Nov 7 2024

Faculty Fellow Lecture Series: Lynn Hudson, History, “Troubled Waters: Segregated Swimming in American Cities, 1914-1954”

Faculty Fellow Lecture Series

November 7, 2024

4:00 PM - 5:30 PM

Location

Institute for the Humanities, 153 Behavioral Sciences Building

Address

1007 W. Harrison St., Chicago, IL 60607

Lecture’s title, “Trouble Waters: Segregated Swimming in American Cities, 1914-1954”, date, “Thursday, November 7, 2024”, time, “4:00pm-5:30pm”, and lecturer’s name, “Lynn Hudson”, against a background of different swimming pools paintings.  There is also a historical photograph of Chicago Parks District’s Washington Park Pool from circa 1937 with a large group of people in swimming trunks gathered around two swimming pools and facing the camera, and in a few swimmers inside of the pools, with a brick building visible in the background.

In this lecture, Lynn M. Hudson examines the challenges faced by Black Americans as they crossed color lines in pursuit of recreation in pools and on beaches in the critical years between World War I and the Brown v. Board Supreme Court decision. The focus will be on the Midwest and West, where the Great Migration brought thousands of African Americans seeking to live free of the Jim Crow restrictions of the South. Migrants sought the freedom to own a house, vote, use a library, go to school, or swim in a pool, and cities in these regions were the testing grounds. To gain access to segregated swimming facilities, African Americans crossed color lines, took legal action, and reclaimed white-only spaces. Focusing on the conflicts over recreational spaces and water highlights the ways in which Black bodies were seen as contaminating agents in the battles over urban space and the ways black Americans shaped new definitions of citizenship in the years before Brown.

Lynn M. Hudson is a professor of history and an affiliated faculty member of the Black Studies department. She is the author of The Making of ‘Mammy Pleasant’: A Black Entrepreneur in Nineteenth-Century San Francisco (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2003), and West of Jim Crow: The Fight Against California’s Color Line (University of Illinois Press, 2020).

Contact

Institute for the Humanities

Date posted

May 22, 2024

Date updated

Oct 10, 2024