Image: Baldwin & Co., New Orleans.
Search for your nearest Black-owned bookstore here and here.
Historical
The Afro-American: 50-year-old bookstore to close in Harlem.
Joshua Clark Davis:
- Civil Rights Activist, Poet, Bookseller: An Interview with Charlie Cobb. (See full transcript here.)
- Black-Owned Bookstores: Anchors of the Black Power Movement.
- Una Mulzac, Black Women Booksellers, and Pan-Africanism.
- Black Bookstores and the Black Power Movement: An Interview with Paul Coates.
- The FBI’s War on Black-Owned Bookstores: At the height of the Black Power movement, the Bureau focused on the unlikeliest of public enemies: black independent booksellers.
Drum and Spear Bookstore Site, African American Heritage Trail.
C. Gerald Fraser: Lewis Michaux, 92, Dies; Ran Bookstore in Harlem.
Ashawnta Jackson:
- The First Black-Owned Bookstore and the Fight for Freedom: Black abolitionist David Ruggles opened the first Black-owned bookstore in 1834, pointing the way to freedom—in more ways than one.
- Freedom Libraries and the Fight for Library Equity: Freedom libraries in the south provided Black residents with access to spaces and books, whether in church basements or private homes.
Douglas Martin: Una Mulzac, Bookseller With Passion for Black Politics, Dies at 88.
SNCC Digital Gateway: 1968: Drum and Spear Books founded.
Wikipedia:
David Woo: Marcus Books, the Nation’s Oldest Black Bookstore.
Contemporary
AALBC: Only 54 Black Owned Bookstores Remain in America.
Tim Arango & Matt Stevens: California Today: A Cherished Black Bookstore in a Changing South L.A.
Marissa J. Lang: Bookstores by and for people of color are finding their industry niche.
Kim Severson: Where Books Meet Black Mecca: A bookstore in Atlanta where half of the books aren’t for sale?
André Wheeler:‘Economic duress is nothing new’: Can America’s oldest black bookstore survive the pandemic?
David Woo: Marcus Books, the Nation’s Oldest Black Bookstore.