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

Holmes Bros. Sinclair Service Station

3415 Gosport Road Portsmouth, VA

Holzer Tavern

1060 Magnolia Ave. Elizabeth, NJ

Home of Hawkins

372 Beach St. West Haven, CT

Home of the Bachelor

20 Brewer St. New London, CT

Home Rooms for Rent

120 Gaines Avenue Hot Springs, AR

Homestead Hotel

82-45 Grrenfall St. Queens, NY

Home Sweet Home motel

Hwys. 10 & 52 Fargo, ND

Honeycutt Hotel

816 West 9th Street Little Rock, AR

Honokaa Club Hotel

P.O. Box 185 (45-3480 Mamne Street) Honokaa, HI

Honor Reed Hotel

667 West Franklin Street Baltimore, MD

Honor Reed Hotel

667 North Franklin Street Baltimore, Maryland

Hood's

Dupont Highway Townsend, DE

Hooper's Bakery

2628 N. Newstead Ave. St. Louis, MO

Hoot Owl

374 Beach St. West Haven, CT

Horac Crecy's Tourist Home

1710 Lexington Ave Corpus Christi, TX

Horman Restaurant and Harman Cafe

1270 East 21st St. Salt Lake City, UT

Horseshoe

198 Pine St. Buffalo, NY
212 William St. Buffalo, NY

Horseshoe

2474 7th Ave Harlem, NY

Horse Shoe

Williams & Pine Buffalo, NY

Horton's

615 Almond St. Syracuse, NY

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