally killing her. The negro was captured and burned at stake and from that day to this no negro has been allowed to live in that vicinity, one family that defied the mob being almost wiped out by a band of men that fired into their house and killed several of the family.
  94. 1 2 Jaspin, Elliot (March 10, 2007). "Kentucky Town Re-Examines Its Racial History". NPR . Retrieved November 2, 2024.
  95. "To Protest Eviction: International Labor Defense Plans Mass Meeting Friday Night". The Cincinnati Post . Vol. 99, no. 87. Scripps-Howard Newspapers. April 11, 1930. p. 1 via NewsBank. The Labor Defense believes the Negro innocent of the crime and that he was 'framed' for daring to go thru Crescent Springs, Ky., where, according to the Labor Defense, Negroes are not allowed to live.
  96. "Civil War to Civil Rights: Andrew Wade Home Bombing" (PDF). Kentucky Historical Society. Archived from the original (PDF) on June 5, 2014.
  97. Carlson, Peter (February 20, 2006). "When Signs Said 'Get Out' in 'Sundown Towns,' Racism in the Rearview Mirror". The Washington Post . Archived from the original on February 15, 2019. Retrieved April 4, 2024.
  98. 1 2 Beckwith, Ryan Teague (July 4, 2024). "After 67 Years, Two Small Maryland Towns Tore Down the Racial Barrier Between Them". MSNBC.com. Archived from the original on September 19, 2024. Retrieved September 19, 2024.
  99. Editorial Board (June 23, 2017). "Protesting Invisibility in Silver Spring, Maryland". The Activist History Review. Archived from the original on September 24, 2020. Retrieved August 23, 2020.
  100. 1 2 Pan, Deanna (October 7, 2020). "Once a Ku Klux Klan Stronghold, Groton Fights Its Reputation As a 'Sundown Town'". The Boston Globe . Groton, Massachusetts . Retrieved November 2, 2024.
  101. Farley, Reynolds; Danziger, Sheldon; Holzer, Harry J. (September 5, 2002). Detroit Divided. Russell Sage Foundation. ISBN   978-0871542816.
  102. Ward, Clifford B. "The South Is Fair Game Up North". The News-Sentinel (editorial). Fort Wayne, Indiana. Reprinted in "The South Is Fair Game Up North". Montgomery Advertiser . Montgomery, Alabama. July 20, 1956. p. 4 via Newspapers.com. The Advertiser has delighted in finding Northern Cities where Negroes are not allowed to live or even to stay overnight, among them Owosso, Mich., birthplace of Thomas Dewey.
  103. Cooper, Desiree (February 15, 2007). "Shining a Light on Wyandotte". Detroit Free Press . p. 17 via Newspapers.com.
  104. Matson, Marci (February 16, 2011). "Page from the Past: Morningside Mayor Addresses "A Matter of No Prejudice"". Edina Historical Society. Archived from the original on January 22, 2015. Retrieved August 30, 2024.
  105. Smetanka, Mary Jane (January 1, 2013). "Edina's Historical Mystery: Black Flight". Minnesota Star Tribune . Archived from the original on January 5, 2013. Retrieved August 30, 2024.
  106. Loewen, James W. (2005). Sundown Towns: A Hidden Dimension of American Racism. The New Press. ISBN   978-1-56584-887-0 via Google Books.
  107. "A White Man's Town: Citizens of Doniphan Determined No Blacks Shall Live There". The Sunday Journal . Indianapolis. July 29, 1900. p. 1. Archived from the original on February 18, 2019. Retrieved November 3, 2024 via Chronicling America. The importation of a large number of negroes into Doniphan nearly precipitated a race war. No negroes are allowed to live in the town and on their arrival the citizens undertook to drive them out. Several colored men were roughly handled and a number of white men and negroes were injured. Sheriff Morrill came to the rescue and an armed posse is now guarding the colored laborers. The citizens are determined the negroes shall not be allowed to remain and further trouble is expected.
  108. Loewen, James W. (2005). Sundown Towns: A Hidden Dimension of American Racism. The New Press. p. 13. ISBN   156584887X.
  109. "Negroes Killed or Driven Away". Chicago Daily Tribune . Chicago. August 21, 1901. p. 1 via Newspapers.com. Most of the refugees are making through the woods to Joplin, as Monett, the nearest town, has for years refused to permit a negro to reside there. Across the main street of Monett for years there has been a sign reading: 'Nigger, don't let the sun go down,' and no negro has been permitted to remain inside the corporation after dark.
