Authors: Arthur Browne
Battle, Sophia, 29, 36–37, 290
Battle, Theodore, 117, 150
Battle, Thomas, 5, 7, 8–12, 15, 37, 233
Battle, William D., 46, 47, 228
Battle, Yvonne, 3
Battle of Harlem
(Battle and Hughes), 284–85, 288–90
Battle of San Juan Hill, 145
Beaumont, Texas, white-on-black rioting in, 265
Belton, Samuel G., 158–59, 170
Bernstein, Michael, 205
Bethune, Mary McLeod, 250–53, 264–65, 289
Bethune-Cookman University, 251, 264
The Birth of a Nation
(movie), 104
Black Cabinet, 251
Black Code (1866), 12
“Black Second,” 232–33
Black Valley (East St. Louis), 115
Blake, Eubie, 40, 163
blood donations, 263
Blumstein, William, 230
Blumstein’s Department Store, 230–31
Boddy, Luther, 167–70
Bontemps, Arna, 136
bootleggers, 157, 159
“Boston Tar Baby.”
See
Langford, Sam
Bowes, Edward “Major,” 160
boxers and boxing, 61–63, 67–70, 125, 178–79, 189–90, 247–48, 257
Boyden, William, 194–95
Braddock Hotel, 267–68
Bradford, Perry, 40–41, 68, 69
Brady, Diamond Jim, 83
Brennan, John J., 131, 138–40
“Bricktop” (Ada Smith), 174–76
Brown, Eugene, 230
Brown, Jake, 105
Brown, James W., 228
Brown, John, 154, 199–201
Brownsville Raid, 111–12
Brown v. Board of Education
(1954), 288
Bruce, Herbert, 245
Buchalter, Louis “Lepke,” 226
Buckley, Francis J. M., 167
Burke, Joseph, 216
Burns, Tommy, 62–63
Butler, Edward, 267
Cachemaille, Enrique, 212
Cachemaille, Henrietta (Etta), 212–13, 217, 230
Calloway, Cab, 264
Calloway, Marse, 254
Campbell, James, 33, 34
Capitol Theatre, 159–60
Carnera, Primo, 247
Carrington, Elizabeth, 94
Carrington, Florence.
See
Battle, Florence Carrington
Carrington, Henry, 43
Carrington, Maria, 43
Carter, Eunice, 207–8, 241
Caruso, Enrico, 53
Castle, Irene and Vernon, 52, 113
Cherot, Baldomero, 217–18
Cherot, Charline Elizabeth Battle: birth of, 94–95; birth of Tony, 259; birth of Yvonne, 250; courtship of, 218; education of, 194, 207–8, 278; at Greenwood Forest Farms, 264, 278–79; marriage of, 225, 227–29; move to Englewood, NJ, 290; trip to Europe, 212–13
Cherot, Fanny DuPont, 217–18
Cherot, Thornton (Eddy), 217–18, 225, 227–29, 247, 278–79, 285, 290
Cherot, Thornton (Tony), 2, 3–4, 76, 232–36, 259, 264, 278, 290
Cherot, Yvonne, 250, 264, 278, 290
Citizens League for Fair Play, 242
Clark, Kenneth, 263
Cleary, Edward, 271
Cobb, Irvin S., 287
Cobb, Moses P., 34–37, 67, 72, 74, 290
Coll, Vincent “Mad Dog,” 214
Colored Men’s Branch of the YMCA, 71, 125, 179
Colored Orphan Asylum, 19
Compton, Betty, 213, 215
Confidential Squad, 146
Conn, Billy, 257
Connie’s Inn, 174
Connor, John W., 40, 172, 176, 177
