EFTA02346987.pdf
dataset_11 pdf 536.6 KB • Feb 3, 2026 • 5 pages
From: Gregory Brown
Sent: Sunday, April 23, 2017 9:04 AM
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Subject: Greg Brown's Weekend Reading and Other Things.. 04/23/2017
DEAR FRIEND
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Pullman Porters
Ordinary Men, Extraordinary History: from Servitude to Civi= Rights
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Web Link: https://youtu.be/6yoYSk=Cp5M and https://www.facebook.com/gordon.cyr=s/posts/10154059446712134
<https://www.facebook.com/go=don.cyrus/posts/10154059446712134>
They made beds and cleaned toilets. They shined shoes, dusted jackets, cooked meals and washed dishes. Yet the
Pullman porters crea=ed history in the face of adversity and racial prejudice. Over time, many of these porters were
able to combine their meager salaries with tips. They saved and put their children and grandchildren through college,
which helped them attain middle-class status. They helped form the foundation for the black middle class, and became
instrumental in the civil rights movement.
Many people credit Pullman porters as significant con=ributors to the development of America's black middle class. In
the late 19th ce=tury, Pullman porters were among the only people in their communities to travel extensively.
Consequently, they became a conduit of new information and ideas from the wider world to their communit=es. Many
Pullman porters supported community projects, including schools, and saved rigorously to ensure that their chil=ren
were able to obtain an education and thus better employment. <=span>
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Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall and former Sa= Francisco Mayor Willie Brown were descendants of Pullman
porters. Mar=hall was also a porter himself, as were Malcolm X and the photojournalist Gordon Parks. And my father
was a Pullman Porter for several years to help pay for his education, as well as my older brother Jimmy who was a porter
and retired w=en it merged into the larger union.
In their home neighborhoods, to be a Pullman Porter w=s considered a prestigious position. The job offered a steady
income, an opportunity to travel across America, and a life largely free of heavy phys=cal labor, rare for blacks in that
era. Historian Timuel Black recounts, "They were good looking, clean and immaculate i= their dress, their style was quite
manly, their language was very carefully crafted, so that they had a sense of intelligence about them ... they were =ood
role models for young men."
When a 'Pullman Car' was leased to a railroad, it came "equipped" with highly-trained porters to serve the travelers.
The cars were sta=fed with recently freed slaves, whom Pullman judged to be skilled in service and willing to work fo=
low wages. Soon, The Pullman Rail Car Company was the largest employer of blacks in the country, with the greates=
concentration of Pullman Porters living on Chicago's South Side. =/span>
Prior to the 1860s, the concept of sleeping cars on r=ilroads had not been widely developed. Chicago engineer,
entrepreneur and industrialist George Pullman pioneered sleeping accommodations on trains, and by the late 1860s, he
was hiring only African=Americans to serve as porters. In 1867, Pullman revolutionized rail travel when he introduced
his first "hotel on w=eels," the President, a sleeper with an attached kitchen and dining car that became known as
Pullma= Cars. A year later in 1868, he launched the Delmonico, the world's first sleeping car devoted to fine
cuisine.=C2*The Delmonico menu was prepared by chefs from New York's famed Delmonico's Restaurant.
</=pan>
Pullman believed that if his sleeper cars were to be successful, he needed to provide a wide variety of services to
travelers: collecting tickets, selling berths, dispatching wires, fetching sandwiches, mending torn trousers, converting
day coaches into sleepers, etc. Aft=r the Civil War ended in 1865 Pullman knew that there was a large pool of former
slaves who would be looking for work;=he also had a very clear racial conception. Pullman believed that former house
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slaves of the plantation South had the right combination of training to serve the businessmen who would patron=ze his
"Palace Cars."
He was aware that most Americans, unlike the wealthy,=didn't have personal servants in their homes. Pullman also
knew the wealthy were accustomed to being served by a liveried waiter =r butler, but to staff the Pullman cars with
"properly humble&quo=; workers in uniform was something the American middle class had never experienced. Hence,
part of the appeal of traveling =n sleeping cars was, in a sense, to have an upper class experience.
c/=pan>
To enhance that unique selling proposition, the compa=y exclusively hired African-American freedmen as Pullman
porters. Many of the men h=d been former domestic slaves in the South. Their new roles required them to act as
porters, waiters, valets, and entertainers, all rol=ed into one person. From the very start, porters were featured in
Pullman's ads promoting his new sleeper servic=. Initially, they were one of the features that most clearly distinguished
his carriages from those of competitors, but eventually nearly all would follow his lead, hiring African-Americans as
porters, cooks, waiters and Red Caps (railway station porters). Pullm=n became the biggest single employer of African
Americans in post-Civil War America.
While the pay wa= very low by the standards of the day, in an era of significant racial prejudice, being a Pullman porter
was one of the =est jobs available for African-American men. Thus, for black men, while t=is was an opportunity, at the
same time it was also an experience of being stereotype= as the servant class and having to take a lot of abuse. Many
passengers =ailed every porter "George", as if he were George Pullman's "boy" (servant), a practice that was born in the
South where slaves were named after their slave-mas=ers.
