1 minutes | Jun 8, 2023

Juneteenth Cincinnati Shorts: Intersectionality at the Cotton Club

To celebrate Juneteenth, Urbanist Media's Urban Roots podcast has partnered with Cincinnati Public Radio ⁠ to bring you Juneteenth Cincinnati Shorts: weekly, 90-second tributes to people and places important to Cincinnati’s African American history. 

Today, we’re highlighting the Cotton Club in the West End’s Hotel Sterling. It was not only a mecca of jazz music AND the one place in Cincinnati where Black and white folks could dance, together, until about seven in the morning, it was ALSO a home for black queer performers at a time when most bars and nightclubs denied LGBTQ+ folks.

Find each episode on the Urban Roots podcast feed or tune in to 91.7 WVXU on Thursdays at 5:49 and 7:50 a.m. during Morning Edition and again at 4:50 p.m. during All Things Considered. Additionally, episodes will air on sister station 90.9 WGUC each Thursday at 9:00 a.m. and 9:00 p.m.

And tune in on the Juneteenth Holiday -- Monday, June 19 at noon and 8 p.m. -- when WVXU will present a one-hour special featuring some episodes from Season 1 of Urban Roots podcast!

Credits: Juneteenth Cincinnati Shorts is brought to you by Vanessa Quirk, Deqah Hussein-Wetzel, and Connor Lynch. Special thanks to Queer Cincinnati's Jake Hogue for his help making this episode possible!

Sources: Cincinnati’s West End by John W. Harshaw. Page 118. / “Josephine Baker, 3 Cats, Tons of Luggage Arrive.” Cincinnati Post. June 15, 1951.


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