Pioneering Racial Integration

"Record Firm Here Smashes Jim Crow,"

Jerry Ransohoff, Cincinnati Post, Mar. 21, 1949

 

“Record Firm Here Smashes Jim Crow”
Cincinnati Post article from March 21, 1949, by Jerry Ransohoff

Two years ago they told Ben Siegel, of the King Record Co., of 1540 Brewster Avenue, that it couldn’t be done. “Cincinnati is a border town,” said the skeptics, “you can’t get negroes and white people to work together. It’s too close to the south.” But Mr.Siegel didn’t believe them. He told Sidney Nathan and Howard Kassel, officers of the company, that he’d be King’s personnel manager only if they’d let him run his department as he saw fit. They backed his policies.

The skeptics were wrong. King hires 400 employees, and the non-discrimination policies have needed no “backing.” Here’s the way things stand today: The musical director, assistant office manager, foreman of the mill room, set-up man on the production line, assistant promotion director, legal secretary, a dozen stenographers and 20 percent of the factory workers are negroes.

There is a Chinese bookkeeping machine operator and a Japanese comptometer operator. All groups have joined on summer picnics, Christmas parties and baseball games. The plant sponsors a negro and white team in a city industrial league. “We pay for ability,” says Mr.Siegel, “and ability has no color, no race and no religion. Our hiring policy and our promotion system are based only on the question of the individuals capacity to fill a given job.”

When you ask for a job at King, there’s no space on the blank for “religion,” or “race,” or “national ancestry.” But there is a question that is pertinent: “What are your feelings about working with people of a different race or religion?” Mr. Siegel explains: “We ask that question because we want to know how people feel. It makes no difference in our hiring policies.”

Here are the answers of two girls that King hired: “I will not work with another color but the religion doesn’t matter,” and “religion, ok - color, no!”

“Both girls still are with us,” adds Mr.Siegel. “One is assistant in charge of a department, and the other is in a department headed by a negro. They’ve both told us that they realize now that their ideas and prejudices were wrong.” “People are basically good,” is King credo, “but occasionally they get some wrong ideas that take tolerance, intelligence and good examples to straighten out.”

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King Has No Barriers

The First Truly Integrated Record Company Paves the Way Bringing together Black & White America.

The fusion of Country & Western and Rhythm & Blues that led to Rock and Roll occurred at King Records because the company practiced racial integration at every level. King founder Syd Nathan challenged the nearly universal segregation of American popular culture as well as American business in the 1940s and 1950s.  As a Jew, Nathan was aware of discrimination and translated his understanding into hiring both Blacks and Whites as production staff as well as artists. Music, too, crossed the color line. For example Henry Glover, one of the first African-American music executives in the United States, produced “Moon’s Tune” in 1949, a song that took advantage of Country musician Moon Mullican’s proficiency in Black Boogie Woogie piano.

Left, King Records employees packing and sorting the gems from the studio, Photo courtesy of King Studios/Xavier University

 

Photo courtesy of King Studios/Xavier University

“We were the first to do that...King worked with white country singers as well as black R&B artists, it seemed a natural thing to cross boundaries. We weren’t afraid of intermarriages.”

Henry Glover

The Innovator

 

African American Migration

Beginning in the early 1900s, African Americans began to move to northern cities like Cincinnati, leaving behind environmental damage to farming in the South caused by floods and boll weevil infestation. Anti-Black violence also drove migrants North. Industrial growth in northern cities offered new job opportunities, especially during the two world wars. Between 1910 and 1940 Cincinnati’s Black population more than doubled from 32,100 to 69,700. During and after World War II, the period when King Records was making hits, the number of Black residents in the city rose to 152,800.

Many of these new arrivals settled in the neighborhood called West End, located near downtown. Segregated from the rest of the city, African Americans created their own base of entertainment. The ballroom in the Sterling Hotel, located in the heart of West End, was converted into a nightclub in the early 1920s. From the 1930s through the 1950s, that nightclub, known as The Cotton Club, was the leading venue in Cincinnati for black entertainers and musicians. Many artists who performed at the Cotton Club also recorded at King, including Earl Bostic, H-Bomb Ferguson, Tiny Bradshaw and Hank Ballard.

