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THE GO-GETTER SPIRIT:
KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS BUILDING


(Source of image: American Memory Project, Library of Congress)
CLICK HERE
for another shot of the Knights of Pythias Building
Wouldn't you like to own one of these wonderfully streamlined, bug-eyed cars?
Ashley
Street in LaVilla used to buzz with African American shoppers by day and
partiers by night.
This photo dates from February 1943, when World War II raged.
The Knights of Pythias
Building, with its domed front door, proved a big part of the LaVilla scene.
Located at 727 West Ashley, it housed a variety of businesses, as well as boarding rooms, meeting
facilities, and a
3rd floor dance hall where nationally-known entertainers performed.
Among the many users of the
meeting rooms were the Daughters
of Calanthe. Over the years, the building's private establishments
included a hotel,
Sentinel Publishing, White Front Pool Parlor, Peoples Dressmaking Shop,
and Dr. James P. Patterson's Drug Store.
Commercial districts thrived
in
many African American neighborhoods during the Jim Crow era.
Black
Americans were given 2nd class treatment at numerous white-owned stores.
They usually couldn't put on clothing, for example, prior to purchasing it.
Then again, some Jax stores required only African American customers to place
tissue paper over their heads before trying on hats. And store staffs,
almost always lily white, often forced black patrons to wait until all of the white
visitors had been served first. African Americans also received inferior
service and segregated accommodations at white restaurants, theaters, and
nightclubs -- that is, if they were even allowed in. Therefore, places like LaVilla proved
lucrative for black entrepreneurs, who catered to African American shoppers.
Much of this ended, however, when integration finally occurred.
Competition from white establishments forced a number of black
businesses into the red.
In 1943, when LaVilla was
still in its heyday, the area around the Knights of Pythias Building drew
crowds. African American patrons made tracks to such establishments as the Strand Theater, Frolic
Theater, Lenape Bar, Hollywood Music Store, Hotel Charlie Edd, and Green Front
Hotel. Stanton High School and the Clara White Mission
also stood nearby. Do you recall any of these neighboring entrepreneurs
& enterprises?
Strand Donut Shop
Daniel Joyner
(African American cigar store)
Nettie Leapheart (African
American beauty shop)
William A. Barrington
(African American restaurant)
Gussie Campbell
(African American restaurant)
James R. Burris
(African American liquors)
Economy Shoe Repair
(African American)
Nattrew Livingston
(African American dress shop)
Julia Davis (African
American dress shop)
James R. Burris
(African American liquor store)
Paramount Barber Shop
(African American)
Eutopia Beauty Salon
(African American)
Weaver's Tavern
(African American)
Wilson Mack (African
American barber)
Charles F. Harris
(African American women's furnishings)
Thaddeus Alvarez (African American
shoe shiner)
Louis
Legro (confectioner)
Edgar
L. Moler (grocer)
Lee
Lemmle (African American barbershop)
Edward P. Jones (African American beauty shop)
William Moseley
(African American clothes cleaner)
William Barr (African
American restaurant)
Casson
Norman, Evelyn Green, Marie Radford, William Hopkins, and Frank A. Crosby (African
American confectioners)
James T. Taylor (African American barber shop)
Otis Limbric,
Zachariah Limbric, and Cecil L. Limbric (African
American barbers)
Edward
P. Jones (African American beauty shop)
Griffin Fruit Shop (African
American)
Frank Littleton (African
American restaurant)
Samuel Holley (grocery store)
Pullman Restaurant (African
American)
You Gee Restaurant
Ernest L. Gross (African
American
soft drink company)
Herbert the Taylor (African American)
Matilda Way (African American
restaurant)
The
Knights of Pythias Building was constructed after the Great Fire of 1901 to
replace meeting facilities that had been burned. The structure
lasted until 1957, when it was finally torn down. Developers had wanted to
build a new hotel/apartment at the site, but these plans didn't get off the ground.
A field and parking lot now occupy the spot in back of the LaVilla School of
the Arts.
During the 1890s, by the way, a well known bordello operated
just across from the future Knights of the Pythias Building.
Cora Crane, the common law wife of the eminent author Stephen Crane, ran the
establishment, which serviced clients at the southwest corner of Ashley and
Jefferson. Its dreamy name? The "Hotel de
Dreme."

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