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Old 05-13-2001, 10:50 PM
MIDWESTDIVA MIDWESTDIVA is offline
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Join Date: Aug 2000
Location: Kansas City, MO
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Quote:
Originally posted by Eclipse:
Midwestdiva,
Can you tell me a little bit about your research that says BGLOs as an entity discriminated on the basis of skin color or did the paper bag test back in the day? I am really looking for a little more than antidotal evidence, if you can. The reason I ask is because I am a graduate of Spelman College and as a HS student when I would tell (some) people that I wanted to go to Spelman they would say I wasn't light enough or that I didn't have long hair and that Spelman was founded for the illegitmate daughters of wealthy white men When I got to Spelman I found out that that couldn't be farther from the truth. According to pictures in the campus archives, the first class at Spelman had several women with very pronounced African features and hair and some other women on the more medium brown scale. As a whole, the group did not fit that mold.

Don't get me wrong, I know that there were (still are for that matter!) organizations/entities that used this test, if only by visual inspection. I remember going to Savannah on a Girl Scout trip and visiting a church that had a piece of wood nailed to a pedestal in the vestibule. According to the tour guide, if you were darker than the piece of wood, then you could not come in!!

BTW...I agree with you that it is unreasonable to always hold institutions responsible for something that was national policy until about 50 years ago. If we did this consistently there are a whole lotta places that we (as Black folks) would not be living, working or shopping!! And I bet you, that very few people would be willing to give up their jobs, nice suburban homes and weekly visits to the mall on "they useta not let us in here!"
Eclipse,

I only know what I have been told by Black Greeks. Basically what I have been told is it did happen, it doesn't happen anymore, and everyone else was doing it too. I remember reading similar comments in the "Oprah" thread. I have never questioned the validity of this answer since Greeks know so much about their own history. It would be nice if this information was available in written form, but I don't think this is the kind of thing you would read about in "Through The Years" or "In Search of Sisterhood". I haven't read either of these books, so I may be wrong. (I'm not singling out these 2 organizations, I just know the names of their books off the top of my head).

I have never heard that Spelman was a school for the illegitimate daughters of White men. But I have read time and time again on GC that in the early 1900s, the only Blacks that could afford post-secondary education were wealthy Blacks who just happened to also be light-skinned. If you say that was not the case at Spelman, I have to wonder why that was the case at Howard?

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