Frank Etheridge's Traveloque
While traveling abroad, Etheridge played in interracial orchestras and for mixed audiences. Many African American jazz musicians preferred the race relations in European countries or Egypt to America's Jim Crow laws. While living abroad did not mean they avoided any racial discrimination, they had more opportunities and more freedom of movement.
In addition to music, Etheridge indulged in other hobbies. Throughout his travels he took photographs of architecture, his friends, and landscapes. He wrote articles, poems, essays, and books. His travelogue was published posthumously.