  110. "Blacks Aroused by Curfew Law". The Daily Oklahoman . Monroe City, Missouri. August 9, 1907 [First published on August 8, 1907]. p. 9. Archived from the original on October 3, 2024. Retrieved September 17, 2024 via Newspapers.com. For amout three weeks the whites have not allowed negroes to appear on the streets of Monroe City. Printed notices were posted notifying the negro population that they must not be uptown after 8 o'clock at night.
  111. "Federal Men Probe Ousting Sharecroppers". The Chattanooga News. Sikeston, Missouri. January 20, 1939. p. 14. Archived from the original on October 3, 2024. Retrieved September 19, 2024 via Newspapers.com.
  112. 1 2 "Engineering Conquest of the Ozarks: Construction of White River Railroad Through Mountainous Districts of Stone and Taney Counties". The St. Louis Republic. St. Louis, Missouri. February 21, 1904. p. 1. Archived from the original on October 3, 2024. Retrieved September 29, 2024 via Newspapers.com. Then came the contractors with their hundreds of horses, their powerful machines for moving and piling stone and earth, their great camp of men, Irishmen for foremen, Austrians, Italians and negroes, the last most woefully unwelcome in these two counties, where no negroes have been allowed to live for many years.
  113. "Blacks Aroused by Curfew Law". The Daily Oklahoman . Monroe City, Missouri. August 9, 1907 [First published on August 8, 1907]. p. 9. Archived from the original on October 3, 2024. Retrieved September 17, 2024 via Newspapers.com. Seven years ago Paris, the county seat of Monroe county, drove out more than one-third of its negro population, while Stoutsville, eight miles southwest of Monroe City, has not allowed a black to remain in town after nightfall for twenty-five years. A sign prominently displayed a short distance from the railroad station reads: 'Mr. Nigger, don't let the sun set on you in Stoutsville.'
  114. Pilkington, Ed (February 11, 2018). "From the Green Book to Facebook, How Black People Still Need to Outwit Racists in Rural America". The Guardian . Retrieved November 2, 2024.
  115. Loewen, James William (2005). Sundown Towns: A Hidden Dimension of American Racism. New York City: The New Press. p. 23. ISBN   978-1565848870 via Google Books.
  116. Hildebrand, Kurt (May 27, 2021). "Bill That May Silence Minden Siren on Governor's Desk". Record-Courier . Archived from the original on June 7, 2021.
  117. Lochhead, Colton (May 15, 2021). "In Nevada Town, a Racist Past Cries Out — Every Day". Las Vegas Review-Journal . Archived from the original on June 7, 2021.
  118. Hildebrand, Kurt (April 5, 2023). "Update: Bill to Silence Minden Siren Carries $50,000 Fine". Record-Courier . Archived from the original on October 2, 2023. Retrieved October 24, 2023.
  119. 1 2 3 4 Davis, Julie Brown (May 29, 2021). "For the Washoe Tribe of Lake Tahoe, a Sundown Siren Is a 'Living Piece of Historical Trauma'". San Francisco Gate . Archived from the original on June 7, 2021. Retrieved November 2, 2024.
  120. Swan, Miles Yellow (October 9, 2023). "Minden Silences Daily Siren After Nevada Passes Bill Forbidding 'Sundown Ordinance' Sounds". Reno Gazette Journal . Archived from the original on August 6, 2024. Retrieved November 2, 2024.
  121. "Colored Folk Shun Hoboken". Brooklyn Daily Eagle . September 29, 1901. Archived from the original on September 27, 2024. Retrieved November 3, 2024 via Newspapers.com. Hoboken, that unique suburb of New York, which has been maligned by many and spoken of derisively from Maine to California, has one claim to distinction: It has only one negro family within its borders. This is all the more remarkable because its neighbor, Jersey City, is full of colored people and outlying sections also have a large quota. ... Of the hundred and one reasons given for the diminutive size of the negro population of Hoboken, probably the correct one is that there is no way for negroes to earn a livelihood in the city.... There seems to be a sort of unwritten law in the town that negroes are to be barred out. This feeling permeates of everything. The Hobokenese are proud of the distinction conferred on their town by the absence of negroes.
