Plan a TripGenealogical ResourcesWalk Historic BostonNeighborhood HistoryHomeImmigrant BostonFamily History for KidsGuest BookSearchBoston History Collaborative

 
 
Home > My Ancestors > African American > Timeline: 1950-present

  • 1950: Postwar migration increases the black population of Boston to more than 40,000. Most of the newcomers are from the South and they settle in the existing black neighborhoods. Spanish speaking African Americans also begin to arrive in the 1950s; they initially settle in the South End.
  • 1951: September, Martin Luther King, Jr. arrives at Boston University to study for his Ph.D. While in Boston, King would meet Coretta Scott who, like King, was a southerner attending a Boston school.
  • 1967: Thomas Atkins becomes the first black person elected to the city council at-large.
  • 1968: April, Black community organizers in the South End erect "Tent City" in protest of the urban renewal program that left many people without affordable housing in their own neighborhood.
  • 1970: Boston's black population reaches 104,000.
  • 1973: Roxbury Community College is founded after Boston's black community pressures the state.
  • 1974: The offices of the NAACP on Massachusetts Ave. in Boston are firebombed in protest to the busing of children to integrate schools.
  • 1975: Bill Owens becomes first black State Senator.
  • 1985: Black Bostonians vote on a referendum to secede from Boston to form their own city, with Roxbury and Dorchester as its principal parts. The city would be called Mandela. It is voted down.
  • 1988: Roxbury Community College opens at its current location in its first permanent building. It is the only predominantly black college in New England.
See 1850-1949

 

 

Home | Immigrant Boston | Neighborhood History | Walk Historic Boston | Plan a Trip
Genealogical Resources | Family History for Kids | Guest Book | Search
Boston History Collaborative | Sponsors | Opportunities for Support | Praise

Copyright 2001 Genealogy.com, LLC., and its subsidiaries and licensors, and
Boston History Collaborative. All rights reserved.
All trademarks are the property of their respective owners.