Hi
I know most Pullman porters were blacks, but there were any white ones ? or it was 100% blacks ?
Were not mexicans or latinos as porters ?
thanks
What about Native Americans?
All my Porters will be Native Americans when I get too that part!!!
In all my train travels in the 50's and 60's, I never seen a latino or an Indian, American or otherwise, as a porter. A handful of whites but predominately Black
Dick
Texas Chief
Phillipinos were also Pullman Porters, Pullman Conductors were generally white. Most western railroads also featured blacks in the dining cars with white stewards. Of course all of that has changed with Amtrak, in fact it was changing in the last few years before the National passenger carrier was formed.
Al - in - Stockton
While the vast majority of Pullman porters were black, on at least one trip years ago I had an oriental porter on my car.
Mark
Before the 1950's it would have been virtually all blacks. A white who was going to work for Pullman probably wouldn't start as a porter, but a step or two up as a Pullman conductor or dining car steward. Being a Pullman porter was a good paying job for blacks, but whites could usually find easier work that paid better. Similarly, many southern railroads had black firemen who worked their whole careers as firemen and could never be promoted to engineer, so a 50 year old black fireman might be assigned to work with a 25 year old white engineer. I suspect there may have been a few non-black porters, especially in the fifties-sixties, but before that it was all-black or close to it.
http://americanhistory.si.edu/ONTHEMOVE/exhibition/exhibition_9_6.html
Rio Presidio wrote: I know most Pullman porters were blacks, but there were any white ones ? or it was 100% blacks ? Were not mexicans or latinos as porters ?
I know most Pullman porters were blacks, but there were any white ones ? or it was 100% blacks ? Were not mexicans or latinos as porters ?
Regards
Ed
BIENVENIDOS
AND
WELCOME !!
hopper wrote:There's a great DVD out called" 10,000 men called George." It's the whole saga of the Pullman Portors & what they had to go through to try to start a union.It paid well for them,but there was plenty of hardship. Hopper
Just to follow up on that..."10,000 men called George" refers to the fact that rail travallers called all Pullman porters "George" for George Pullman, something which most porters hated but accepted. Plus, the job did pay pretty well but only compared to the few other jobs open to blacks at that time. Still, Pullman porters were often respected leaders in their communities, were able to send their children to college, and many took leading roles in the Civil Rights movement.
BTW in "Roots II" Alex Haley's father or grandfather was a Pullman porter, and there's a good section showing him starting out and learning the ropes as a porter.
Hi Everyone:
There was a program some years ago on PBS about A. Philip Randolph, who for many years, was the head of the Porters' Union (I forget the exact title of the Union but I am sure someone here can obtain or post the name) and there was a good history of his involvement with the union and the Pullman porters he represented. This program may be available on DVD although I am not sure.
I saw Mr. Randolph once on I think the Coast Starlight in the dining car after he had retired and the black waiters were treating him with much respect.
FYI.
---"Ken" Ruben---
daveklepper wrote:In Canada, both CP and CN had white porters. And black.
This puts me in mind of a story my brother's mother-in-law tells. Calgary experineced huge population growth after WWII because of the petroleum industry. However, it was still a small place 100,000? people or so before the war. Calgary had two high schools and only one black student between them. His father was the porter on the CPR overnight trains between Calgary and Edmonton. Up one night and back the next. These trains were called The Eskimo, NB, and The Stampeder, SB. Named after the Calgary and Edmonton's CFL football teams.
So shovel the coal, let this rattler roll.
"A Train is a Place Going Somewhere" CP Rail Public Timetable
"O. S. Irricana"
. . . __ . ______
I was just watching "Good Morning America" this morning and they had a whole segment on the Pullman Porters, they interviewed one who was a porter back in the day he was old but had a great memory and was proud to be a Pullman Porter he stated that for blacks back then it was concidered a "clean job" and he took pride in his job, they did the interview from the Pullman Porter museum that his daughter started, they even had his latern that was presented to him upon his retirement, very cool segment, I wish I would have recorded it.
GMA might have clips of the interview on their site, I haven't looked.
Just wanted to let you folks know that it was a very cool portion of my morning viewing.
Login, or register today to interact in our online community, comment on articles, receive our newsletter, manage your account online and more!
Get the Classic Trains twice-monthly newsletter