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

Snow & Yeoman's

3661 Broadway Harlem, NY

Society Restaurant

900 N. Taylor Ave.- 8 St. Louis, MO

Solar Cafeteria

104 W. 116th St. Harlem, NY

Sol Jeffries Service Station

121 Reynolds Street Rochester, NY

Solomon R. Guggenheim

5th Ave. and 88th Street Manhattan, NY

So. Memphis

907 Florida Ave. Memphis, TN

Sonnie's Restaurant

141 Bloomfield Ave. Glenridge, NJ

Sonny's

397 Tarrytown Rd. White Plains, NY

Sorrento Cocktail Lounge

1050 Taylor Ave. St. Louis, MO

Southern

2201 7th Ave. Harlem, NY

Southern Restaurant

118 Martine Ave. White Plains, NY

Southern Restaurant

1010 East 11th St. Austin, TX

Southern Style Bar-B-Que

Norfolk Ave. Amherst, VA

Southern Tea Room

44 W. 3rd St. Mt. Vernon, NY

South Side Service Station

970 E. Humboldt St. Fort Worth, TX

South Side Service Station

1151 New York St. Fort Worth, TX

Spaniol

13 6th Avenue N. St. Cloud, MN

Spanish

Broadway and 155th Street Manhattan, NY

Spanish America

2637 8th Ave. Harlem, NY

Sparrow's Beach

P. O. Box 266 Annapolis, MD

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