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Harlem in Disorder: A Spatial History of How Racial Violence Changed in 1935

[Carlton Moss], Untitled account of the disturbance on the night of March 19, Harlem Survey: March 19th, Box 131-123, Folder 7, E. Franklin Frazier Papers (Moorland Spingarn Research Center, Howard University).

This first person narrative is unsigned. However, a letter filed separately in the Frazier Papers, from Carlton Moss dated November 12, 1935, refers to enclosing his account of the disturbance on the night of March 19 (Box 131-117, Folder 6). Moss may have been encouraged to send the account by his wife, Annie Laurie Savage, who worked for the MCCH. The couple married on July 6, 1935, in a wedding reported in a long story in the society pages of the New York Amsterdam News: "Participants in Noon Wedding Ceremony At Quaint Little Church Around the Corner," New York Amsterdam News, July 13, 1935, 8.
 

E. Franklin Frazier Papers

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