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Injured (74)
The injured include forty-nine victims of assault; four other assaults involved attacks on individuals in vehicles that damaged cars and smashed windows, but did not result in reported injuries, and Thomas Wijstem died three months after the attack on him led to a prosecution for assault. Four of the men charged with assault are also recorded as being injured: Paul Boyett shot by a policeman who alleged he was part of a group assaulting Timothy Murphy; Charles Alston, who fell from a building roof to a ledge several floors below while trying to escape police; Isaac Daniels, arrested for assaulting Herman Young; and James Smitten, arrested for assaulting William Kitlitz. An additional man arrested in the disorder for inciting a riot, Hashi Mohammed, also appears in lists of the injured. Another five individuals are identified as injured by flying glass, and Stanley Dondoro was accidentally shot by police pursuing James Thompson. The remaining fourteen are listed as injured with no information on the circumstances that produced their injuries.
Few of the injured suffered wounds severe enough to require being admitted to the hospital. Information is available for forty-three of the seventy-two injured individuals: physicians sent only twelve (28%) to the hospital. Six of those were shot and wounded (two other shooting victims were not admitted to the hospital, while the three men shot and killed were admitted, although one does not appear in hospital records). The other six individuals injured severely enough to be sent to the hospital received their wounds in a variety of circumstances: head wounds when assaulted by a group, by an individual and in unknown circumstances; and injuries to the leg and nose. The highest proportion came in assaults on individuals, but the numbers are very small (1/4, with no information in three cases). In terms of injury, the highest proportion sent to hospital were of those with leg injuries (2/5). By the day after the riot, March 21, only eight men remained in the hospital, according to the New York Herald Tribune.
That combination of a high proportion requiring treatment and a small number admitted is at odds with accounts that emphasize shooting during the disorder, particularly on March 20. The New York Evening Journal's picture of the extent of injuries resulting from the violence seems particularly sensationalized and exaggerated:
Ambulances raced through the streets to care for the wounded as the casualty list grew until it resembled some wartime engagement. The accident wards of Harlem, Sydenham, Knickerbocker and Jewish Memorial hospitals were jammed with victims of the mob's wrath. At first the victims were those injured by rocks or clubs. But as the night wore on and the looting and violence increased to a point never before reached in New York City, the police were forced to use their guns - were forced to use them to protect helpless whites from being beaten and kicked and stamped to death under the feet of the stampeding blacks. And then the reports carried the words: "Gunshot wounds."
Not even estimates reported in other newspapers suggest injuries on the level of “some wartime engagement,” let alone as many as would result from violence “at a point never before seen in New York City.” Nor do the handful of gunshot victims support claims of widespread gunshot wounds.
The injured attracted the attention of photographers from the Daily News, New York Evening Journal, and Daily Mirror, and appear in almost a quarter of the published images of the disorder. Those images span the experience of injury from wound to treatment to recuperation, and feature men and women, Blacks and whites, and police and medical staff: an unidentified white man knocked to the ground; an injured white police detective, Henry Roge, being helped by another officer (on the street in the New York Evening Journal and Daily Mirror and inside in a second photograph in the New York Evening Journal); an unidentified man waiting for an ambulance (likely in a police precinct); Dr. Sayet of Harlem Hospital treating an unidentified Black man in a police precinct; police officers carrying an unidentified Black individual on stretcher (likely Charles Alston); police officers picking up an unidentified injured man outside Harlem Hospital; doctors treating an unidentified Black man and an unidentified Black woman in Harlem Hospital; a room of people recuperating in hospital beds; a bandaged white woman, Patricia O'Rourke, leaving Harlem Hospital (on the front page of the Daily News); and an injured white woman, Elizabeth Nadish, at home. The presence of three Black individuals in these images is out of proportion with the number of Black men and women identified as injured in the sources, suggesting that those lists did not include all those injured during the disorder. Black men with bandaged heads also appeared among the men arrested during the disorder photographed being transported to court the next day, in photographs published in the Daily News, one on the front page, and in the Acme Photo Agency image below.
This page references:
- [Photograph] “A Girl Victim," New York Daily News, March 20, 1935, 1.
- Result of medical attendance of those with different injuries
- Result of medical attendance of the injured in different events
- [Photograph] "Race Riot Victims," Acme Photo Agency.
- [Photograph] "A Casualty of the Mob," New York Evening Journal, March 20, 1935, 1.
- All injuries
- [Photograph] "A Bottle Crashed," Daily News, March 20, 1935, 1.
- Percy Gould, "20,000 Fight Police in Orgy of Looting," New York Evening Journal, March 20, 1935, 1.
- [Photograph] "Elizabeth Nadish," Daily Mirror, March 22, 1935, 1.
- [Photograph] "One of the Casualties in the Riot," Daily Mirror, April 3, 1935, 4.
- [Photograph] “Sex was disregarded in riot," Daily News, March 21, 1935, 30.
- [Photograph] "Patrol wagon disgorges its cargo of prisoners at Harlem Court," Daily News, March 21, 1935, 1.
- "650 Police Patrol Harlem to Block Renewed Rioting," New York Herald Tribune, March 21, 1935, 1, 2.
- [Photograph] "Although badly injured, this riot victim didn't want to enter Harlem Hospital," Daily News, March 21, 1935, 30.
- [Photograph] "Victims of rioting, some of them seriously injured, lie in Harlem Hospital ward," Daily News, March 21, 1935, 1.
- [Photograph] "One of the colored victims of the Harlem rioting...," Daily News, March 21, 1935, 3.
- [Photograph] "Physicians at Harlem Hospital treat a colored riot victim for a badly damaged eye," Daily News, March 20, 1935, 88.
- [Photograph] "Stretched out in a chair in the West 135th Street Station...," Daily News, March 21, 1935, 30.
- [Photograph] “Struck by a stone, during Harlem outbreak, this man suffered severe head wounds," Daily Mirror, March 20, 1935, 1.
- [Photograph] “On the way to line-up at Police Headquarters," Daily News, March 21, 1935, 31.
- "Police Stop Harlem Riots; Ten Negroes Are Wounded," The Plain Speaker, March 20, 1935, 2.
- "40 Injured In Harlem Riots; Fear Renewal," The Vidette-Messenger, March 20, 1935, 1.
- [Photograph] "Detective Being Led From Scene," New York Evening Journal, March 20, 1935, 3.