  122. Chapel Hill-Carrboro NAACP; Ogle, Mike (October 5, 2022). "Celebrate 75 Years with the Chapel Hill-Carrboro NAACP". ChapelHillMagazine.com. Archived from the original on October 3, 2024. Retrieved September 20, 2024.
  123. 1 2 3 Grubb, Tammy (October 16, 2018). "Can Carrboro Keep Its Name Without Honoring a White Supremacist?". The News & Observer . Carrboro, North Carolina. Archived from the original on December 27, 2019. Retrieved September 20, 2024.
  124. "Negro Laborers Not Allowed There; Railroad Company Wants Protection". The Dayton Evening Herald . Dayton, Ohio. November 6, 1899. p. 5 via Newspapers.com. The Ohio River & Charleston Railroad Co. will appeal to Governor Russell for protection for its gangs of negro laborers in Mitchell county. The residents of this county escorted three gangs of laborers to the border line and told them not to return under pain of death. It is the boast of the people of Mitchell county that no negroes are allowed to live or work there. Up to date the boast has been made good. The situation is serious, and blood may flow if the railroad company brings its colored laborers back.
  125. "Negroes Driven Out by Force". The Newport Daily News . November 9, 1899. p. 2 via Newspapers.com.
  126. "As the Crow Flies". Stevens Point Daily Journal. Stevens Point, Wisconsin. May 11, 1909. p. 1. Archived from the original on October 3, 2024. Retrieved September 30, 2024 via Newspapers.com. Pine Bluff is governed by a mayor and board of commissioners, and negroes are not allowed to live within the corporate limits. There is a colored settlement near by, however, and a number of negroes are employed in the village, but in the day time only. Even the servant girls go home after supper and return in time to get breakfast.
  127. "State Press". The Semi-Weekly Messenger. Wilmington, North Carolina. November 18, 1898. p. 4. Archived from the original on August 7, 2020. Retrieved October 3, 2024 via Chronicling America. Southern Pines, in Moore county, this state, is a typical northern community. It was built, is settled and is governed by people from the northern and New England states, and it is interesting to know how the negro is treated there. … Southern Pines was founded by eastern capitalists as a resort for invalids and hundreds go there every winter seeking restoration of health. Its founders, notwithstanding their birth-place and traditions, did not allow any sentimental notions about the negroes to enter in their plans. No negro is allowed to live or do business in Southern Pines. They are all congregated in a place called 'Jimtown', and when they visit the town proper, are models of quiet and orderly behavior.
  128. Walker, Doug (August 25, 1968). "Integration Moving on Peaceful Feet". Dayton Daily News . Dayton, Ohio. p. 4-C via Newspapers.com. A dandy example is Fairborn, up until recent years a 'Sundown Town' where community forces worked in concert to keep Negroes out. ... He explained that two years ago real estate operators may have actually [been] afraid of some type of censure from their fellows and the community if they sold to negroes. Now the situation is reversed. The same formidable pressures would be brought to bear if they declined to sell to Negroes. ... He cites a shift of attitude on the part of the military at Wright-Patterson Air Force base, which has terrific influence on the economic and social life of the community, as partly responsible for the new atmosphere.
  129. Fairbanks, Robert B. (Winter 1978). "Cincinnati and Greenhills: The Response to a Federal Community, 1935–1939" (PDF). Cincinnati Historical Society Bulletin. 36 (4): 239. Archived from the original (PDF) on February 17, 2019. Retrieved February 17, 2019. Eager for the new town to be accepted not only by these few but by the entire metropolitan community, federal officials dedicated themselves to abiding by 'community standards' in their new town. As a result, the suburban town project which had been planned for the needy, ignored the neediest. Although the two chief administrators of the greenbelts, Rexford G. Tugwell and Will W. Alexander, believed in equal benefits for blacks, prejudice prevailed and blacks were excluded from Greenhills.
  130. Loewen, James W. (2005). Sundown Towns: A Hidden Dimension of American Racism. The New Press. pp. 13, 197, 281. ISBN   156584887X. In 1920, Warren G. Harding ran his famous 'front porch campaign' from his family home in Marion, Ohio; a few months before, Marion was the scene of an ethnic cleansing as whites drove out virtually every African American. According to Harding scholar Phillip Payne, 'As a consequence, Marion is an overwhelming[ly] white town to this date [2002].'
