Obama PA’08 : a tale of two Levittowns

I got my first overtly racist anti-Obama comment today while phoning central Pennsylvania. It was a 62-year old man, who said, simply, “I’m not voting for the black man.” I moved to end the call, but he continued, “I’ve worked with hundreds of black people.” He meant that as a defense (“Some of them are my best friends!”), but the point was clear. At least he was honest.

It’s interesting, then, to see in today’s NY Times, and then echoed on Daily Kos, on-the-ground reporting from Levittown, PA. “Levittown is whiter, older and less educated than the rest of the nation — and Pennsylvania is made up of many Levittowns,” writes Michael Sokolove, a Levittown native. Perhaps I was calling into one of them.

Levittown, NY I grew up a short bike ride from the original Levittown — Levittown, NY, the one featured in all the social studies textbooks. Actually, I grew up in what Bill O’Reilly calls “the Westbury part of Levittown,” which is to say, Salisbury. In 1981, my family moved to a split-level (so, not a real “Levitt” house) just off Old Country Road. By then, suburban New York was in flux, and I suspect it’s around then that Levittown NY took a different turn than Levittown PA. Maybe a third of my high school classmates lived in Levittown proper, and I remember, as the Cold War wound down, hearing rumor of Grumman’s shrinking fortunes as demand for its F-14 began shifting away.

Back then, blue-collar work meant a middle class lifestyle. But the economic shock of Gruman’s decline and ultimate sale, coming so soon after the 1987 recession, put Long Island on the path to a post-industrial future. From Stony Brook in the east, biotech was coming; from the west lapped waves of money from New York’s capital markets. Gruman was to Levittown NY what Fairless Works was to Levittown PA, but with the luck of geography the older Levittown escaped the millstone around its neck. (Ironically, Fairless Works is called “the mill”). Today, the median household income of Levittown NY is $78,454 to PA’s $58,985; industrial work comprises 17% of PA’s jobs but only 9% of NY’s. (Latest data for NY, PA).

In other demographic matters, the two Levittowns are almost identical. They also share a similar history. As Sokolove reports,

And on matters of race Levittown has a particularly shameful history. It was billed as “the most perfectly planned community in America,” and part of the plan was for it to be whites-only: 5,500 acres, stretching across three Pennsylvania townships and one borough, closed off to blacks. The first development of mass-produced homes by Levitt & Sons, Levittown, N.Y., on Long Island, which dates from 1947, had the same exclusionary policies. William Levitt weakly insisted that he would love to sell houses to black families but had “come to know that if we sell one house to a Negro family, then 90 to 95 percent of our white customers will not buy into the community. That is their attitude, not ours.”

And so, as of 2000, both Levittowns were 94% white, with PA’s having a few more blacks and NY’s having more Latinos (many of whom are counted as white) and Asians.

The racial history of Long Island was sometimes written in stone, as in the low highway overpasses that Robert Moses allegedly designed to prevent New York City buses from reaching the beach. It’s also written on the crazily overlapping boundaries that divide up our school districts. Mr. O’Reilly might be excused for not knowing whether he hailed from Levittown or Westbury; my high school drew from both, plus East Meadow, and belonged to the East Meadow School District. (Two other school districts also covered Levittown.) Yet our school did not take students from the other side of Old Country Road, a majority black and Latino community known as New Cassel. Those kids went to Westbury High School, in the Westbury School District.

I was one of about a dozen Asian kids in my class of 181 (ours was the smallest class the school had ever seen), and I’m pretty sure the only non-Hispanic black kid in the class was in the special education program (he was deaf). Unlike Sokolove’s experience in 1950s PA, Jews were much more numerous in my high school, and especially my part of town; today, Jews comprise some 15% of Levittown NY but only about 5% of Levittown PA. And while I don’t have up-to-date demographics at hand, from what I’ve seen Levittown NY has become more diverse since the 2000 census, especially among Latinos and East and South Asians.

