Free
NPR

Writer Recalls Her Mother's Secret Gambling Enterprise

Listen in app
Before states ran legal lotteries there was the underground street version — the numbers. When writer Bridgett M. Davis was growing up in Detroit in the '60s, her mother was a successful bookie in the African American community. She says the numbers helped fund both an underground economy and legitimate businesses at a time when opportunities for African-Americans were limited. "Numbers men were also race men, and they believed in taking their largesse and reinvesting it in the community, starting all kinds of businesses — everything from, say, a bowling alley to an insurance company to a newspaper." Davis' memoir is 'The World According to Fannie Davis.'
0:48:35
Publisher
Fresh Air
Series
Fresh Air
Publication year
2019
Have you already read it? How did you like it?
👍👎
fb2epub
Drag & drop your files (not more than 5 at once)