  131. "Fear Crowd As Suspect Faces Girls". The Cincinnati Post . Vol. 70, no. 5 (home ed.). Scripps-Howard Newspapers. July 5, 1912. p. 1 via NewsBank. Negroes are not allowed to live in Reading or stay there after dark and the attack stirred residents to greater indignation than that aroused by several other attacks in the same locality.
  132. Shuler, Jack (April 5, 2017). "'Sundown Towns': Midwest Confronts Its Complicated Racial Legacy". The Christian Science Monitor . Archived from the original on April 17, 2024. Retrieved November 3, 2024.
  133. "Negro Suspected of Murder". Daily Inter Ocean . Chicago. September 4, 1900. p. 5 via Newspapers.com. A posse is hunting [Hezekiah] Scott, and he may be harshly dealt with if captured. Negroes are not allowed to live in Waverly. Scott tried to settle there, and [railway conductor William] Woods was one of those instrumental in driving him out. For this, it is said, Scott had sworn vengeance.
  134. 1 2 "After Negroes in Ada, I T". Arkansas City Daily Traveler . Arkansas City, Kansas. March 30, 1904. p. 1. Archived from the original on July 8, 2023. Retrieved September 10, 2024 via Newspapers.com.
  135. "Clipped from Manhattan Nationalist". The Manhattan Nationalist . Manhattan, Kansas. August 15, 1907. p. 6 via Newspapers.com. It was only a short time ago that negroes were not allowed to either live or die in Bartlesville.
  136. "Negroes Are "Shy" of Blackwell". Blackwell Journal-Tribune . November 11, 1925. p. 2. Archived from the original on October 3, 2024. Retrieved September 17, 2024 via Newspapers.com. 'Negro, don't let the sun set on you here.' A sign containing the above command, which years ago was sufficient warning to negroes to stay away from Blackwell, and the fear which it brought to those going through this city has not been entirely forgotten yet.
  137. "The Free Press". Kingfisher Free Press . October 10, 1901. p. 2. Retrieved November 9, 2024 via Newspapers.com.
  138. "Told by Telephone". The Daily Ardmoreite . Ardmore, Indian Territory. May 7, 1900. p. 4. Archived from the original on October 3, 2024. Retrieved September 10, 2024 via Newspapers.com.
  139. 1 2 "Considers Conspiracy Law". The Wagoner Echo. Wagoner, Indian Territory. November 19, 1904. p. 5. Archived from the original on September 10, 2024. Retrieved November 3, 2024 via Newspapers.com. Now in Durant and other towns in the Central District, and for that matter, in Holdenville, Ada and other towns in the territory notices had been posted for the Negroes not to let the sun go down on them in said towns.
  140. Tomlinson, Joe (July 8, 2022). "Edmond Man Finds Racially Restrictive Covenant Language Amid Neighborhood Dispute". NonDoc.com. Archived from the original on May 22, 2024. Retrieved November 3, 2024.
  141. "Race War Feared". Stark County Democrat. Canton, Ohio. News-Democrat Wire Service. June 25, 1901. p. 6. Archived from the original on September 24, 2024. Retrieved September 24, 2024 via Chronicling America. United States marshals have been ordered to Glencoe, Oklahoma, to try to prevent a race war. People have never allowed negroes to live or stop there. When the Santa Fe Railway company brought forty negro laborers there to work they were visited by a committee of citizens who warned them to leave under penalty of a visit from vigilants with ropes, if they failed to go further. Trouble is feared.
  142. "Ban Placed on Negroes". Scott County Kicker. Benton, Missouri. September 5, 1903. p. 2. Archived from the original on February 18, 2019. Retrieved November 3, 2024 via Chronicling America. Because the ban has been placed on the negroes by the citizens of Greer county, Okla., there will be an estimated loss of 5,000 bales of this year's cotton crop. Greer county, which, until a few years ago, was a part of Texas, is one of the big cotton producers of the territory. This year the farmers raised 20 per cent. increased acreage and a 15-per-cent. increase yield, but there is a labor famine. The growers have been threatened by the citizens in general upon every attempt to import negroes, but unless the necessary laborers are secured in the immediate future the financial loss will be great. The growers now have a movement on foot to bring 100 Mexican families to pick the cotton crop. Since the organization of Greer county no negroes have been allowed to live within its boundaries.