I can’t speak directly to the Levittown, proper, experience, but growing up in the next town over in the 1980s, my experience of race was — while not uncomplicated — not fraught with hatred or even significant overt prejudice. I don’t know if it was our particular generation (the youngest children of the oldest hippies), religious diversity, or — as some of my friends have suggested — high marijuana usage in my school, but when I compare notes with peers from other schools from elsewhere in the country, I do believe that I had a uniquely peaceful, even idyllic, childhood. Which is not to say that race never surfaced in ugly ways (in retrospect, I think the Archie Bunker lookalike next door hit golf balls on our roof on purpose), but that it wasn’t quite as simple as kids lining the halls making Chinkie jokes, either.

On the other hand, I wasn’t black.

Still, it frankly surprises me that I haven’t encountered any overt racism in working on the Obama campaign these past few months until tonight. Even if racism is out there, it’s shrouded in code words or perhaps lying to pollsters — which implies that even racists of the old-school sort know that the public consensus is against them. There’s a lot to be thankful about in terms of race relations in this country, and the Levittown that I know in New York gives me hope about the future. So, too, do some of the Levittown, PA residents that Sokolove reports on. Said John Annunziata, a former local politician, “When he won Iowa, it touched my soul. I was very emotional. I felt like we were moving toward what this country should be.”

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4 thoughts on “Obama PA’08 : a tale of two Levittowns

  1. It struck me how in Ohio, 20 percent of Democratic primary voters said that race was a major factor in their decision, and three-quarters of them voted for Clinton. This is more or less overtly racist. That 3/4 of the 20 percent voted for Clinton because of race means there’s very little chance that they did this out of “white pride,” which would be presumably absurd even for a hardened racist to consider since the national political class is almost exclusively white–they voted for her because they wouldn’t vote for the “black guy.” AND they admitted it, whether or not they were realizing they were admitting it (presumably these were two separate questions… was race a major factor? and who did you vote for?–that someone being polled may or may not have connected). Yes, the 1/4 of the 20 percent voted for Obama because of race, but we acknowledge and accept black pride and black solidarity (and other non-majority pride) (…maybe it should be questioned, but that’s a different topic).

    If I were Clinton, I would have stood up when I heard these numbers and said “if you voted for me because my opponent is white or if you plan to vote for me because of that, I don’t want your vote. I’d rather lose than win that way.” How could you not?

    Instead, I can only think she counted on this, in Ohio and now in PA.

  2. While I don’t doubt that many voters are themselves racially motivated, I’d suggest that some portion of the 20% were second-guessing other voters’ racism — that is, because they think that a black man has no electoral chance with the population-at-large, race is an important factor. It’s very similar to how racial segregation perpetuates itself in American neighborhoods even though most individual homeowners may harbor little racial animosity. Essentially, a collective action problem.

    As an Obama supporter, I’d also want to hear Obama do the flip of what you suggested Clinton do: to decry misogyny in the electorate as well.

  3. I hadn’t thought of that before, it’s interesting, but I think probably ascribing too sophisticated an interpretation. If voters are asked by exit pollsters, “did race play a major factor in your decision?” I just don’t think anyone would think “yes it was, I voted for HRC because I think other people would not vote in the general election for BO because of his race.” I think that many people are racially motivated in some places in the country, although I’m not sure how they would describe it themselves. As for misognyny, I just haven’t seen polls that suggest people have voted against HRC because she’s a woman, although I’m sure it happens and I agree if there’s any concrete sign of it BO should denounce it.

  4. I came across your post on HuffPo. Will link to this on the http://www.AsianAmericansforObama.com site. I read the NYT Magazine piece on Levittown this weekend.

    Haven’t started making calls to Pennsylvania yet, but it is encouraging that that’s the first call you’ve had like that. In my experience, I haven’t had too many people in prior states bring up Obama’s race. But I have had people shut me down right away–and it’s possible race was a factor in their resistance.

    I agree it would be great for Senator Obama to denounce misogynistic and sexist comments–as well as anti-Muslim rhetoric out there.

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