
Covenants, Redlining and Black Homeownership in Wisconsin
Clip: 10/3/2023 | 7m 30sVideo has Closed Captions
Racially restrictive covenants and redlining discrimination created segregated housing.
Opportunity for Black residents of Wisconsin to purchase a home and build wealth has been limited by racially restrictive covenants and redlining discrimination, creating a segregated housing market.
Problems playing video? | Closed Captioning Feedback
Problems playing video? | Closed Captioning Feedback
Wisconsin in Black & White is a local public television program presented by PBS Wisconsin
Funding for Wisconsin in Black & White is provided by the Ira and Ineva Reilly Baldwin Wisconsin Idea Endowment, DeAtley Family Foundation, Joe and Mary Ellyn Sensenbrenner, Lau and Bea...

Covenants, Redlining and Black Homeownership in Wisconsin
Clip: 10/3/2023 | 7m 30sVideo has Closed Captions
Opportunity for Black residents of Wisconsin to purchase a home and build wealth has been limited by racially restrictive covenants and redlining discrimination, creating a segregated housing market.
Problems playing video? | Closed Captioning Feedback
How to Watch Wisconsin in Black & White
Wisconsin in Black & White is available to stream on pbs.org and the free PBS App, available on iPhone, Apple TV, Android TV, Android smartphones, Amazon Fire TV, Amazon Fire Tablet, Roku, Samsung Smart TV, and Vizio.
Providing Support for PBS.org
Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorship[solemn music] [hammering] - Nathan Denzin: Owning a home has always been key to the American dream.
According to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, "Homeownership is a pillar "of wealth building for most families, a source of wealth that can be passed down to future generations."
- Having the ability to purchase a home and live where one chooses is, you know, should be a fundamental right.
- Nathan: As African Americans moved to Wisconsin in large numbers after World War II, they entered a segregated housing market.
- When we think about racism, when we think about Jim Crow, we have a tendency to focus on the South, when it was universal throughout the United States.
- Nathan: Including here in Wisconsin, where starting around 1900, racism was built into home ownership.
- Racially restrictive covenants were clauses that were inserted into property deeds that prevented people who were not white from owning, buying, or occupying property.
- Nathan: Anne Bonds and Derek Handley are professors at UW-Milwaukee, where they map old covenants in the city of Milwaukee and its surrounding suburbs.
- By 1928, about half of all homes that were owned by white people in the United States had some sort of a restrictive, racially restrictive covenant.
- Nathan: Often, restrictive covenants had sweeping language.
Derek Handley reads this one from Wauwatosa.
- Number eight, "Ownership and occupancy "by members of white race only.
"No lot in said subdivision shall be conveyed or leased to "or occupied by any person who is not a member "of the white race.
"This prohibition is not intended "to include domestic servants while employed by an owner or occupant of any such lot."
So now African Americans have limited areas in which they can live, in which they can spread.
And so now they're gonna be crowded into one area.
- Black people who come during the Great Migration are already coming to a space that has a history of anti-Blackness, that has a history of racism.
These are the people who are shaping the texture of your life.
- Nathan: Dr. Christy Clark-Pujara, a UW-Madison history professor, also works with the Madison organization Nehemiah.
She's an instructor in its "Justified Anger: Black History for A New Day" course.
The nine-week course teaches the community about race, history, and justice.
- Housing is critical because this idea of being able to pay the same amount, month after month, for 30 years with little to no money down transformed American life.
- Nathan: While restrictive covenants were made unenforceable by a 1948 Supreme Court ruling, they continued to be added to property deeds.
- After 1948, we have examples of deeds in the 1950s, and the latest one we found so far is 1962.
- Nathan: Even though covenants fell out of use in the '60s, other long-standing tools of racial segregation, like redlining, continued to carve up neighborhoods.
- The term redlining comes from a set of maps that were drawn by the federal government.
- Nathan: Reggie Jackson educates people about diversity.
He says that the redlining maps weren't common knowledge.
- They were, for the most part, secretive maps.
Nobody really knew they existed other than bankers and some realtors.
- And so the Home Owners' Loan Corporation in 1933 and the Federal Housing Administration in 1934 adopted a mechanism where they drew lines on a map.
- Nathan: UW-Madison professor Kurt Paulsen is a historian of urban planning.
- What redlining said was who could get a mortgage refinanced.
- Nathan: Redlining maps, like this one drawn for Milwaukee in 1938, divided cities into four grades.
Green areas were considered the best place for banks to invest in, while red areas were deemed hazardous and not worthy of additional investment.
