Wednesday, September 14, 2011

What was life like in the 1950s for African Americans? Why did Henrietta’s family come north?

What was life like in 1950s Baltimore for Henrietta and her family? I can’t speak to it personally. I wasn’t alive nor do I know anyone who experienced it. But I do think that in order to understand Henrietta’s story, I have to understand it in relation to time and place. Without it, the story loses any kind of meaning for me.

Many African Americans came left the south in what was called “the Great Migration.” Initially this happened from 1910 to 1930 but the second migration came from 1940-1970. Henrietta and her husband left Clover, Virginia, where they farmed tobacco and where their ancestors had been slaves.

Moving north meant taking advantage of work opportunities more available to African Americans due to WWII. Henrietta’s husband worked for Sparrows Point, the largest steel manufacturing plant in the world at that time.

The work was not pretty: workers (primarily black men) were exposed to toxic coal dust and asbestos. But it was steady and afforded a middle class life to the growing Lacks family. We now know more about the health risks that existed at Sparrows Point and there have been recent efforts to clean up the area.

But while moving up north mean steady work and a better life for their children, life in Baltimore was not without segregation. While the Civil War ended slavery, it did not open up schools or public accommodations for African Americans.

The Second Morrill Act (1890) upheld that states needed to provide the same services to blacks as whites but they could be separate. “Equal” didn’t necessarily ring true. Plessy v. Ferguson upheld this. Take a look at this timeline of major events and legislation of civil rights.

What else happened around this time? What was the Baltimore of Henrietta Lacks?

In 1952, the Army Chief of Staff ordered worldwide integration of this service. Despite efforts to integrate the Armed Forces after WWII, the last segregated unit existed in 1954.

In 1964 the twenty-fourth amendment to the constitution was passed. Since the legal end to slavery, Blacks in America had been denied the right to vote by a number of different ways. Some measures were deceitful, many others were life threatening. This confirmation ensured the Abolition of the Poll Tax Qualification in Federal Elections.

The University of Maryland did not allow Black students until 1951. Prior to that time, the Princess Anne campus served as the “separate” school for African Americans.

Workplace racial discrimination was legal until Civil Rights Act of 1964 prohibited discrimination in employment.

Did you know that Henrietta and her husband had to drive 20 miles to get to Johns Hopkins because JHU was the closest hospital that treated Blacks? Or that JHU began as a “charity” hospital as part of its mission?

Given life in Baltimore (and many other places in the US), what do you think healthcare was like for African Americans?


--- Dr. Lisa Kiely, Assistant Dean, University of Maryland

2 comments:

  1. I am a BSCI 105 student in section 5186, and in answering the last question, I believe healthcare was very unfair for African Americans. One obvious reason mentioned above is the fact that many were turned away from hospitals because of their Race and forced to drive to a hospital that served 'blacks'. A less obvious example in the book that stuck out to me was the Tuskegee experiment where doctors took many black men with syphilis, and watched them die slow, painful deaths, knowing that penicillin could cure them, all for 'research sake'. Also, during segregation, the idea was that the hospitals are separate, but equal, however this was not the case. The African American facilities were usually less competent than that of the non black hospitals. The fact that they are separate makes them inherently unequal, because by common sense that no two things are exactly alike. No two, separate things are identical. Therefore, in my opinion, African Americans were treated poorly in the health system.

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  2. given life in baltimore I believe health care for african american was extremely poor. after reading "the immortal life of henrietta Lacks" and the numerous examples they gave of the poor healthcare for the african american population. first off henrietta had no health insurance. when she discovered that she had a a lump on her cervix she went to a free clinic at Johns Hopkins. once at this free clinic, which was almost entirely for african american population, she was left under the discretion of these doctors. these doctors refereed to these free health care centers as a place for free research volunteers, even though they were unaware they were participation. this is evident in Henrietta case as well as the Syphilis experiments, and the hysterectomy cases is Alabama. these are just several case of a general trend a crossed the board that counted even until after the civil rights movement.

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