Norfolk Journal and Guide - July 12, 1930
1 2019-03-12T23:57:24+00:00 Stanford University Press af84c3e11fe030c51c61bbd190fa82a3a1a12824 1 1 Norfolk Journal and Guide - July 12, 1930 plain published 2019-03-12T23:57:24+00:00 AnonymousThis page is referenced by:
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July - Archived Posts
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Click on date to view post:July 1, 1944: Cleveland Call and Post highlights Annie Booker, a mother with three sons serving in Army during WWII.July 2, 1991: Clarence Thomas nominated to U.S. Supreme Court by President George Bush, reported in Philadelphia Tribune.July 3, 1976: Women fight sex bias, reported in Pittsburgh Courier.July 4: Frederick Douglass’ speech “What to the Slave Is the Fourth of July?“ in Philadelphia Tribune (1933 & 1993), Chicago Defender (1971), and New York Amsterdam News (1983).July 5, 1947: Eviction crisis reported in Cleveland Call and Post.July 6, 1950: African-American swimmers in Los Angeles Sentinel.July 7, 1977: African-American Family History Association meets in Atlanta, reported in Atlanta Daily World.July 8, 1933: Soprano Matilda Sissieretta Jones mourned in Norfolk Journal and Guide.July 9, 1927: Alain Locke returns to Howard University, reported in Baltimore Afro-American.July 10, 1971: Ophelia DeVore and Florynce Kennedy sue Life Magazine, reported in New York Amsterdam News.July 11, 1914: White neighbors harass black homeowner in West Philadelphia, reported in Philadelphia Tribune.July 12, 1930: Telephone advertisement in Norfolk Journal and Guide.July 13, 1963: Chicago Defender editorial on Maryland civil rights activist Gloria Richardson.July 14, 1926: New York Amsterdam News reports on Empire State Federation of Women’s Clubs.July 15, 1937: U.S. Navy sailor Robert Starks Jr. helps search for Amelia Earhart, reported in Cleveland Call and Post.July 16, 1948: African American men involved with United Nations profiled in Atlanta Daily World.July 17, 1909: Richard Robert Wright Sr. and the National Association of Teachers in Colored Schools, reported in Baltimore Afro-American.July 18, 1966: Chicago Defender on West Side conflicts between residents and police. Guest post by Catrien Egbert and Yasmin Mitchel, DePaul University and Chicago History Museum.July 19, 1951: Sister Rosetta Tharpe’s epic wedding covered in Los Angeles Sentinel.July 20, 1929: Advertisement for Auburn Straight Eight cars in Pittsburgh Courier.July 21, 1951: Air Force veteran and family face violence in all-white Cicero, Illinois, reported in Chicago Defender. Guest Post by Mark Speltz.July 22, 1969: Black press coverage of Apollo moon landing.July 23, 1927: Baltimore Afro-American on the sinking of the ship Majestic in Chesapeake Bay.July 24, 1977: Atlanta Daily World reports on a conference at Howard University regarding Regents of the University of California v. Bakke affirmative action case.July 25, 1981: New York Amsterdam News on Black and Hispanic construction workers protesting at Trump Tower in Manhattan.July 26, 1947: Cleveland Call and Post reports on WWII veteran and family living in garage.July 27, 1939: Los Angeles Sentinel announces opening of new dress shop.July 28. 1939: Actress and singer Abbie Mitchell returns from three years performing abroad, reported in Norfolk Journal and Guide.July 29, 1944: Dr. Lonnie Smith (of Smith v. Allwright case) goes to the polls in Texas, reported in Philadelphia Tribune.July 30, 1955: “Heroes in Blue” series profiles black police officers in Pittsburgh Courier.July 31, 1909: Rail travel over Santa Fe Trail featured in Chicago Defender.
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July 12, 1930
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On July 12, 1930, the Norfolk Journal and Guide included an advertisement from the Chesapeake and Potomac Telephone Company of Virginia. The ad compared the speed of telephone communication favorably to cross-country air travel: “2,112 miles in 13 hours and 55 minutes—a flight from one end of the country to the other—the fastest long journey man has ever made—a journey that took our pioneer forefathers from 3 to 5 months of weary travel at a snail’s pace, over vast expanses of prairie, across turbulent rivers, through perilous mountain passes. To skim over these vast expanses in a little less than 14 hours seems incredible. Yet, even speed such as this becomes as nothing over the telephone wires. By means of the telephone this journey can now be made not one way but both ways, within the space of MINUTES.”
In 1930, about 40 percent of Americans owned a telephone, and this percentage declined during the Depression. I was not able to find telephone adoption rates for African Americans in the 1930s, but based on socioeconomic status, black telephone ownership rates were likely less than the national average. This advertisement in the Norfolk Journal and Guide was therefore targeting early technology adopters.