Black History

In the 1920s, Sarasota Was Small, Southern and Segregated

But the very inequities meant to contain the Black community spurred a parallel world—self-sustaining, rooted and determined to endure.

By Kim Doleatto November 3, 2025 Published in the November 2025 issue of Sarasota Magazine

Leonard Reid, a Newtown founder, taking John Hamilton Gillespie’s wife, Blanche, for her daily buggy ride.
Leonard Reid, a Newtown founder, taking John Hamilton Gillespie’s wife, Blanche, for her daily buggy ride.

In the 1920s, Sarasota was small, Southern and segregated. The Ku Klux Klan’s national resurgence did not pass the town by: In one local parade, residents marched down Main Street in white hoods, greeted—according to accounts from that era—with “cheery hellos” from onlookers. Black citizens, meanwhile, were often pressed into construction labor during the land boom.

Education was marked by inequity. In 1927, statewide valuations showed white school properties worth nearly $19 million, while those for Black schools stood at less than $1 million. An eighth-grade education was deemed “sufficient” for Black students, and, as former mayor Jerome Dupree described, “Every piece of equipment sent to Booker schools was second hand.”

The very inequities meant to contain the Black community spurred a parallel world—self-sustaining, rooted and determined to endure. In Overtown, later renamed the Rosemary District, businesses and gathering places thrived. In 1925, a new brick building opened as the Sarasota Grammar School for Negro Children—later renamed for its principal and founder, Emma E. Booker—which became a source of pride. The Colson Hotel, built by Edwin O. Burns, opened in 1926 as a refuge for Black travelers barred from white establishments.

The Rev. Lewis Colson and his wife, Irene, were Sarasota’s first-known African-American settlers.

Named for the Rev. Lewis Colson—once enslaved, later a surveyor and minister—and his wife, Irene, an expert midwife, it included a barber shop and soft drink parlor on the ground floor. Payne Chapel AME, destroyed in the 1926 hurricane and rebuilt the following year, anchored spiritual life.

That legacy carries forward. The Leonard Reid House, home to one of Newtown’s founders, now serves as headquarters for the Sarasota African American Cultural Coalition, while the Colson Hotel is being restored by community hands.­­

Share
Show Comments