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Hidden Figures - Margot Lee Shetterly

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Japan, and assorted Vanderbilts, Du<br />

Ponts, and Pulitzers all converged on<br />

White Sulphur Springs throughout the<br />

1920s, 1930s, and 1940s, where they<br />

Charlestoned, cha-chaed, and rumbaed<br />

the night away. Even as breadlines<br />

snaked through America’s main streets<br />

and drought broke the backs of tens of<br />

thousands of farm families, “Old White”<br />

remained a magnet for glamorous<br />

international guests who golfed, took the<br />

waters at the resort’s famed springs, and<br />

basked in its unbridled luxury.<br />

The Greenbrier segmented its serving<br />

class carefully. Negroes worked as<br />

maids, bellmen, and kitchen help, while<br />

Italian and Eastern European immigrants<br />

attended the dining room. During<br />

summers home from Institute, the<br />

Coleman boys pulled stints as bellmen,

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