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

Hugh Young injured

Hugh Young was at the intersection of Lenox Ave and West 129th Street when he was cut by “flying glass,” according to a hospital record. A twenty-three-year-old man of unknown race, he lived a block north, on the corner of Lenox Avenue and West 130th Street, an area of black residents. He may have been a bystander drawn by the noise on Lenox Avenue at this time, when a number of incidents of looting took place. Dr Payne attended Young at Harlem Hospital, half a dozen blocks north on Lenox Avenue, at 1.30 AM according to a hospital record, so he was likely injured sometime around 1.00 AM. Another person, Alice Mitchell, was also injured by flying glass at the same place and treated by Dr Payne at the same time. They may have been transported in the same ambulance.

The hospital record described Young's injury as "lacerations of face." Young does not appear in any of the lists of the injured published by newspapers, unlike Alice Mitchell. Others injured by flying class suffered wounds to their legs (2), hands (1), and in one other case, to the head. After being seen by the physician, Young went home, his injury evidently not serious enough for him to be admitted to the hospital. The hospital records did not record race.
 

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