  143. "Ban Placed on Negroes". The Sainte Marie Tribune . Guthrie, Oklahoma. September 4, 1903. p. 2. Retrieved November 10, 2024 via Newspapers.com.
  144. "Porter Disregards Warning: 'Negro Don't Let Sun Set on You Here' and Is Slain". The Rock Island Argus . Marlow, Oklahoma. December 18, 1923. p. 1. Archived from the original on October 4, 2024. Retrieved September 19, 2024 via Newspapers.com.
  145. Carlson, Peter (February 20, 2006). "When Signs Said 'Get Out' in 'Sundown Towns,' Racism in the Rearview Mirror". The Washington Post . Archived from the original on February 15, 2019. Retrieved April 4, 2024.
  146. "Witness Says He Saw Kincannon Kill Two: Birch Killed As Went to Protect a Negro Porter". The Duncan Banner . Vol. 32, no. 24. January 4, 1924. p. 1. Archived from the original on October 3, 2024. Retrieved September 19, 2024 via Newspapers.com.
  147. "Colored Man Loses His Suit". The Sunday Inter Ocean . Chicago. September 17, 1899. p. 19 via Newspapers.com. Negroes are not allowed to live or work in the town of Norman, containing 2,000 population. Last winter a negro went there to put a tin roof on a building. He was attacked by a mob and cruelly beaten. He brought suit for $20,000 against the town, claiming that the police officers failed to protect him.
  148. "Negro Women Should be Members of DAR, Pickens Tells Students". Pittsburgh Courier . Pittsburgh. March 16, 1940. p. 3 via Newspapers.com. William Pickens set a precedent last week when he led the forum meeting at the University of Oklahoma at Norman, a town near here where Negroes are not allowed to live, and several years ago 'dared not be seen after dark.'
  149. Worthington, S.M. (December 17, 1902). "From Oklahoma: Interesting Letter From Mr. S. M. Worthington Who Is Visiting at Norman". The Evening Bulletin . Maysville, Kentucky. p. 1. Archived from the original on January 28, 2023. Retrieved November 3, 2024 via Chronicling America. The negro is thought less of here than the Indian. A negro is not allowed to live or stay in this town. They are hounded and driven out, mostly by the ultra abolitionists and hoodlums of the town.
  150. Mathis, Nancy (October 14, 1979). "Rights Commission Changes Norman". The Sunday Oklahoman . Oklahoma City. p. 24A via Newspapers.com. 'Norman was a very traditional Southern town,' [Norman Human Rights Commission chair Richard] Kenderdine said, explaining reasons for the opposition. Until the early 1960s, Norman was known as a 'sundown town' where blacks dared not be seen in public after dark, he said. And even in the late 1960s, blacks had trouble buying homes in Norman, he said.
  151. "Outlines of Oklahoma". The Wichita Daily Eagle . Wichita, Kansas. September 3, 1901. p. 4. Archived from the original on October 3, 2023. Retrieved November 3, 2024 via Newspapers.com. Last week, after the riat [ sic ] at Stroud, a sign was painted and stuck up on one of the prominent corners which read: 'Nigger, don't let the sun go down on U.'
  152. 1 2 Maynard, Guy (April 11, 2016). "Just People Like Us". Oregon Humanities . Archived from the original on June 28, 2020. Retrieved November 3, 2024.
  153. 1 2 "'Sundown' No More". Medford Mail Tribune . Medford, Oregon. July 18, 1963. Archived from the original on October 7, 2024. Retrieved October 7, 2024 via Newspapers.com.
  154. Rothstein, Richard (May 2017). The Color of Law: A Forgotten History of How Our Government Segregated America . Liveright. ISBN   978-1631492853.
  155. "South Dakota Town Bars Negroes". Dallas Express . Sioux Falls, South Dakota. November 29, 1919 [First published on November 27, 1919]. p. 6. Archived from the original on October 3, 2024. Retrieved September 19, 2024 via Chronicling America. There will be no race question to bother the residents of Lemon [ sic ] in the immediate future. This is due to the fact that Negroes are not allowed to live in Lemmon. Several Colored men recently appeared here, and the citizens did not loke their looks the newcomers were quickly requested by some of the young men of the town to seek new fields. The Negroes lost no time in replying with the 'request.' It is believed they were from some of the larger cities.
