Green Book Marriage -
1. The Opening Hook “They didn’t just marry for love. They married to move.” Before GPS and Waze, Black travelers in Jim Crow America relied on The Negro Motorist Green Book (1936–1966)—a guide to safe gas stations, restaurants, and “tourist homes.” But long before that guide was printed, Black couples had already created their own survival map: The Green Book Marriage. 2. Definition Green Book Marriage (n.): A marital union formed not solely from romance, but as a deliberate strategy for physical safety, economic stability, and legal protection against racial violence. In such unions, the spouse functions as a human passport —granting access to spaces, resources, or mobility otherwise denied to a Black individual alone. 3. Historical Roots | Era | Function of Marriage | |------|----------------------| | Slavery | Marriage (where permitted) prevented sale of family members. | | Reconstruction | Legal marriage protected children from being declared orphans and apprenticed to former owners. | | Jim Crow | A light-skinned spouse could shop in white stores; a professional spouse (teacher, porter) offered “respectability” to avoid white violence. | | Great Migration | Marriage provided a second income to afford a car (essential for avoiding sundown towns). |