The only ones who protested were other men named Geor=e, who founded the Society for the Prevention of Calling
Sleeping Car Porters Geor=e, or SPCSCPG, which eventually claimed 31,000 members. Although the SPC=CPG was more
interested in defending the dignity of its white members than in achieving any measure of racial justice, it nevertheless
had some effects for all porters. In 1926, =he SPCSCPG persuaded the Pullman Company to install small racks in each
car, displaying a card with the given name of the porter on duty. Of the 1=,000 porters and waiters then working for
Pullman, only 362 turned out to be named George. Stanley G. Grizzle, a former Canadian porter, titled his
autobiography, My Name's Not G=orge: The Story of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters. Porters wer= not paid a
livable wage and needed to rely on tips to earn enough to make a living. Walter Biggs,=son of a Pullman porter, spoke of
memories of being a Pullman porter as told to him by his father:c/=pan>
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"One of the most rem=rkable stories I liked hearing about was how when Jackie Gleason would ride ... al= the porters
wanted to be on that run. The reason why? Not only because he g=ve every porter $100.00, but it was just the fun, the
excitement, the respect =hat he gave the porters. Instead of their names being George, he called everybo=y by their first
name. He always had like a piano in the car and they sang an= danced and had a great time. He was just a fun person to
be around."
The number of porters employed by railroads declined =s sleeping car service dwindled in the 1960s and as railroad lines
went bankr=pt due to competition from the airlines. By 1969, the ranks of the Pullman sleeping car porters had declined
to 325 men with an average age of 63.
Duties
</=pan>
A porter was expected to greet passengers, carry baggage, make up the sleeping berths, serve food and drinks, shine
shoes, and keep the ca=s tidy. He needed to be available night and day to wait on the passengers. He was expected to
always smile; thus th= porters often called the job, ironically, "miles of smiles".
According to his=orian Greg LeRoy, "A Pullman Porter was really kind of a glorified hotel maid and bellhop in what
Pullman called a hotel on wheels. The Pullman Company just thought of the porters as a piece of equipment, just like
another butt=n on a panel — the same as a light switch or a fan switch." 4>=A0Porters worked 400 hours a month or
11,000 miles, sometimes as much as 20 hours at a stretch. They were expected=to arrive at work several hours early to
prepare their car, on their own time; they were charged when=ver their passengers stole a towel or a water pitcher. On
overnight trips= they were allocated only three to four hours of sleep — and that was deducted from their pay=
It is not widely=known that in the early 1900s, the heyday of luxury travel, the more luxurious trains also had African-
American Pullman maids to care for women's needs, especially women with children. =hey were expected to assist
ladies with their bath, be able to give manicures and dress hair, and assist with children. "It didn't pay a livable wage,
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but they made a living with the tips that they got, because the salar= was nothing," says Lyn Hughes, founder of the A.
Philip Randolph Pullm=n Porter Museum. The porters were expected to pay for their own meals and uniforms and the
company required them to pa= for the shoe polish used to shine passengers' shoes daily. There =as little job security,
and the Pullman Company inspectors were known for suspending porters for trivial reasons.
Characterization
Historian Timuel=Black recounts Pullman porters' saying, "They were good loo=ing, clean and immaculate in their dress,
their style was quite manly, their language was =ery carefully crafted, so that they had a sense of intelligence about
them ... =hey were good role models for young men."
According to Larry Tye, who authored Rising fro= the Rails: The Pullman Porters and the Making of the Black Middle
Class, George Pullman was aware that as former chattel slaves, the men he hired had alrea=y received the perfect
training and "knew just how to take care of any w=im that a customer had." Tye further explained that Pullman was
aware tha= there was never a question that a traveler would be embarrassed by running =nto one of the porters and
having them remember something they had done during their trip that they didn't want their wife or husband, perhaps,
to kno= about.
Black historian and journalist Thomas Fleming began h=s career as a bellhop and then spent five years as a cook for the
Southern Pacific Railroad. Fleming was the co-founder and executive editor of Northern California's largest weekly
African-Americ=n newspaper (Free Press); in a weekly series of articles entitled, "Reflections on Black History</=>", he
wrote of the contradictions in the life of a Pullman porter:
"Pullman went on to =ecome the largest single employer of blacks in America, and the job of Pullman po=ter was, for
most of the 101-year history of the Pullman Company, one of the ve=y best a black man could aspire to, in status and
eventually in pay. Th= porter reigned supreme on George's sleeper cars. But the very definition of their jobs, of their
kingdom, roil=d in contradictions. The porter was servant as well as host. He had the best job in his community and the
worst on the train. He could be trusted =ith his white passengers' children and their safety, but only for the five days of
a cross-country trip. He shared his riders' most private moments but, to =ost, remained an enigma if not an enemy."
In 2008, Amtrak became aware of The Pullman Porters N=tional Historic Registry of African American Railroad
Employees, a five-year resea=ch project conducted by Dr. Lyn Hughes, for the A. Philip Randolph Pullman Por=er
Museum, and published in 2007. Amtrak enlisted the APR Pullman Porter Museum, and partnered with them using the
registry to locate and honor surviving Porters through a series of regional ceremonies. Amtrak also attempted to locate
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