richardmurray Posted yesterday at 08:54 AM Report Posted yesterday at 08:54 AM Black-Owned Cafés️️️ 40+ Black-Owned Cafés in 11 Cities to Support.... ( compliled by Shoppe Black) from KEMI CONTENT Black-Owned Cafés️️️ 40+ Black-Owned Cafés in 11 Cities to Support.... ( compliled by Shoppe Black) Check where your dollars should go!!! A few years ago, we published an article highlighting Black-owned coffee and tea businesses .... A few years ago, we published an article highlighting Black-owned coffee and tea businesses as alternatives to Starbucks. That list became one of our most-shared pieces because conscious consumers were actively seeking value-aligned Here are over 40 Black-owned cafés across 11 major U.S. cities to support right now. New York City NBHD Brulee, Harlem Ginjan Cafe, Harlem The Oma Shop II, Harlem Brooklyn Tea, Bed-Stuy Lips Cafe, Flatbush Los Angeles South LA Cafe, South Central Hilltop Coffee and Kitchen, Inglewood, DTLA, Eagle Rock Dubb’s Organic Coffee Blends, West Hollywood House Coffee Co, West Jefferson Blvd Atlanta Urban Grind, West Midtown Black Bean Coffee Co, West End Black Coffee ATL, Castleberry Hill Portrait Coffee, Southwest Atlanta Chicago Sip and Savor, South Side Afro Joe’s Coffee and Tea, Beverly Build Coffee, Woodlawn Overflow Coffee, South Loop Muse Coffee Studio, Little Italy (Near West) Detroit Detroit Sip, University District Detroit Brew-ti-ful Coffee House, Plymouth Rd District In Harmony Café Sweets and More, Dexter Avenue Simply Roasted, Downtown Detroit Philadelphia Uncle Bobbie’s Coffee and Books, Germantown Coffee Cream and Dreams, North Philadelphia Brown Street Cafe, Southwest Philly Bower Cafe, Center City Haven Café, Grays Ferry Alif Brew and Mini Mart, West Philly Es Cafe Lounge, Northern Liberties Washington, D.C. Cafe Cino, Dupont Circle Sankofa Video Books and Cafe, Georgia Avenue Creative Grounds DC, North Capitol Street Little Food Studio, Petworth Grounded Plant Shop and Cafe, Anacostia Jaliyaa Coffee Truck and Catering, Shaw Texas (Houston + Dallas–Fort Worth) Houston Day 6 Coffee Co., Spring Branch LIT Java, Pearland Mo’ Brunch + Brews, Museum District Kefita Coffee, Midtown Dallas–Fort Worth Soirée Coffee Bar, Trinity Groves Tre Stelle Coffee Co, North Dallas Brown Bag Coffees and Tea, Northwest Dallas Billie Joe Coffee Co, Grand Prairie New Orleans Backatown Coffee Parlour, Treme Cupcake Fairies Coffee, Bywater St. Noir, Lower Garden District Up & Adam, Central Business District Seattle Boon Boona Coffee, Multiple Locations Avole Central District, Central District Bonhomie Coffee Bar, Labour Temple Winnie’s Cafe, Rainier Beach The Station, Columbia City Moments like this remind people to pay attention to where their dollars go. These cafés represent local ownership, culture, and community. They create the kind of spaces that big chains cannot replicate. 1
Pioneer1 Posted yesterday at 12:28 PM Report Posted yesterday at 12:28 PM Man, time flies. I haven't been to ANY of those cafes in Detroit....lol. There is one cafe I used to go to quite a bit and I'm surprised it wasn't on your list, Nandi's House of Knowledge. 1
richardmurray Posted yesterday at 01:44 PM Author Report Posted yesterday at 01:44 PM @Pioneer1 I told KEmi hopefully she adjusts her list https://aalbc.com/bookstore/Nandi%26rsquo%3Bs+Knowledge+Cafe 1
Pioneer1 Posted yesterday at 02:19 PM Report Posted yesterday at 02:19 PM richardmurray Thank you sir, but that comment wasn't meant to be a criticism of the list! It's appreciated because it hipped me to a lot of new spots I need to hit the next time I go back to Detroit. I was kind of thinking "out loud" as I remember the various spots I used to frequent when I lived in the city....lol. I'm kind of surprised at Seattle having so many Black owned cafes. I been there a bunch of times. Although it does have a Black presence, it's a fairly White city, lol. 1
richardmurray Posted 22 hours ago Author Report Posted 22 hours ago @Pioneer1 YEah I comprehend I am just stating what I did in support.... I am not surprised I believe I listed in an economic corner edition quite a large number of small black owned businesses in my neck of harlem which is one of many regions of black small business in nyc. It goes back to Frederick Douglass and the composite nation. Small black owned businesses in white cities: NYC/Chicago/LA/Seattle/Cleveland/Houston/ et cetera is a financial result of that philosophy. Arguably: Frederick Douglass+Booker t washington+ young WEB Dubois each held the same fiscal perspective to Black empowerment in the USA. None of them was about a black owned firm controlling a market, each were about a black owned firm/firms having a respectable share as part of the Statian whole. Garveyites + the Exodusters financially, viewed the goal of black people to be black fiscal domination in our sphere and eventually in competition to the non black. so... most of the black movements starting with the black church planned on what we are expereincing which the black populace in the usa achieved, non violently, not killing native americans or others for land or resources, not enslaving other humans beings for inequal labor situations, not having a country of militaristic power, like nuclear power, like china/india/russia supporting our activities in the usa. So.. slowly the black populace got to where it, in majority leadership, wanted to in the past, but absent any of the crimes to others the non blacks committed for their wealth which they plus some blacks seem to not know or forget.
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