Racial #History
On this daySep 25, 1913
Baltimore Law Requires Black and White Residents to Live on Separate Blocks
On September 25, 1913, the Baltimore City Council passed an ordinance requiring Black and white residents to live on separate blocks.
According to newspaper reports, only one Black family lived on the Mosher Street Block in Baltimore at the time. On September 25, the same day the segregation ordinance was passed, a group of white men and boys โbombardedโ the Black familyโs home with stones and bricks for several hours.
In 1917, the U.S. Supreme Court held in Buchanan v. Warley that a Kentucky ordinance prohibiting Black and white people from buying homes in neighborhoods where they were racial minorities violated the Fourteenth Amendment's protections for freedom of contract. Baltimore Mayor James H. Preston soon instructed city officials to charge anyone who rented or sold to Black people in predominantly white neighborhoods with code violations.
The passage of the 1913 law formalized decades of de facto segregation enforced by violent attacks by white mobs on Black families in โwhiteโ neighborhoods, and helped Baltimore earn the reputation of the โnational leader in residential segregation.โ The racially discriminatory restrictions were later also applied to Jewish residents, many of whom lived in the Roland Park neighborhood in Baltimore.