#NationalSandwichDay is a holiday we can really bite into. These photos were snapped by the Scurlock Studio of Washington, D.C. We love eating up the little details, like the dapper kid in the group photo, the boxes of All-Bran for sale, and the items listed on the menu, from hot dogs to oyster stew. Yum! African American business owners played an important role in communities. One of these involved supporting community amenities. In the era of Jim Crow, segregation often meant that African Americans were taxed to build parks they could not play in, pools they could not swim in, and schools their children could not attend. Though there were segregated schools black students could attend across the South, these were underfunded and overcrowded. African American individuals and business owners paid for these things themselves. They used their "second taxes" to build their own schools, their own parks, their own playgrounds. Johnson's Sandwich Shop may have played a similar role in its day. We don't know what the sandwiches at Johnson's were like, but we're curious if maybe one of our Instagram friends remembers visiting there or has a family member who does? Scurlock Studio Records, around 1905-1994, Archives Center, National Museum of American History. #BusinessHistory #AmericanHistory #SandwichDay #SmithsonianFood #FoodHistory #FoodStudies #AfricanAmericanHistory #AfricanAmericanHeritage #AmericanFood #DChistory #WashingtonDC #myDCcool #aCreativeDC #DCfood #DCfoodies #ArchivesPotluck #DChistcon

amhistorymuseumさん(@amhistorymuseum)が投稿した動画 -

国立アメリカ歴史博物館のインスタグラム(amhistorymuseum) - 11月4日 02時31分


#NationalSandwichDay is a holiday we can really bite into. These photos were snapped by the Scurlock Studio of Washington, D.C. We love eating up the little details, like the dapper kid in the group photo, the boxes of All-Bran for sale, and the items listed on the menu, from hot dogs to oyster stew. Yum!
African American business owners played an important role in communities. One of these involved supporting community amenities. In the era of Jim Crow, segregation often meant that African Americans were taxed to build parks they could not play in, pools they could not swim in, and schools their children could not attend. Though there were segregated schools black students could attend across the South, these were underfunded and overcrowded. African American individuals and business owners paid for these things themselves. They used their "second taxes" to build their own schools, their own parks, their own playgrounds. Johnson's Sandwich Shop may have played a similar role in its day.
We don't know what the sandwiches at Johnson's were like, but we're curious if maybe one of our Instagram friends remembers visiting there or has a family member who does?
Scurlock Studio Records, around 1905-1994, Archives Center, National Museum of American History.
#BusinessHistory #AmericanHistory #SandwichDay #SmithsonianFood #FoodHistory #FoodStudies #AfricanAmericanHistory #AfricanAmericanHeritage #AmericanFood #DChistory #WashingtonDC #myDCcool #aCreativeDC #DCfood #DCfoodies #ArchivesPotluck #DChistcon


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