[Ads-l] "The 91"
paul johnson
paulzjoh at MTNHOME.COM
Mon Mar 26 13:58:47 UTC 2018
I was doing some very hard drinking in '57 thru '60 but seem to remember
Chinese owned gambling joints ( never drunk enough to think of them as
casinos) in the black area of Vegas. File this under "gods look out
for___________", won over a $1000 one nite and they sent me home in a
cab with an employee to make sure I got home with the money!
On 3/26/2018 1:31 AM, Wilson Gray wrote:
>> the colored neighborhood
> Colored were allowed to live in Vegas back in the days of Jim Crow?!
> They're barely allowed to live there today. Maybe the author was just
> trying to add a little local color.😜 IAC, Nevada was a so-called "sundown
> town" - NIGGER, DON'T LET THE SUN GO DOWN ON YOU HERE - state, in those
> days. Depending on the state, Japanese-Americans, Jewish-Americans,
> Mexican-Americans, Native Americans, and even dogs were also subject to
> sundowning.
>
> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sundown_town
> "Playwright John Henry Redwood III wrote the play *No Niggers, No Jews, No
> Dogs* after he saw the words written on a sign from a sundown town in
> Mississippi. The play is set in a sundown town in the American South."
>
> From Here to Eternity: A Novel
> https://books.google.com/books?isbn=0812984315
> James Jones, George Hendrick - 2012 - Preview - Page 188
> "DON'T LET THE SUN SET ON YOU IN HARLAN, NIGGER!"
>
> Of course, sundown towns weren't peculiar to the South.
>
> https://books.google.com/books?id=FPxJ_aG_B-8C
> Sundown Towns: A Hidden Dimension of American Racism
> James W. Loewen
> The New Press, Sep 29, 2005 - Social Science - 562 pages
> “Don’t let the sun go down on you in this town.” We equate these words with
> the Jim Crow South but, in a sweeping analysis of American residential
> patterns, award-winning and bestselling author James W. Loewen demonstrates
> that strict racial exclusion was the norm in American towns and villages
> from sea to shining sea for much of the twentieth century.
>
> Ironically, Ferguson, Missouri, was once such a town, as were all other
> towns in Saint Louis County, with the exception of Webster Groves, "St.
> Louis author Jonathan Franzen's" true hometown, and Kinloch, a now
> all-black village that was once, like the Watts district of Los Angeles, an
> all-white town.
>
> On Sun, Mar 25, 2018 at 6:36 PM, Jim Parish <jparish at siue.edu> wrote:
>
>> I'm currently rereading Tim Powers' novel _Last Call_, and was just struck
>> by something. Powers specializes in fantasy of the "secret history" type,
>> so the following is set in (what purports to be) our world and timeline. In
>> my experience, Powers does his homework, but the following seems like an
>> anachronism to me.
>>
>> The first chapter is set in Las Vegas in 1943, and it's written in tight
>> third person, through the eyes of one of the characters.
>>
>> "They drove around, and found a new casino called the Moulin Rouge in the
>> colored neighborhood west of the 91."
>>
>> We've discussed the use of "the :number:" to refer to highways, but I was
>> under the impression that that was a Southern California innovation, dating
>> to sometime in the 1980s and usually referring to interstates . Would
>> someone in Las Vegas in the '40s use it, to refer to (I presume) a state
>> highway? Anyone know?
>>
>> Jim Parish
>>
>> ------------------------------------------------------------
>> The American Dialect Society - http://www.americandialect.org
>>
>
>
--
"Humans will have advanced a long, long way when religious belief has a
cozy little classification in the DSM."
------------------------------------------------------------
The American Dialect Society - http://www.americandialect.org
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