c.2020, Liveright
$28.95
352 pages

Seat beltโ€™s on.

Keys in the ignition, rearview mirrorโ€™s been adjusted, steering wheel is set for maximum comfort. Youโ€™re ready to go, ready for this trip to get started. In โ€œDriving While Blackโ€ by Gretchen Sorin, youโ€™re heading back in history.

Few things in America have altered the cultural scene more than the automobile. Not only has it changed the way we move, it affected the way we dress, talk, and eat. But, says Sorin, for Black folks, the automobile has โ€œmeant something differentโ€ โ€” mainly, โ€œthe automobile made it more difficult โ€ฆ to enforce racial apartheid while cruising along the highways at forty-five miles per hour.โ€

Once was a time that Black people couldnโ€™t travel far, if at all. Moving about from plantation to plantation allowed opportunities for slaves to escape or, at the very least, to learn the lay of the land, neither of which was desirable for a slaveโ€™s owner. Even free Blacks were restricted from too much movement then.

After the Civil War ended, former slaves began to head north for work and to escape Jim Crow laws, a Great Migration that didnโ€™t preclude the occasional trip back South by rail or by bus to visit friends and relatives. There was still segregation in travel but the bigger fact was that travel itself was no longer restricted.

Starting around the 1920s, automobile ownership began to be a possibility for mobile (and upwardly mobile) African Americans. This meant even more freedom โ€” a road could lead almost anywhere โ€” but it could also mean danger, if you accidentally went where you werenโ€™t welcome. On the other hand, you could sleep in the car, depending on the kind you bought; some vehicles were faster, and could outrun violence; others meant fewer fill-ups. Restroom stops, if you were Black, were still an issue.

By the 1970s, Sorin says, this was all mostly a moot point. The civil rights movement had changed the country, and segregation at hotels and gas stations was a thing of the past. And yet today, once again, DWB comes with a whole different set of dangers โ€ฆ

Here itโ€™s not even spring, and you already know where youโ€™re going on vacation this year. If you havenโ€™t packed a book yet, โ€œDriving While Blackโ€ is the right one to take.

You wonโ€™t be sorry if you travel with this travel-history book. Author Gretchen Sorinโ€™s all-encompassing in her information, beginning with slavery and moving at a good clip into the 20th century with, like any decent road trip, a few side stops along the way. If this seems like old news, itโ€™s not: Sorin also shows us things we donโ€™t often consider, including tales of Black musiciansโ€™ reliance on freer travel, how sports were changed by fewer restrictions, and how Black drivers accidentally taught white business owners a lesson or two.

Sorin even adds personal anecdotes to the openings of her chapters, making โ€œDriving While Blackโ€ a great vacation (or anytime) read. If youโ€™re needing a smart, comprehensive look at the history of travel, grab it and buckle up.

This correspondent is a guest contributor to The Washington Informer.

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