Resumen
This article examines newspapers, government records, sociological studies, and the personal papers of elites to argue that black Washingtonians helped to stigmatize and ghettoize D.C.'s African-American community during the Depression. Black residents in the nation's capital especially characterized the working- and under-class populations, who resided in inner-city wards, as menaces to public health, safety and prosperity. Working- and middle-class blacks who flocked to new "colored" suburbs also participated in the government and market driven efforts to maintain racially-segregated housing during this time.
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