Establishments

In the mid-twentieth century, African American travelers required the same types of services as their white counterparts. The Green Book’s listings were varied enough to enable young people coming to a strange city to arrive at the local YMCAs and YWCAs after finding a friendly taxi cab driver at the train station while also helping families find their way to a tourist home or musicians to a suitable hotel.

For African Americans traveling between the relative freedom of a hometown to less familiar places, the listings for gas stations, motels, and pharmacies ensured safe passage in distant towns. For guests traveling to large cities for social events, the publication helped travelers find dance halls and restaurants in a timely manner. As time passed, The Green Book grew to include a very wide range of establishment types that answered every possible traveling need.

TitleAddresses

Seaway Idlewild Hotel

N.Y. Int. Airport (Belt Pkwy. Jamaica 30) Queens, NY

S. E. Crawford Tourist Home

Happy Hollow Pittsburg, TX
Happy Hollow Pittsburg, TX

Selma's Beauty Parlor

1002 5th St. Lynchburg, VA

Service

1415 Etting Street Baltimore, MD

Service Barber Shop

2296 7th Ave Harlem, NY
7th Ave. & 135th St. Harlem, NY

Service Center

415 So. 1st Ave. Sioux Falls, SD

Serville

246 1/2 4th Ave. So. Minneapolis, MN

Serv-U

805 St. Nicholas Ave, Apt 24 Harlem, NY

Sess

1639 Division Street Baltimore, MD

Sessons Tavern

Caret, VA

Sevelle Bar-B-Q

237 Sumner Ave. Brooklyn, NY

Seven Corners

158 West 7th St. St. Paul, MN

Seventos Creamy Way

Highland & Grove Niagara Falls, NY
3214 Cleveland Avenue Niagara Falls, NY

Seventy Park Hotel

70 Park Ave. Manhattan, NY

Sexton's

616 Halsey St. Brooklyn, NY

Shadowland Restaurant

632 W. 7th St. Port Arthur, TX

Shady Rest Country Club

Jerusalem Road Reveytown, NJ

Shahana Beauty Salon

144 Main St. Tuckahoe, NY

Shalimar

3638 Broadway Harlem, NY

Shalimar

2065 7th Ave Harlem, NY

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