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.
Title | Addresses |
---|---|
Turf Club | 1702 Main St. Hartford, CT |
Turner's | 249 Summer St. Brooklyn, NY |
Turner's | 1698 Fulton St. Brooklyn, NY |
Turner's Restaurant | Caddo Street Arkadelphia, AR |
Turnpike Motel | 434 Hempstead Tpke., W. Hempstead Nassau , NY |
Tuscany Hotel | 39th St. E of Park Ave Manhattan, NY |
Tuskegee | Route 15 (384) Albany, NY |
Tuskegee | 364 West Morris St. Bath, NY |
Tuxedo | 1925 Amsterdam Ave Harlem, NY |
Tuxedo | 121 Williams St. Buffalo, NY |
Twi-Light | 458 Williams St. Buffalo, NY 14204 |
Twilight Cafe | 416 East State St. Murfreesboro, TN |
Twin Acres Motel | Highway 7, 6 miles North of Troy Center Brunswick, NY |
Twin Lake Village | New London, NH |
Tyler's Chicken Farm Restaurant | Avenel, NJ |
Ubangi | 2213 Pennsylvania Avenue Baltimore, MD |
Ullman & Hauser | 27 St. Claire Pl. Harlem, NY |
Umbrella Drive In | 4338 Bonny Oak Dr. Chattanooga, TN |
Uncle Curley's | 3589 Third Ave Bronx, NY |
Union Pacific Greyhound Depot | 9th and Bannock Sts. Boise, ID |