This is an important book, though admittedly for a small audience. It begins with a brief history of African American settlement in Madison WI, beginning in the 1700’s with the arrival of English fur traders and their enslaved peoples. This section is short, but informative, with footnotes for those who wish to learn more. The next section of the book, its bulk, consists of 20 or so oral histories of the descendants of the first African American families that settled in Madison, WI. There are two supplemental oral histories, one by a White woman who worked as a real estate agent helping Black families buy houses in the 1940’s when housing and lending policies were blatantly racist. The second supplemental oral history was given by an Italian immigrant who talked about the multicultural Greenbush neighborhood he grew up in where many Black families settled. Finally, the book ends with two appendices; one is notes from a Black book club from the early 1900’s and the other is a listing of Black families listed in the 1930 Census. I skimmed through these sections and think they have limited interest for most readers.
Madison is my hometown and the place I live now, after having lived on the west coast for almost 20 years. Madison is the state capital, home to the University of Wisconsin and known as a liberal haven in reddish-purple Wisconsin. However, there are large racial inequities in income, education and incarceration rates that belie its rosy self-image. What I found most interesting about this book is the continual references to systemic discrimination against Black folks going back to their earliest days here. As a White person, I have been somewhat recently awakened to the vast extent of systemic racism and this book documents that very clearly. It helps me understand how my city and our country have not been able to support and cultivate a thriving Black community.
There’s a particularly enlightening piece about Madison’s urban renewal efforts in the 1950’s and 60’s that decimated the Greenbush neighborhood and its residents. The “Bush” was primarily made up of African American and Jewish and Italian immigrant families and businesses. Properties were obtained through eminent domain with unfairly low compensation and sold to (White) developers at low cost. Many displaced families were unable to purchase homes in other areas of the City due to the blatantly racist policies of realtor associations and banks. And the Klan in Madison, who knew? Highly recommended.