![]() ![]() Setting out to prove that the decline of black neighborhoods into slums had nothing to do with the absence of African-American resources and everything to do with subjugation and greed, Satter draws on her father's records to piece together a thoughtful and very personal account of the exploitation that kept blacks segregated and impoverished. Thats because it hones in on the relationship between one specific black community and one specific Jewish community and thus revels in the particular humanity of all its actors. It is, by far, the best book Ive ever read on the relationship between blacks and Jews. ![]() Mark Satter died of a heart condition eight years after the Boltons crossed his threshold, but nearly 50 years later, his daughter, Beryl, a history professor at Rutgers, picked up where he left off. Beryl Satters Family Properties is really an incredible book. ![]() ![]() Called “contract selling,” the practice cost thousands of migrating blacks their livelihoods. Chicago and Urban America, which also recounts. Satter uncovered a citywide scheme, in which landlords sold African-Americans overpriced homes, keeping the titles until black homeowners paid them off, while charging excessive interest rates to insure they never could. University historian Beryl Satter, Family Properties: How the Struggle Over Race and Real Estate Transformed. In the early 1950s, Mark Satter opened his law practice in the Chicago suburb of Lawndale, but his life's work really began in 1957, the day a black couple, Albert and Sallie Bolton, walked through his doors needing a stay on an eviction from a home they had just purchased. ![]()
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