jruss's blog
2012: The Reuther Year in Review
2012 was a big year for the Reuther. We’ve reported on most of the developments, achievements, and activities in our annual newsletter and on our blog. A few items have not enjoyed their deserved recognition, however: read more »
The 1943 Detroit Race Riot
- Detroit (Mich.) -- Riot, 1942
- Detroit (Mich.) -- Riot, 1943
- Detroit--economic conditions
- Detroit--politics and government
- Detroit--race relations
- Detroit--social conditions
- Discrimination in housing--Michigan
- Housing
- Housing development--Michigan--Detroit
- Jeffries, Edward, 1900-1950
- Race relations
- Race riots
- Racism
- Urban Affairs
- World War, 1939-1945
On June 20, 1943, a fight broke out between African American and white Detroiters spending their Sunday on Belle Isle, the city’s large park in the middle of the Detroit River. Fighting spread to the mainland, and rumors crisscrossed the city, stoking racial tensions that had been running high and threatening to boil over into violence for months. Rioting spread, with little attempt from the police to stop it (in fact, much evidence points to many white police facilitating and even participating in violence against African Americans), and by the time President Franklin Roosevelt sent in federal troops on the evening of June 21, hundreds had been injured, and 34 people had died: 25 African American (17 of whom were shot by police), and 9 white. Of the arrests made later, 85% were African American. read more »