L.A. Post World War II was defined by Anti-Blackness. After the fight against Nazis, it was time to fight against housing for ‘Negroes.’



“When, however, a survey was finally made it was found that those who lived in the slum districts were not only Negroes, Mexicans, and Japanese…’Sixty five percent of the slum homes were occupied by white families,’ [according to the L.A. housing official]…And we found that many of those houses were owned by the people who objected to slum clearance. If it had not been for these obstructions, he declared, Central avenue could have had ten more housing projects than it has.”

“During the emergency housing program for war workers, the same objections against minority groups prevailed. And last year when ‘private enterprise’ began building, only 1 percent was made available for Negroes.”

In 1951, after a “bitter eight-hour battle over a $110,000,000 federally-financed housing program on December 26, 1951,” in L.A. City Council Chambers, Councilman Davenport introduced a resolution to cancel a multi-million dollar contract for 10,000 public housing units in Los Angeles. The cancellation resolution passed, 8 to 7.
J.T.
[…] who’ve served as “leaders” only in the interests of white supremacy as say, a regime or status quo, then for non-white bodies in L.A. and California both the city and state have long performed as […]