The tl;dr is that there were laws, like vagrancy (i.e. not having a job), that were vague and applied to “everybody” but realistically only applied to black people through legal jiu jitsu and selective blindness on the part of police. Sundown towns are known as such for that behavior. They were (are) very unwelcoming if you’re not white.
Black people who are passing through have to leave by sundown. There’s still some small towns in the US with this expectation, although it’s no longer written on signs.
A town in the USA that the excluded non-white people from the community…coming from signs that warned non-whites saying “don’t let the sun set on you in whatever city”.
What is a sundown town?
Oh, you poor soul.
Here’s the wikipedia, if you wanna read.
And here’s a video about the history of slavery and its after-effects that is kind of relevant.
The tl;dr is that there were laws, like vagrancy (i.e. not having a job), that were vague and applied to “everybody” but realistically only applied to black people through legal jiu jitsu and selective blindness on the part of police. Sundown towns are known as such for that behavior. They were (are) very unwelcoming if you’re not white.
Oh wow, that’s some nice and cozy sounding name for such an atrocity.
The name refers to “move on before sundown” - as in, if you’re a minority and caught there after sundown, you’d be beaten or killed or both.
Black people who are passing through have to leave by sundown. There’s still some small towns in the US with this expectation, although it’s no longer written on signs.
Oh hello Cullman Alabama
Or most of the towns in Oregon before the 1970s
Or Oregon at all before 1926.
A town in the USA that the excluded non-white people from the community…coming from signs that warned non-whites saying “don’t let the sun set on you in whatever city”.