Cook, Will Marion, 163
Cookman Institute, 251
Cooper, George W., 196
Copacabana (nightclub), 280–81
Costigan, “Honest Dan,” 146
Cotton Club, 152, 174, 210–11
covenanted buildings, 57, 99
Crater, Joseph Force, 213
Crawford, Joan, 175
Creegan, Richard, 102
Croker, Richard, 65, 144
Crouch, Stanley, 172
Crowley, Francis “Two-Gun,” 214
Cullen, Countee, 96, 155, 241
Cullen, Frederick Asbury, 96, 155, 189–90
Daly, Richard, 194–96
Davies, Graham, 14
Davis, Benjamin J., 277
Dawson, Dick, 279–80
Daytona Educational and Industrial Training School for Negro Girls, 251
De Carlo, Peter, 216
Delamar, Killis and William, 4–5, 15, 22
Delehanty, Michael J., 66, 109
Delehanty Institute, 109, 124, 134, 137, 218
Delmonico Hotel, 281
Delmonico’s Restaurant, 148
De Martino, John, 240, 241–43, 245–46
Dempsey, Jack, 163–64, 170–71, 249
Dent, Herbert, 167–70
De Priest, Oscar Stanton, 202, 206–7, 213, 220–21, 225, 237
Detroit, white-on-black rioting in, 265–66
Devery, William “Big Bill,” 141–45, 146, 158
Divine, Major J., 244
Dixon, John, 233
“Don’t Buy Where You Can’t Work” campaign, 220, 255
Doolittle, Jimmy, 264
Dorman, John, 197–98
Dorsey, Charles A., 31
Douglass, Frederick, 10, 27, 30, 129, 200
Dowling, James, 72–73
Doyle’s Saloon, 59
Drew, Charles, 263
Du Bois, W. E. B.: on blacks in military, 129, 130; and Frederick Douglass, 30; on Jack Johnson, 62; on lynchings, 105, 110; and National Afro-American League, 61; and Harry Pace, 162; and racism, 235–36; and Needham Roberts, 287; and Woodrow Wilson, 98
Duryea, Etta Terry, 70
Edmond’s (nightclub), 40
Elias, Hannah, 84
Elks, black.
See
Improved Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks of the World
Ellington, Edward Kennedy “Duke,” 175–76, 281
Ellison, Ralph, 136
Enoch, May, 24–25
Enright, Richard E., 140, 145–49, 156, 158, 160–61, 170–71, 176–78, 182–84
Equitable Life Assurance Society, 161, 162
Equity Congress, 60, 75, 89–91, 98–99, 109, 120, 123
Europe, James Reese, 39, 113, 114, 119, 120, 122, 128
Ewen, David, 172
Exclusive Club, 152, 172–78, 179–80, 181–82
Fair Play Club, 201–2
Farley, Thomas, 214
Farrell, Frank, 144, 145
Federal Emergency Relief Administration, 211
Fifteenth Regiment, 111–14, 115–16, 118–20, 121–22
Fillmore, Charles W., 90, 99, 111
Firpo, Luis, 171
Flegenheimer, Arthur “Dutch Schultz,” 205, 214, 215, 218–20
Foley, Tom, 148
Forbes, Arthur Holland, 42
Ford, Margaret Russell, 101, 103, 106, 120
Fortune, Emmanuel, 29–30, 31
Fortune, Timothy Thomas, 29–31, 38, 41, 49, 50, 61, 64, 90
Foster, Dude, 69
“Freedom Church.”