Right, The Cotton Club played a key role in creating and cultivating culture in Cincinnati. Illustration by Jason Snell

 
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Appalachian Migration

At the turn of the century, Cincinnati, nicknamed the Queen City of the West, had a proud tradition of fine art and culture with a booming entertainment district. In the late 1800s and early 1900s, internationally known dramatists and bands played the local theaters and concerts halls in the downtown area. The city’s taste in opera, symphony, and choir music reflected a strong European influence. By the 1920s White southerners were bringing their cultural heritage to the city.  Some, like the Delmore Brothers, were originally sharecroppers driven North by the same conditions affecting southern Blacks. Others, Appalachians from Kentucky and West Virginia lost their jobs as coal miners as the coal industry became mechanized or mines played out. For example, Merle Travis wrote songs about coal mines such as “Sixteen Tons” and “Dark as a Dungeon,” though at King Records he recorded Gospel tunes as part of early King groups, the Brown’s Ferry Four and the Sheppard Brothers. 

Called “Hillbilly Music” in the forties, the songs written and performed by White southerners came to be called “Country Music.” Sometimes, as in “Red River Valley,” these songs referred to the pangs of homesickness described so poignantly by Alton Delmore: “when we moved it made me feel kind of numb and it seemed like all the ambition I had ever had was gone down the drain. It was tough moving into a new and strange atmosphere. And leaving all that I cherished so much.” At other times they celebrated the sights and sounds of the urban environment that had lured them North with the promise of better paid jobs, especially in the war effort. For example, the York Brothers recorded “Hamtramck Mama” at King even though it was originally about industrial production in World War II Detroit.

Left, WLW was a pivotal part of growing King Records in Cincinnati as many of the artists at King Records got their start performing on WLW Radio. Illustration by Jason Snell

 

Photo courtesy of King Studios/Xavier University

“We give everybody an even break. This is because I’m a Jew and I know what obstacles are. A Jew may have it rough, but a Negro has it a lot rougher. And a good man is a good man. His religion or his race isn’t going to make any difference.”

Syd Nathan

The King of Them All

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First To Collaborate

These two musicians ignored any color barrier to create new music never heard or seen before in America.

For decades, Calvin ‘Eagle Eye’ Shields was recognized, honored and respected by the music world. Calvin lived in Las Vegas for 42 years. At the age of 21, Calvin decided to follow in his father's footsteps, but instead of the piano, he decided to play the drums - but it wasn't his first choice. He loved to joke about how his musical career began. "I went in as a trumpet player and came out a drummer," he laughed and said. In 1945, he was honorably discharged from the U.S. Army. From 1945 to 1956, he traveled from Florida to New York performing with big bands, landing with Tiny Bradshaw's band at King Records, who at the time, was best known to the world as the "King of Jitterbug." As he started working sessions at King, he started working many sessions with Henry Glover and notably, Moon Mullican.

“I tried several black bass players with Moon. Moon was the first country artist that I mixed in black musicians with” - Henry Glover. 

Aubrey Wilson Mullican, known professionally as Moon Mullican and nicknamed "King of the Hillbilly Piano Players", was a national country and western singer, songwriter, and pianist. He was a big voice in the hillbilly boogie style which greatly influenced rockabilly and rock and roll. Jerry Lee Lewis cited him as a major influence on his own singing and piano playing, paving the way for Rock and Roll.

In 1950, Grand Ole Opry and King Records star, Moon Mullican, alongside the incredible black drummer Calvin “Eagle Eye” Shields covered Tiny Bradshaw’s R&B hit, Well Oh Well. This recording made Eagle Eye the first black man to record country music in the world breaking new barriers for Eagle Eye, Moon Mullican, King Records and the beyond.

This changed the music landscape.

Left: Eagle Eye and Moon working together at King Records, Illustration by Jason Snell

 
 

King Leadership On Brewster Avenue

Leadership Roles in Evanston, Cincinnati

African Americans moved into jobs with supervisory capacities. The following positions were filled by blacks in 1947: Assistant office manager, three foremen of the mill room, set up man on the production line, assistant promotion director, legal secretary, a dozen stenographers while 20 percent of the factory workers were black.

Right: The infamous Cotton Club in the West End, Cincinnati, an African-American night club where both white and black King Record artists began to collaborate. Photo courtesy of King Studios/Xavier University

 
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Dorthy Siegel Talks about the Hiring Process at King Records

Ben Siegel’s (Personnel Director at King Records) Opportunity Should Not Be Based on Race.

Interviews with former King Record artists, staff, and family members were conducted in 2008 following an Ohio Historic Marker dedication at the King Record’s building. Video content was recorded and produced by Lightbourne Communications. Post-production transcription and editing was provided by King Studios, LLC, and supported by grants from the Elsa Heisel Sule Foundation, and the Dater Family Foundation. All rights reserved by the Greater Cincinnati Music Heritage Foundation and King Studios, LLC.

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