Tag Archives: Los Angeles Sentinel

Black L.A. 1947: Four African Americans File for City Council 7th District Race

Jan. 30, 1947: An ad in the Sentinel announces a preview of a model home in Carver Manor, a housing development designed by Paul R. Williams at 135th Street and Avalon Boulevard. Stanford Avenue in Carver Manor, via Google Street … Continue reading

Posted in 1947, African Americans, Architecture, City Hall, Politics | Tagged , , , , , , | Comments Off on Black L.A. 1947: Four African Americans File for City Council 7th District Race

Jan. 16, 1947: Teachers Call ‘Song of the South’ Racist Propaganda

Jan. 16, 1947: Chef Tubbs is opening a restaurant at 1305-7 E. Olympic Blvd. Olympic Boulevard and Central Avenue, via Google Street View. Jan. 16: Local 27 of the American Federation of Teachers, meeting in Washington, called the Disney feature … Continue reading

Posted in 1947, African Americans, Film, Food and Drink, Hollywood | Tagged , , , , , , | Comments Off on Jan. 16, 1947: Teachers Call ‘Song of the South’ Racist Propaganda

Black L.A. Laura Bowman Cast in All-Black Production of ‘Anna Lucasta’

Jan. 9, 1947:  Laura Bowman, who died in 1957 after a long illness, is to appear in an all-black production of “Anna Lucasta” at the Biltmore Theater. ” Anna Lucasta,” written by Philip Yordan, was originally produced by the American … Continue reading

Posted in 1947, African Americans, Stage | Tagged , , , , | 1 Comment

Black L.A. 1947: Sentinel Refuses Ads From Central Avenue Club Over White Cashier

4201 S. Central, the location of the Downbeat Room, via Google Street View. Notice the Dunbar Hotel next door. The famous Club Alabam’ was nearby at 4215 S. Central.   Jan. 9, 1947: Mabel Scott and Gerald Wilson open the … Continue reading

Posted in 1947, African Americans, Music, Nightclubs | Tagged , , , | Comments Off on Black L.A. 1947: Sentinel Refuses Ads From Central Avenue Club Over White Cashier

Black L.A. 1947: Meet the Honor Students of Jefferson High

Jan. 9, 1947: The Sentinel publishes the photos of four Jefferson High students on the front page: Florence Smith, Ivan Baldwin, Gen Lew and Walter Richard Lumpkin. Here we meet four young people — and a significant research challenge: What … Continue reading

Posted in 1947, Education, Stage | Tagged , , , , | 2 Comments

Black L.A. 1947: Mary Lou Williams ‘Waltz Boogie’

“Leon Wheaton of 1011 E. 43rd Place, Los Angeles, one of the latest local victims of police brutality,” in a photo published Jan. 2, 1947, in the Los Angeles Sentinel.  Unfortunately, there is no further information in the Sentinel about … Continue reading

Posted in 1947, African Americans, Music | Tagged , , , , | Comments Off on Black L.A. 1947: Mary Lou Williams ‘Waltz Boogie’

Black L.A. 1947: 10 Black Doctors Admitted to Leading Surgical Society, Raising Number to 14

Leon H. Washington Jr., left, publisher of the Sentinel, marches in a picket line with a sign that says “Don’t Buy Where You Can’t Work” in a photo published Jan. 2, 1947. Jan. 2, 1947: At its convention in Cleveland, … Continue reading

Posted in 1947, African Americans, Medicine, Obituaries | Tagged , , , , | Comments Off on Black L.A. 1947: 10 Black Doctors Admitted to Leading Surgical Society, Raising Number to 14

Black L.A. 1947: First African American Named to L.A. Police Commission

Jan. 2, 1947: The Los Angeles Sentinel publishes the photo of Charles H. Matthews on Page 1 as part of its roundup of major stories from 1946. Matthews, a former deputy district attorney and an NAACP executive at the time, … Continue reading

Posted in 1946, 1947, African Americans, LAPD | Tagged , , , , , | Comments Off on Black L.A. 1947: First African American Named to L.A. Police Commission

Black L.A. 1947: Racist Street Sign Removed; Advertisers, Officials Repudiate ‘The Equalizer’

Jan. 2, 1947: The Los Angeles Sentinel publishes a photo of a street sign reading “Dixiana Circle” at 23rd Street and Long Beach Avenue. The Sentinel reported June 6, 1946, that the street had been renamed Staunton.  Not too surprisingly, … Continue reading

Posted in 1946, 1947, African Americans | Tagged , , , , , | Comments Off on Black L.A. 1947: Racist Street Sign Removed; Advertisers, Officials Repudiate ‘The Equalizer’

Black L.A. 1947: Buddy Young — First African American to Score a Touchdown in the Rose Bowl

A 1947 Rose Bowl program, listed on EBay, with bids starting at $10.50.   Jan. 1, 1947: On the program’s cover, the players are white… … but the Sentinel’s sports section highlights five African Americans playing in the Rose Bowl: … Continue reading

Posted in 1947, African Americans, Sports | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Paul Coates

Jan. 29, 1958 The Kingfish and I got a pretty fair raking over the coals a few days ago. And, somehow, I’m not quite sure that we deserved it. The man who did the raking is a colleague of mine–a … Continue reading

Posted in broadcasting, Columnists, Countdown to Watts, Paul Coates, Television | Tagged , , , , , | Comments Off on Paul Coates

A question of leadership

July 18-Aug. 1, 1957Los Angeles In the summer of 1957, eight years before the Watts riots, the Los Angeles Sentinel, a weekly newspaper serving the black community, published a three-part series by Stanley Robertson titled: “Does Los Angeles Have a … Continue reading

Posted in 1957, Countdown to Watts | Tagged , , , , , , | Comments Off on A question of leadership