Hot Corner

Episode 3: Business as Usual

23 min · 19 jun 2023
aflevering Episode 3: Business as Usual artwork

Beschrijving

During the decade that followed the landmark civil rights legislation of the 1960s, there was a steep drop in the number of Black-owned businesses on Hot Corner. In what has become a sort of standard story that people tell about Black business districts in the South, this shift often gets presented as a side effect of civil rights victories. But when Aleck and Broderick look into the history of the large historic buildings that anchored Hot Corner, they find out that there’s more to it than that. In the 1970s, when most downtown Athens businesses were struggling, Hot Corner was on its own – with one big exception.

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Alle afleveringen

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aflevering Episode 2: Back in the Day artwork

Episode 2: Back in the Day

To understand how segregation evolved after the civil rights movement, it’s important to understand what segregation was like before. Broderick and Aleck talk with people who worked on Hot Corner in the 1950s and 1960s, when it was a “Mecca” for Black economic and social life in Northeast Georgia. They also hear about Hot Corner’s significance for the local high school students who led the Athens civil rights movement. That struggle helped to bring about the end of Jim Crow – and the end of the system under which Hot Corner had been built. For more about the Athens civil rights movement, check out If We So Choose (vimeo.com/99725662), a short film about the youth-led campaign to desegregate The Varsity. Produced by Athens local Nicole Taylor, the film was the first to focus on the Athens movement and brought renewed attention to the town's Black history.

9 jun 202315 min