How Racist Restrictions in Housing Deeds Helped Shape Where Rhode Islanders Live Today

Old property deed restrictions in deeds prohibited people of color from buying certain homes

During the early 20th century, property owners and developers wrote restrictions into home deeds prohibiting people of color from buying property.
During the early 20th century, property owners and developers wrote restrictions into home deeds prohibiting people of color from buying property.
Photo illustration by Allison Magnus/Rhode Island PBS
Share
During the early 20th century, property owners and developers wrote restrictions into home deeds prohibiting people of color from buying property.
During the early 20th century, property owners and developers wrote restrictions into home deeds prohibiting people of color from buying property.
Photo illustration by Allison Magnus/Rhode Island PBS
How Racist Restrictions in Housing Deeds Helped Shape Where Rhode Islanders Live Today
Copy

Mark Brown was flipping through property records in Warwick City Hall when he found something unexpected. As part of his volunteer work with the local historic cemetery commission, he was looking to see if a small cemetery had a right-of-way attached to it.

What he found in a deed from 1940 for a neighboring house shocked him:

“No persons of any race other than the Caucasian race shall use or occupy any building or any lot except that this covenant shall not prevent occupancy by domestic servants of a different race domiciled with the owner or tenant.”

What Brown found was known as a racially restrictive covenant, a relic of a time when property owners and developers could write restrictions into deeds to ensure that individual homes — and sometimes entire subdivisions — would be part of a segregated, all-white community.

“It seems like centuries ago, but 1940 was shortly before I was born,” Brown said.

Though racially restrictive covenants are now illegal, they remain visible in the chain of property records tied to many local homes. They offer a clear window into a recent past in Rhode Island where some communities openly practiced racial segregation. Historians said their use also influenced another planning tool that is still the dominant force shaping cities and towns today: zoning.

This story was reported by The Public’s Radio. You can read the entire story here.

A $300 million payment dispute and a 2024 blade failure fuel a high-stakes legal fight over the future of the project
Getting up the East Side once meant horses, cable cars and ingenuity. Now, it usually means walking
The power politics of a vacancy on Rhode Island’s highest court
The explosion, which sent 13 people to the hospital, was caused by ethanol vapors accumulating in an oven, according to the Rhode Island State Fire Marshal
Based in East Greenwich, Dewetron specializes in high-tech measurement equipment
Anonymous letters claimed a judge threw cases in favor of a prosecutor he was seeing romantically. A court-appointed investigator found no evidence to support the allegations