  156. 1 2 Rowan, Carl T. (March 1, 1951). "How Far From Slavery? Segregation Is 'Great Debate'". Minneapolis Morning Tribune . Minneapolis. p. 1 via Newspapers.com. I have been in Crossville before—but not for long. No Negroes are allowed to live here. On a tree near the city limits is this sign: 'Nigger, don't let the sun set on you here.' Since it is early morning and the sun long has set, I remain aboard the bus for the 20-minute stop here. I do see two Negro passengers going down a corridor into the kitchen for sandwiches, however. But even in this all-White community (one Negro family lived just outside it eight years ago, but has moved now) I can write about progress in the south—progress that would be noticed only by a Negro grown sensitive to the little shades of race relations.
  157. Russell, Carrie Archie (August 5, 2010). "Reckoning with a Violent and Lawless Past: A Study of Race, Violence and Reconciliation in Tennessee" (PDF). Vanderbilt University. Archived from the original (PDF) on August 7, 2016.
  158. Loewen, James. "Showing Erwin in TN". Sundown Towns in the United States. Archived from the original on October 3, 2024. Retrieved August 20, 2020. The Negro population, which was very small, was located in two areas in Unicoi County: Sam's Gap, descended from slaves owned by Josiah Sams, and Erwin, where they were railroad laborers. In 1918, unrestrained, ghoulish, mob violence eradicated the Negro population in Unicoi County. Charles Edward Price Papers, Box 1, Folder 6, Blacks in Unicoi County, TN.
  159. "Clipped from the Courier-Gazette". The Daily Courier-Gazette . McKinney, Texas. June 2, 1950. p. 7. Archived from the original on October 4, 2024. Retrieved September 21, 2024 via Newspapers.com. Alba, Texas was so named because settlers did not permit negroes to live there. Alba means 'white.'
  160. Earnest, D. C. (January 14, 1904). "Convict Labor in Mines". The Galveston Daily News . Galveston, Texas. p. 2. Archived from the original on October 3, 2024. Retrieved September 21, 2024 via Newspapers.com. It must be remembered that the labor situation at Alba and surrounding territory is different from that which prevails at any other lignite or coal mine in the entire State of Texas; this is due to the fact that the citizens of Alba and that community will not permit either negroes or Mexicans to work there. This makes the owners of the lignite mines at Hoyt, Tex., entirely dependent on white labor; whereas at other mines in Texas both negro and Mexican labor is permitted to enjoy the legal right to work.
  161. Loewen, James W. (2005). Sundown Towns: A Hidden Dimension of American Racism. New York City: The New Press. pp. 347, 444. ISBN   978-1-62097-454-4.
  162. "Alvin Citizens Doubt That Negro Suspect Responsible for Christmas Ax Killing". The Galveston Daily News . Galveston, Texas. December 27, 1933. p. 1. Archived from the original on October 3, 2024. Retrieved September 21, 2024 via Newspapers.com. It was pointed out that practically no negroes are allowed to live in Alvin and that Lapham's home was near the Mexican quarter of the town.
  163. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Driven from Home". Portage Daily Register . Fort Worth, Texas. July 30, 1886. p. 1. Archived from the original on October 3, 2024. Retrieved September 21, 2024 via Newspapers.com.
  164. "Tabooed". The Courier–Journal . Louisville, Kentucky. August 19, 1901. p. 4. Archived from the original on September 21, 2024. Retrieved September 21, 2024 via Newspapers.com.
  165. "Color Line at Elmo". San Saba County News. San Saba County, Texas. July 22, 1892. Reprinted in "The Race Feeling in Texas". Weekly Charlotte Observer . Charlotte, North Carolina. August 1, 1892. p. 1. Archived from the original on October 4, 2024. Retrieved September 21, 2024 via Newspapers.com. The following resolutions were adopted by the citizens of Elmo precinct at a mass meeting called together with a view of discouraging the immigration of negroes into the settlement and removing the obnoxious citizens of color already in the precinct. ... 'Resolved, that it is the judgment of this meeting that no negro immigrant be given any home in our midst, and that the objectionable ones be peaceably, quietly and lawfully removed from us as soon as the present crop is harvested. ...'
