This page was created by Anonymous. 

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

Herbert Holderman injured

Around 1.20AM, Herbert Holderman was “cut by flying glass when some unknown persons broke windows of stores” on Lenox Avenue at 132nd Street. Alice Mitchell and Hugh Young were also injured by flying glass ten minutes later three blocks south, as part of an outbreak of looting on the blocks north of Lenox Ave north of 125th Street around 1.30AM.

Holderman, like Mitchell and Young, was treated by a physician at Harlem Hospital, likely in the emergency room. He does not appear in the hospital records, but in the 32nd Police Precinct record of aided cases. Two newspaper lists of the injured also included Holderman, but the only information that they provided on his identity was his home address, 73 East 128th Street, an area of mixed black and white residences on the eastern boundary of Harlem. The police record did not specify where Holderman was cut. The lists disagree on his injury; the New York Post recorded it as laceration of his hands, the New York Daily News of his face. He was one of four of those injured with wounds to the hands (20%). After being attended by a physician, Holderman went home, suggesting the wound was not serious enough to require him to be sent to hospital.
 

This page has tags:

This page references: