In a time when histories are being removed, hidden, and made illegal to teach in schools, your support for The People’s Graphic Design Archive is more important than ever. This is your archive and survives on your support.

The Negro Travelers’ Green Book

1021

From Swann Galleries site:

 

The Negro Travelers' Green Book. 80 pages plus [4] pages of detached illustrations at center fold. 8vo, original colored wrappers, minor wear; dampstaining throughout, minimal wear to contents. [New York], 1958

Additional Details

The indispensable travel guide for Black families, from a time when long-distance travel would be a cause for apprehension about finding lodging, gasoline, or even a restroom. Friendly service stations, hotels, nightclubs and restaurants are arranged by state across the country--North and South. The cover of this edition states “Carry your Green Book with you . . . You may need it!” The last Green Book was printed in 1966.

Most Green Books of this era were priced at $1.25 on the cover, and were presumably offered for sale at gas stations or bookstores. This one was printed as a special promotional giveaway by the Esso Standard Oil Company. On the cover, “Spring 1958” is in a different font than usually seen on the 1958 edition, it does not have "$1.25" in the upper right corner, and it bears a band of additional text, "Presented With The Compliments Of The Esso Men." The interior text appears the same, except to the addition of a four-page centerfold introducing two Black public relations officers from Esso, and then showing their educational work in the community, an integrated classroom at the Esso Training Center, and a Black-owned Esso filling station in Buffalo, NY.