By: Becky Little

Before the Green Book, These Resorts Offered Hidden Safe Havens for Black Americans

Black Americans could temporarily escape the Jim Crow laws at early vacation resorts that catered only to them.

The Abbott Sengstacke Family Papers/Robert Abbott Sengstacke/Getty Images

Published: November 16, 2018

Last Updated: March 07, 2025

Idlewild, Michigan was once known as “The Black Eden”—a resort where black writers, business people, physicians and entertainers spent their summers in a racially segregated country. In its earliest days, you could run into W.E.B. Du Bois; in its later years, you could catch an Aretha Franklin show. But it wasn’t the only such spot. Even before the Negro Motorist Green-Book came out in 1936, resorts had opened up all over the country catering to black vacationers.

Starting in the late 19th century, Jim Crow laws in the south prevented black Americans from using the same accommodations and services as white people. Even though the same set of laws didn’t exist across the north, black people were still not welcome at many beaches, hotels and other facilities there. Thus, resorts that specifically catered to excluded black vacationers popped up in both the north and south.

A group of people at the Idlewild Club House in 1938

A group of people posing outside the Idlewild Club House in September, 1938. These photos were found in the personal collection of future newspaper publisher John H. Sengstacke during vacations at Idlewild, Michigan, once known as “The Black Eden.”

The Abbott Sengstacke Family Papers/Robert Abbott Sengstacke/Getty Images

Idlewild, founded in 1912, was known as “The Black Eden” because it was a resort where black writers, business people, physicians and entertainers spent their summers in a racially segregated country.

The Abbott Sengstacke Family Papers/Robert Abbott Sengstacke/Getty Images

The Abbott Sengstacke Family Papers/Robert Abbott Sengstacke/Getty Images

Green Books acted as a guide for African Americans, boasting thousands of establishments from across the country, all of them either black-owned or verified to be non-discriminatory.

The Abbott Sengstacke Family Papers/Robert Abbott Sengstacke/Getty Images

Island Park, an island surrounded by Idlewild Lake, was the center of activity from 1920 to 1945. It featured the Idlewild Clubhouse, the Oakmere Hotel, and the Purple Palace Supper Club. These resorts were havens for black vacationers, who couldn’t safely stay in many of the accommodations for white travelers that dotted the country.

The Abbott Sengstacke Family Papers/Robert Abbott Sengstacke/Getty Images

Families rode horses, roller-skated and swam in lakes during the day, and at night listened to musical acts like Louis Armstrong, Aretha Franklin and future Touched by an Angel star Della Reese.

The Abbott Sengstacke Family Papers/Robert Abbott Sengstacke/Getty Images

Idlewild was a popular spot for prominent black Americans like Dr. Daniel Hale Williams, founder of Chicago’s Provident Hospital; attorney Violette Neatley Anderson, the first black woman admitted to practice before the U.S. Supreme Court; and millionaire Madam C.J. Walker, a businesswoman in the beauty industry.

The Abbott Sengstacke Family Papers/Robert Abbott Sengstacke/Getty Images

W.E.B. Du Bois, a fan of Idlewild, wrote in 1921: “For sheer physical beauty—for sheen of water and golden air, for nobleness of tree and flower of shrub, for shining river and song of bird and the low, moving whisper of sun, moon and star; it is the beautifulest stretch I have seen for twenty years.”

The Abbott Sengstacke Family Papers/Robert Abbott Sengstacke/Getty Images

“Black business-minded people have always pursued opportunities to capitalize on what has sometimes been called ‘sheltered markets,’” says Myra Young Armstead, a history professor at Bard College. “With Jim Crow there was now a market for travelers that was created, so it would only make sense that these proliferated.”

These resorts were havens for black vacationers, who couldn’t safely stay in many of the accommodations for white travelers that dotted the country. “As late as 1943, after conducting an informal survey of 105 northeastern travel establishments, black journalist George S. Schuyler complained, ‘Many colored families have motored all across the United States without being able to secure overnight accommodations at a single tourist camp or hotel,’” Armstead writes in The Journal of Decorative and Propaganda Arts.