See
African American Methodist Episcopal (AME) Zion Church (“Freedom Church”)
Freeman
(newspaper), 30
The Front Page
(play), 175
Fumville, Tempy, 34–37
gambling, 144, 146, 171–78, 201–7, 218–20
gangsters: at city penitentiaries, 271; and Jimmy Hines, 174, 219; and Fiorello La Guardia, 238; “Paddy, the Priest,” 93; and Special Service Division, 148; and Jimmy Walker, 210, 213, 215; at Wilkins’s Exclusive Club, 175, 181–82
Garvey, Helen, 109, 207, 225–26
Garvey, Jimmy, 93, 96, 109, 207, 225–27, 237
Garvey, Marcus, 114, 151–52, 203
Garvey, Pauline, 109, 226
Gaynor, William, 67, 73, 74
Gehrig, Lou, 259–60, 272
Gerhard, George, 216
Gershwin, George, 172
Gethers, Ephram, 133–34
Gibbs, Harriet, 119–20
Gleeson, Francis, 226
Gordon, Harry, 239, 242
Grand Central Depot, 43–47
“Great Black Way,” 151
Great Depression, 209–11
Great Migration, 4, 103, 129, 151, 218
Greenwood Forest Farms, 76, 264, 279, 286
Griffith, D. W., 104
Guardians Society, 161, 166, 168, 178, 255
Hadley, Philip W., 34–37, 67, 74
Hammerstein, Oscar, 55
Hammerstein’s Victoria Theatre, 70
Hampton Normal and Agricultural Institute, 26
Handy, W. C., 162–63, 286
Harlem: in 1920s, 151–53, 192–93; Battle as police officer in, 95–97; Battle’s first apartment in, 54–57; employment of blacks at stores in, 229–31; gambling in, 171–78, 202–4, 218–20; during Great Depression, 209, 210–11; music and nightclubs in, 39–41; nightstick justice in, 237–39; population growth in 1930s of, 261–62; restrictive covenants in, 99; riots in, 239–44, 266–71; Strivers Row in, 161–65; transition to black population, 55–57
Harlem Citizens League for Fair Play, 230
Harlem Civic Union, 225
Harlem Hospital, 165
Harlem Opera House, 55
Harlem Renaissance, 77, 152, 185, 204
Harris, Arthur, 24–25, 47
Hart, Dan, 39, 52, 82
Hatfield, John, 130
Havens, John, 234
Hayden, Henry I., 32, 34, 35
Hayes, Amanda, 133–34
Hayes, Patrick Cardinal, 45, 198
Hayes, Roland, 265
Haynes, George Edmund, 288
Hays, Arthur Garfield, 241–44
Hayward, William, 111, 112, 113, 119, 122, 128
Hearst, William Randolph, 83, 89, 128
Height, Dorothy, 251–53
“Hellfighters of Harlem,” 125
Hell’s Hundred Acres, 126–27
Hell’s Kitchen, 93
Henderson, Fletcher, 163
Henry, Dominic, 157–58
Hill, Constance Valis, 197
Hines, Ike, 40
Hines, James Joseph “Jimmy”: background of, 173–74; at funeral of Baron Deware Wilkins, 182; and gambling, 171, 177, 219; humanitarian efforts of, 245; and paroles, 271–72
Hobbs, Lloyd, 240, 243
Hobbs, Russell, 240
Holmes, Ella, 95, 117
Holmes, Henry, 95, 117
Holmes, Robert, 95–97, 100, 116–17
Holstein, Casper, 201–7, 210, 218, 220, 245, 278
Holt, John, 256
Honeymoon Express
(play), 52–53
Horton, Floyd, 146
Hotel Palm, 52
House of Flowers, 44–45, 155
Houston riot, 118–19
Hughes, James, 153
Hughes, Langston, 2–4, 76–78, 135–37, 153–55, 185–87, 200–201, 209–10, 236
Hugo, Francis, 128
Hylan, Mike “Red,” 146, 149, 150, 165, 184
Imes, William Lloyd, 199, 225, 230
Impellitieri, Vincent, 283
Improved Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks of the World: Battle joining, 57; Detroit convention, 58; formation of, 42; and funeral of Baron Deware Wilkins, 181; Robert Holmes in, 95; Casper Holstein in, 206; Monarch Lodge of, 181, 188, 193, 201; New York convention of, 197; testimonial dinner for Battle by, 188; J. Frank Wheaton in, 59
