Friday, December 04, 2015

"We Would Be Wrong to See This as a Mere Policy Change"

"Over a long career, he rose through the ranks from laborer to a position in midlevel management. He supervised an office in which many of his employees were white men. He had a farm in Virginia and a home in Washington. By 1908, he was earning the considerable salary—for an African-American—of $1,400 per year.
"But only months after Woodrow Wilson was sworn in as president in 1913, my grandfather was demoted. He was shuttled from department to department in various menial jobs, and eventually became a messenger in the War Department, where he made only $720 a year.
"By April 1914, the family farm was auctioned off. John Davis, a self-made black man of achievement and stature in his community at the turn of the 20th century, was, by the end of Wilson’s first term, a broken man."
 
Gordon J. Davis in The New York Times writes about how Woodrow Wilson's policy of re-segregating the federal government affected Davis's grandfather.

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