One of the most prominent resort towns was Highland Beach in Maryland. Charles and Laura Douglass established the town in 1893, originally naming it Arundel-on-the-Bay. Charles was a son of Frederick Douglass and a Civil War veteran who had bought the Highland land after another Maryland resort denied him entry. In 1922, Highland became the first black town incorporated in the state.

Highland Beach

Raymond Langston, m_ayor of Highland Beach, _and his wife Jean at Frederick Douglass’ summer home. Highland Beach, Maryland is an African American beach front community founded in the 1890’s by Frederick Douglass’ son, Charles.

Jahi Chikwendiu/The Washington Post/Getty Images

Highland Beach

Raymond Langston, m_ayor of Highland Beach, _and his wife Jean at Frederick Douglass’ summer home. Highland Beach, Maryland is an African American beach front community founded in the 1890’s by Frederick Douglass’ son, Charles.

Jahi Chikwendiu/The Washington Post/Getty Images

Pictures from Highland Beach circa 1900 show visitors bathing in the water and playing croquet, a game that was all the rage at the time among the upper classes. “You always had a tiny, tiny segment of the black population who were middle class, upper-middle class or the black bourgeois, and they mirrored the tastes and preferences of their white counterparts as best they could,” Armstead says.

In the south, Florida’s black millionaires built homes at American Beach in Jacksonville. When it opened in 1936, it was the only beach in Florida that offered safe overnight accommodations for black vacationers. Similarly to Idlewild, American Beach also drew famous entertainers like Duke Ellington and Ray Charles.

Not all black families could afford such excursions. But for those who could, Highland and American Beach were important alternatives to the white beaches that black Americans supported with taxes but couldn’t enjoy. During the Civil Rights movement, black activists held “wade-ins” at white beaches to protest their racial segregation, similar to the famous lunch counter sit-ins.

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Another major resort was Idlewild in Lake County, Michigan. Founded in 1912, it was popular spot for prominent black Americans like Dr. Daniel Hale Williams, founder of Chicago's Provident Hospital; attorney Violette Neatley Anderson, the first black woman admitted to practice before the U.S. Supreme Court; and millionaire Madam C.J. Walker, a businesswoman in the beauty industry. Families rode horses, roller-skated and swam in lakes during the day, and at night listened to musical acts like Louis Armstrong, Aretha Franklin and future Touched by an Angel star Della Reese.

W.E.B. Du Bois was also a fan of Idlewild. In 1921, he wrote: “For sheer physical beauty—for sheen of water and golden air, for nobleness of tree and flower of shrub, for shining river and song of bird and the low, moving whisper of sun, moon and star; it is the beautifulest stretch I have seen for twenty years.”

In addition to separate resorts, black Americans carved out enclaves for themselves in vacation spots that mostly catered to white elites like Martha’s Vineyard island in Massachusetts and Newport, Rhode Island.

“On Martha’s Vineyard you have a section called Oak Bluffs, which today is still very much a sort of black middle class vacation spot,” Armstead says. In Newport, prominent black Americans vacationed at Saratoga Springs. These spots became more racially integrated after the 1960s, and are still popular tourist destinations today.

Other vacation spots, like Idlewild and Highland Beach, disappeared as black upper- and middle-class vacationers opted for other resort options that were now available to them. Today, residents in both areas hope they can make a comeback as vacation destinations by highlighting the areas’ historic significance.

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About the author

Becky Little

Becky Little is a journalist based in Washington, D.C.

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Citation Information

Article title
Before the Green Book, These Resorts Offered Hidden Safe Havens for Black Americans
Website Name
History
Date Accessed
March 22, 2025
Publisher
A&E Television Networks
Last Updated
March 07, 2025
Original Published Date
November 16, 2018

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