I Grew Up in the ‘Most Hateful Town in America’

Welcome to Vidor, a town most famous for its racism

Justin Ward
Human Parts

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A welcome sign for my hometown that sits alongside I-10. (Michael Corcoran )

WWhen folks ask me where I’m from, I have a stock answer: You’ve probably never heard of it and if you have, whatever you heard probably wasn’t good.

Vidor, Texas, is a little strip of fast food restaurants and gas stations that bisects Interstate 10 at the midway point on its journey from “sea to shining sea.” It’s a place where you stop to stretch your legs, void your bladder, and scarf down something greasy before moseying on to someplace better, like Biloxi.

With a population of about 11,000, Vidor is primarily famous for two things.

The first is country music because Vidor is where the singer George Jones was living that time he drunk drove his tractor to the liquor store because his wife hid his car keys. My town also produced a few B-list country stars, like Clay Walker and Tracy Byrd.

The second thing that Vidor is known for is considerably less wholesome: racism.

“Don’t let the sun set on your black ass”

Vidor was once what they called a “sundown town,” or a white-flight suburb of the much larger and more racially diverse city of Beaumont. Black people could pass through unscathed so long as…

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Justin Ward
Human Parts

Journalist and activist. Founder and co-chair of DivestSPD. Bylines at SPLC, The Baffler, GEN, USA Today. Follow on Twitter: @justwardoctrine, @DivestSPD