Napa valley – Melanoid Nation Foundation https://www.melanoidnation.org Thu, 27 Aug 2015 07:46:44 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.2.20 When In Doubt, Come Back Home: A List Of Black-Owned Wineries In California https://www.melanoidnation.org/when-in-doubt-come-back-home-a-list-of-black-owned-wineries-in-california/ https://www.melanoidnation.org/when-in-doubt-come-back-home-a-list-of-black-owned-wineries-in-california/#comments Thu, 27 Aug 2015 07:46:44 +0000 http://melanoidnation.org/?p=2394 No Blacks in Napa Valley? No problem.

In light of the half-hearted apologies given to the Melanoid women thrown off of the Napa Valley Wine Train this past weekend for “laughing too loud”, now would be the time for Melanoid people to seriously consider patronizing wineries that will accommodate them with no concerns of unnecessary–and ridiculous–repercussions from suspected white supremacists who own and operate the wineries of Napa Valley. As a matter of fact, those same accommodations can be met without the Sisters having to worry about traveling too far. Here is a list of Black-Owned wineries in the state of California that could very well provide a much better experience for the Melanoid Sisters who were singled out by the suspected white supremacists on the train that day.

1. Rideau Vineyard

Founded by Iris Rideau, the 16-acre winery produces an award-winning wine named Pinot Noir. The winery is located in the Santa Ynez Valley, which is in the Santa Barbara area.

2. Brown Estate

This Melanoid family-owned winery was founded in 1980 on what was known as a “ghost estate” in Napa Valley, CA.  Perhaps the most impressive thing about the winery thus far is its extended invitation to the female Melanoid book club members who were deprived of the same experience on the Napa Valley Wine Train as their non-Melanoid counterparts. The Brown Estate is offering the women a private visit to their premises as a result of their unjust treatment on the Wine Train.

3. Esterlina Vineyards

This particular winery is owned by the Sterling Brothers, a family of Melanoid men who have over 30 years of experience in the industry.

4. L’objet Noir

With a place with a title that actually translates to “the black object”, it is only fitting that the establishment be owned by someone of Melanoid persuasion. Dan Glover is the owner and captain of the ship that is smooth sailing at L’objet Noir.

5. Everett Ridge Winery

Also owned by the Sterling Brothers (the Melanoid men who own Esterlina Vineyards), the Sterling family has to be beaming with pride because of their semmingly lucrative opportunities in this particular industry (wine and spirits). This is a winery that goes back many years in time…137 years, to be exact.

B. Clark

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The Long History Of Racism In Napa Valley https://www.melanoidnation.org/the-long-history-of-racism-in-napa-valley/ https://www.melanoidnation.org/the-long-history-of-racism-in-napa-valley/#comments Tue, 25 Aug 2015 09:05:42 +0000 http://melanoidnation.org/?p=2385 The city of Napa Valley California has recently been in the  international headlines for a suspected racial incident involving a group of Black women who were kicked off of a Napa Valley Wine Train for allegedly “laughing too loud”.

Many white supremacy defenders have gone out of their way to deny any racist intent being a factor in this Napa Valley incident. One of the key strategies to maintaining the system of white supremacy,is by denying it’s existence,no matter how much proof or evidence is available.

One thing that is impossible to deny is the long,well documented history of blatant racism in the Napa Valley area. When you understand the history of white supremacy in Napa Valley, the alleged racial discrimination that these innocent Black women suffered on the Napa Valley Wine Train will not seem like a stretch of the imagination.

 

According to prominent white historian James Loewen, author of the book Sundown Towns-a book about cities and towns all across America that barred Black people from living in or visiting certain areas after sundown- Napa Valley allegedly had a policy of excluding Black citizens.

This exclusionary policy is evident today because the current population of Napa is 74,966 people and only 436 of those residents are Black. There is a saying among many of the residents of Napa Valley today that NAPA stands for “No African People Allowed.”

In the 1920’s, Napa Valley hosted a huge Ku Klux Klan rally that brought in around 10,000 people. There is a mural in downtown Napa today that commemorates the KKK history in Napa. (photo below)

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In 1989 many Neo-Nazi and Skinhead organizations around the country felt comfortable enough with the city of Napa they tried  to hold a white supremacist “Woodstock” styled concert event there. After pressure from the Jewish Defense League and other organizations the event was shelved.

There have been several articles from the local news outlets in Napa that document the history of racism in that area.

Going back to the early history of Napa,a Melanoid woman named Mary Ellen Pleasant-who is known as “the mother of civil rights in California”- is buried in Napa Valley.

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Ironically,Mary Ellen Pleasant gained much of her notoriety for establishing lawsuits against a couple of railroad companies in the Bay area for ejecting her and other Black women from their trains because of race. And here we are over 100 years later,and the system of white supremacy is still in place and we have gone full circle.  Black women are still getting ejected from trains in the same area of the Bay, and race is still the suspected factor.

 

 

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