International Police Association, 184
Invisible Man
(Ellison), 136
Irvin, Monte, 229
Jackson, Edward, 147
Jeanette, Jeremiah “Joe,” 125
Jeffries, Jim, 67–69, 171
Jim Crow segregation: and
The Birth of a Nation
, 104; and Thornton Cherot, 217; Frederick Douglass on, 30; and Harlem race riot, 268; in military, 112; in New York, 98–99; in New York Fire Department, 255, 275–77; and Jesse Owens, 249; and rail travel in South, 273; on trip with Tony to South, 236; in Virginia, 16, 74; Alexander Walters on, 41
Jitter Bug Club, 238
Joaquin, Lawrence, 115
Joe, Lovie, 68
Johnson, Arthur John (Jack), 61–63, 67–70, 125, 171, 181
Johnson, Charles Spurgeon, 185, 192
Johnson, Henry, 121–23, 128, 129, 261, 287
Johnson, James P., 41, 172
Johnson, James Weldon: and blacks in military, 112; on churches, 151; on contribution of blacks to American culture, 187; on education of Charline, 207; on future of Harlem, 153, 193, 209; at Marshall Hotel, 39, 52
Johnson, John H., 229–30, 255, 267, 281
Johnson, J. Rosamond, 39, 52
Just Around the Corner
(musical), 136
Keene, Olive, 191, 194
Kelly, Margaret, 261
King, David, 161–62
Kline, Emmanuel, 147, 267
Ku Klux Klan, 29, 98, 104
La Guardia, Achille, 221–22
La Guardia, Fiorello H.: background of, 221–25; in Congress, 206, 213, 222–23; election as mayor, 216, 220, 223; and Harlem riots, 240, 241–43, 266–72; and integration of Baltimore Police Department, 254; and NAACP, 256; and New York Fire Department, 275–78; and nightstick justice, 237–38; and NYPD, 224–25; and William O’Dwyer, 282; and Jesse Owens, 249; and Parole Commission, 260, 264
La Guardia, Irene Luzzatto-Coen, 221
Lahey, William (Bill), 170–71, 177
Langford, Sam (“Boston Tar Baby”), 125, 163, 179, 181, 247, 249
Langston, Carrie, 153
Las Estrellas Club, 212
Laurie, Edward, 238
Leary, Lewis Sheridan, 153–54, 200, 201
Lee, Edward E. “Chief,” 65, 72
Lee, John W., 34–37, 67, 74, 75
Leeks, Leroy, 195–96
Lieutenants Benevolent Association, 146, 158
Little, Arthur, 123, 126
Little Savoy (nightclub), 40, 41, 63, 69, 70
Locke, Alain, 185, 243
Lopez, Vincent, 213
Lord, James Brown, 161
Los Angeles, white-on-black rioting in, 265
Louis, Joe “The Brown Bomber,” 247, 257, 281
Luciano, Lucky, 157, 171, 208, 241
lynchings, 99, 105, 110, 129–30, 252
Maceo Hotel, 39
Madden, Owney “The Killer,” 210–11
Majestic Hotel, 83
Manley, Effa, 229–30
march on Washington (1940), 262–63
Marshall, Napoleon Bonaparte, 111–12, 119–20, 128
Marshall, Thurgood, 273, 288
Marshall Hotel, 39, 52, 69, 82, 113
Martin, Charles, 96
Mason, Charlotte, 187, 209
Mason, John, 52–53
Mayhew, James, 38
Mayor’s Commission on Conditions in Harlem, 241–44
McAdoo, William, 50
McBride’s Saloon, 46–47, 69
McGowan, Patrick, 64
McHugh, Patrick, 168
McInerny, John, 240
McKay, Claude, 155
McLaughlin, George V., 187, 191
Messenger
(magazine), 152
Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, 266–67
Miles, Nelson, 103
military: black regiment in, 90–91, 110–14, 118–20, 121–23, 125–26, 127–29; segregation in, 103–4, 262–63
military bases, violence around, 263
Miller, Conery (Mrs.), 264
Miller, Dorie, 263, 264
Miller, William “Yellow Charleston,” 167, 180–81
Mitchell, John Puroy, 67, 107
Monarch Lodge (Elks), 181, 188, 193, 201
Mooney, William, 140