American Decades
"Open Letter to the Pullman Company"
Letter
By: A. Philip Randolph
Date: June 4, 1927
Source: Randolph, A. Philip. "Open Letter to the Pullman Company, June 4, 1927." The Messenger 9, July 1927, 237–41. Reprinted in Foner, Philip S., and Ronald L. Lewis. Black Workers: A Documentary History from Colonial Times to the Present. Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1989, 392–403. Original letter in the Lowell M. Greenlaw Papers, Chicago Historical Society.
About the Author: Asa Philip Randolph (1889–1979) was born in Crescent City, Florida, and educated at the Cookman Institute, Florida's first high school for African Americans. He moved to New York City in 1911, where he enrolled at City College and became active in socialist politics. Randolph co-founded the radical magazine, The Messenger in 1917. In 1925, Randolph helped to organize the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, the first...
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1920's Business and the Economy Primary Sources
- Women in the Office
- "The Negro Working Woman"
- Twelfth Annual Report of the Secretary of Commerce, 1924
- The Real Estate Boom
- Installment Buying
- Regulating Radio
- "The Shop Chairmen, the Rank and File and the 'Prosanis' Label"
- "No Backward Step in Federal Aid For Road Building Can Be Taken"
- Calvin Coolidge And Nicaragua
- "Open Letter to the Pullman Company"
- "The Present Status and Future Prospects of Chains of Department Stores"
- Federal Farm Policy
- "Hamlin Memorandum and Diary Extracts, Showing Federal Reserve Board Response to 1927 Recession and Stock Market: July 1, 1927–January 4, 1929"
- "A New Era … an Economic Revolution of the Profoundest Character"
- "Brokers and Suckers"
- The Southern Urban Negro as Consumer
- Copyright Page
- Acknowledgments
