In the history of American
transportation, there is one crucial intersection between railroads and civil
rights: the formation in 1925 of the
Brotherhood of Sleeping Car porters by A. Phillip Randolph. This was the first predominantly
African-American labor union in the US.
PULLMAN CARS
It was in 1859 that
George Pullman launched the first deluxe railroad sleeping cars bearing his
name. They were an instant hit, offering
middle and upper-class passengers the comforts of home.
All of the Pullman Car
conductors were white but the porters who tended to the passengers were
black. Many of them were former slaves
as Pullman theorized they would be used to the subservient roles of lugging baggage,
making up the sleeping berths and serving the white passengers’ every whim.
After they retired for
the night, passengers would place their shoes in a small compartment accessible
from the corridor where the porters would retrieve and shine them.
LONG HOURS, LOW PAY
Pullman’s porters had to
be on call 20 hours a day, serving passengers and tending to boardings at intermediate
stations
Porters worked 400 hours
per month with their time off being uncompensated. They had to pay for their own uniforms, meals
and shoe shine kits. Between runs, even
away from home, they paid for their own lodging. The hours they spent before
and after each trip preparing and cleaning the car were also unpaid.
In 1926 the average
porter earned $72 a month in wages and averaged $58 a month in tips. In contrast, Pullman’s white conductors (who
had a union) earned $150 for a 240 hour month, plus benefits and a pension.
Still, Pullman’s black
porters made a good income compared to others, allowing many to enter the
middle class in railroad hub cities like Chicago and St Louis.
NO RESPECT
As one historian put it,
a Pullman porter had the best job in his community and the worst job on the
train. There was no room for promotion.
Passengers often
referred to Pullman porters by demeaning names like “boy”, or “George”, applying
the first name of the cars’ owner.
UNIONIZATION
In 1925 A. Phillip
Randolph started organizing The Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters under the
rallying cry “Fight or be slaves”. It
took a decade of court battles and the threat of a national strike before the
union was recognized in 1937, giving porters a big wage hike and a 240 hour per
month work schedule.
Randolph and others in
the Brotherhood went on to become leaders of the civil rights movement. One porter, Edgar D. Nixon, helped organize
the Montgomery Alabama bus boycott after Rosa Parks’ arrest in 1955. While Nixon was working the rails he had a
young minister assist in that battle… Martin Luther King Jr.
Among other famous
Pullman porters were future Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall, activist Malcolm
X and photographer Gordon Parks.
By the 1950’s train
service was in decline and in 1959 Pullman closed up its sleeping car
business. Some porters went on to work
with the legacy railroads and a few were still around when Amtrak took over.
In 1995 a museum
dedicated to Randolph and his work for the Pullman porters was opened in
Chicago in one of the original row houses George Pullman constructed as worker
housing at his plant. The museum is now collecting the names and histories
of past porters and their descendants to celebrate Randolph’s contribution to
black history
Posted with permission of Hearst CT Media
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