The population of Weed -- a town near the Oregon border -- is nearly 10 percent black, greater than you might expect for rural Northern California. Here's how that came to be. African-Americans had been living and working in the Golden State since the time of the Gold Rush, but in the 1920s lumber mill workers in the South were sent west by their companies to towns such as Weed, Dunsmuir, and Mount Shasta.
Soon African-American communities in many lumber towns were not only established but thriving, even while dealing with the same issues of segregation and discrimination that afflicted the rest of the country. Director and producer Mark Oliver explores this unique moment in black history in his documentary From the Quarters to Lincoln Heights.
Fri., June 24, 6 p.m.
Museum of the African Diaspora
Price: $5-$10
Tags: African-Americans, discrimination, Weed, Image, Video
