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  1. Mar 18, 2024 · Detroit Riot of 1967, series of violent confrontations between residents of predominantly African American neighbourhoods of Detroit and the city’s police department that began on July 23, 1967, and lasted five days. The riot resulted in the deaths of 43 people, including 33 African Americans and 10 whites. Many other people were injured ...

  2. HISTORY. Understanding Detroit’s 1967 Upheaval 50 Years Later. For five days in July, the Motor City was under siege from looters and soldiers alike. Lorraine Boissoneault. July 26, 2017....

  3. Aug 3, 2017 · History. movies. What We Still Get Wrong About What Happened in Detroit in 1967. 7 minute read. Two police officers in full riot gear arrest a man during a breakout of rioting and looting on...

  4. Mar 5, 2024 · Directed by Academy Award-winning filmmaker Kathryn Bigelow, Detroit is a gripping historical drama based on the true events of the 1967 Detroit riots. Set against the backdrop of racial tensions and police brutality, the film takes us on a harrowing journey through the Algiers Motel incident, a horrifying event that shook the nation.

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    • ‘All of Our Cities Are Potentially Powder Kegs’
    • The Summer of Rage
    • Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968
    • Black Empowerment

    Social unrest in Black communities had long been building. A century after emancipation, Black citizens were still barred from many rights and privileges afforded to white Americans. And while the civil rights movement of the 1950s and '60s was making slow inroads, racial injustice and police brutality persisted, fomenting tension. In 1964, two wee...

    Over the summer of ’67, violent unrest erupted in scores of U.S. cities, including Milwaukee, Buffalo, Tampa and Cincinnati. But the nation was galvanized by the events that transpired in July in Newark and Detroit. The Newark uprising began on July 12 when a Black cab driver was beaten by two white police officers for a minor traffic offense. The ...

    In the first draft of the Kerner Report, entitled “The Harvest of American Racism,” social scientists cited police brutality as the central cause of the uprisings and black discontent in urban America. But the commission buried those findingsby the researchers, and President Johnson chose to focus his response on segregation and economic equality. ...

    The ’67 uprisings helped to usher in a new era of Black activism and empowerment that contributed to reforms in law enforcement, economic inequality and the election of the first Black mayors in the early ’70s in both Newark and Detroit. “The Black community was definitely empowered,” Junius Williams, a Newark-based law professor and civil rights a...

    • Farrell Evans
    • 4 min
  6. On July 23, 1967, the Detroit Police Department stage a raid on an unlicensed club during a celebration for some black veterans returning from the Vietnam War. While suspects are being arrested, a mob forms and begins throwing rocks at the officers before looting nearby stores and starting fires, beginning the 12th Street Riot.

  7. Aug 6, 2017 · In a Detroit Free Press survey in the aftermath of the 1967 events, far and away the No 1 cause that drove people to destruction, behind housing segregation, employment discrimination, and abuse ...

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