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

Edward Genest assaulted

Edward Genest, a thirty-two-year-old white sailor from the S.S. Virginia, was stabbed in the left arm on 7th Avenue at 123rd Street. Two newspapers, the Brooklyn Daily Eagle and the Herald Tribune, added the detail that he had been stabbed by blacks; five newspapers noted only that he had been stabbed.

Genest’s assault took place near a cluster of assaults on whites and other events around 7th Avenue and 125th Street. Genest was likely a visitor to Harlem seeking entertainment around 125th Street, caught up in the disorder. He could have arrived by subway, unaware of what was happening until he arrived, at an unknown time.

The use of a knife in this assault was unusual; only one other of the 54 assaults in the disorder involved stabbing, distinguishing this violence from what occurred at other times. In the rest of 1935, knives were a favored weapon of those committing acts of violence, used in ?% of felony assault cases.   
 

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