  166. McWhirter, Cameron (2011). Red Summer. The Summer of 1919 and the Awakening of Black America. Henry Holt. p. 164. ISBN   9780805089066.
  167. "Color Line at Elmo". San Saba County News. San Saba County, Texas. July 22, 1892. Reprinted in "The Race Feeling in Texas". Weekly Charlotte Observer . Charlotte, North Carolina. August 1, 1892. p. 1. Archived from the original on October 4, 2024. Retrieved September 21, 2024 via Newspapers.com. 'In Terrell also very few negroes are barely tolerated, and in many sections everything is done to discourage negro immigration.'
  168. 1 2 3 4 Swartz, Mimi (December 1993). "Vidor in Black and White". Texas Monthly . Archived from the original on April 30, 2024. Retrieved September 10, 2024.
  169. "Discrimination Held Unproved". Spokane Spokesman-Review . May 17, 1963. p. 6 via Newspapers.com.
  170. "Tri-City Racial Problems Shake Junior College Plans". Spokane Spokesman-Review . Pasco, Washington. December 10, 1954. p. 14 via Newspapers.com.
  171. "Negro March Won't Stress Kennewick". Spokane Spokesman-Review . Pasco, Washington. May 12, 1963. p. 2 via Newspapers.com.
  172. Rigert, Joe (July 9, 1963). "Charge Kennewick As 'Sundown Town'". Port Angeles Evening News . Port Angeles, Washington. Associated Press. p. 1. Archived from the original on September 25, 2024. Retrieved November 10, 2024 via Newspapers.com. A state civil rights board indicated Tuesday Kennewick has virtually barred its gates to Negroes and gained a reputation as a 'sundown town' where Negroes must leave after dark.
  173. Pihl, Kristi (February 14, 2011). "Black Tri-Citians Reflect on Struggles, Progress". Tri-City Herald . Kennewick, Washington. Archived from the original on January 4, 2020. Retrieved December 30, 2019.
  174. Peeples, Scott (April 16, 2013). "Appleton Was Indeed a 'Sundown Town'". Celebrate Diversity Fox Cities. Archived from the original on December 23, 2017. Retrieved December 23, 2017.
  175. Vian, Jourdan (December 11, 2016). "La Crosse Mayors Acknowledge City's Inequitable Past". Star Tribune . Minneapolis. p. B8. Archived from the original on November 1, 2023. Retrieved November 3, 2024 via Newspapers.com. The proclamation came a little over a month after Kabat apologized for La Crosse's history as a 'sundown town,' a city or village with either formal or informal codes that pushed black people out of the community after sundown, after a presentation from sociologist James Loewen at La Crosse City Hall. Loewen was invited by the University of Wisconsin–La Crosse and the city's Human Rights Commission.
  176. "SLC Dedicates Office to African-American Poet". The Herald Times Reporter . Manitowoc, Wisconsin. February 28, 2017. p. 3A via Newspapers.com. As an African-American, Brooks was not allowed to stay overnight in Manitowoc, a 'sundown town,' after she gave a poetry reading in the city on May 9, 1968.
  177. "City Must Prepare to Welcome Negroes into Community: Hildahl". The Sheboygan Press . Sheboygan, Wisconsin. September 27, 1963. p. 2 via Newspapers.com. One Optimist claimed that loan requirements of the Federal Home and Housing Agency will force Sheboygan to sell homes to Negroes 'and when that happens the lid is going to blow off.' The same Optimist asserted that present city officials deny that Sheboygan has an ordinance preventing Negroes from living in Sheboygan. But, he claimed, Sheboygan adopted such an ordinance in 1887 – 'that no Negroes will be housed in Sheboygan – and it is still on the books.'
  178. Jozwiak, Miller (July 11, 2016). "From 'Go Home' to 'Welcome Home' for Local Man". The Sheboygan Press . Sheboygan, Wisconsin. pp. 1A–2A via Newspapers.com. [James] Loewen's testimonies are remembered, secondary accounts. The Sheboygan Press archives also tell a story of discriminatory local discourse and policy. The very rumor of a sundown ordinance prompted then-Mayor John Bolgert in 1959 to outright deny that Sheboygan had any sundown laws. He cited as proof that black people were able to live in the city when they were playing baseball for the local minor league team. The same story reported a local pastor as saying there was no prejudice toward black people because there were none here.