- One of the criteria that the FHA and the Home Owners' Loan Corporation used was the presence of what they call, quote, "inharmonious racial groups."
- Neighborhoods where Black people live were always redlined, and so what that meant was it was exceptionally difficult to become a person who could get a traditional bank mortgage to purchase a home or a business property.
- What that meant was that a Black person, if they moved into a yellow or a blue zone, would change that neighborhood to a red zone, and all of a sudden, that white person's property would be, would lose huge value.
- Nathan: UW Law School professor Ion Meyn says the patterns of segregation we see today stem from these policies.
- So a Black person became a threat to white wealth and it created hyper segregation.
- And it not only created disinvestment in older urban neighborhoods, it facilitated suburban development.
- Nathan: Because redlining maps sent government subsidies to the suburbs, urban communities were left with old housing and high prices.
- In many cases, Black people in deteriorating and urban neighborhoods were paying more in rent than white families were paying in the suburbs.
- That means that Blacks have been left out of the ability to build generational wealth.
[chiming music] - And what you have is basically a system of state-sanctioned apartheid.
- And I remember as a kid, you know, hanging out here, riding my bike around Milwaukee, and I never saw white people because everybody in the neighborhood was Black.
I didn't really understand it when I was a kid.
I just, you know, it's just the way it is.
- Nathan: Reggie Jackson has lived in Milwaukee for most of his life and takes people on segregation tours of the city.
We joined him to see the lines of segregation up close.
- One of the best ways to see the segregation of Milwaukee is to visibly just drive along one of our main streets, North Avenue.
- Nathan: He says the Milwaukee River is one of the largest invisible borders.
- Once you cross from the west to the east across the river, you know that you're not gonna see a residential area that has anything other than white people in it, for the most part.
Developers not trying to build homes in this part of town.
It's a really, really a sad situation to me.
- Nathan: Jackson says that in order to restore Black neighborhoods in Milwaukee, investments in jobs and affordable homes are a must.
- Reggie: Clearly missing is the fact that people can't afford to become homeowners.
People aren't making enough money.
- Nathan: But Jackson says that in order to capture investment for the future, we have to look at how we got here.
- Ours is a complicated history, and we can't hide from it.
We have to understand it; think we have to learn from it, and we have to grow from it.
- Nathan: For Here & Now, I'm Nathan Denzin.
Sabrina Madison on Cultivating Wealth in Black Communities
Video has Closed Captions
Clip: 10/19/2023 | 2m 12s | Sabrina Madison on generating health and ownership among Wisconsin's Black residents. (2m 12s)
Elmer Moore, Jr. on Stress, Safety and Generational Outcomes
Video has Closed Captions
Clip: 10/18/2023 | 2m 17s | Elmer Moore, Jr. on investing in more secure home environments and trajectories of lives. (2m 17s)
Kurt Paulsen on Long-Term Impacts of Racist Housing Policies
Video has Closed Captions
Clip: 10/12/2023 | 1m 48s | Kurt Paulsen on discrimination and homeownership rates of Black families in Wisconsin. (1m 48s)
Theresa Garrison on Witnessing 'Urban Renewal' in Milwaukee
Video has Closed Captions
Clip: 10/11/2023 | 1m 50s | Theresa Garrison on memories of growing up in a neighborhood razed by "urban renewal." (1m 50s)
Derek Handley on Identifying Housing Discrimination
Video has Closed Captions
Clip: 10/5/2023 | 1m 51s | Derek Handley on understanding historical patterns of racist housing discrimination. (1m 51s)
Anne Bonds on How Racially Restrictive Covenants Emerged
Video has Closed Captions
Clip: 10/4/2023 | 2m 44s | Anne Bonds on how racially restrictive covenants shaped housing segregation. (2m 44s)
Impacts of Housing Discrimination on Economic Opportunity
Video has Closed Captions
Clip: 10/1/2023 | 7m 3s | Housing discrimination has diminished opportunity for Black Wisconsinites to build wealth. (7m 3s)
What 'Urban Renewal' Meant for Milwaukee's Black Residents
Video has Closed Captions
Clip: 10/1/2023 | 6m 48s | Urban renewal projects sparked the open housing movement to end housing discrimination. (6m 48s)
Providing Support for PBS.org
Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorshipSupport for PBS provided by:
Wisconsin in Black & White is a local public television program presented by PBS Wisconsin
Funding for Wisconsin in Black & White is provided by the Ira and Ineva Reilly Baldwin Wisconsin Idea Endowment, DeAtley Family Foundation, Joe and Mary Ellyn Sensenbrenner, Lau and Bea...