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

[Photograph] Lino Rivera and Lt. Samuel Battle (seated), March 20, 1935, Associated Press.

Officer Eldridge is to Rivera's right, either out of frame or cropped out. He is visible in an International Photo image taken around the same time. This image is almost identical to an Acme Photo image of Rivera and Battle.

New York Sun, March 20, 1935, 21. Caption: "Boy Whose Arrest Precipitated Harlem Riot. Lino Rivera is shown with Lieut. S. J. Battle after he was taken to a police station."

New York Post, March 20, 1935, 6. Headline: "It Was His Party In Harlem." Caption: "Lieutenant Battle. Lino Rivera [underneath them in image]. Young Rivera, sixteen, was the innocent cause of the Harlem rioting. It was when customers in a Kress store who saw him taken to the manager's office, charged with petty theft, reported that he had been badly beaten..."

New York Herald Tribune, March 21, 1935, 2 [Cropped to show Rivera only]. Headline: "Immediate Cause of Riots." Caption: "Lino Rivera pictured yesterday." Published above story "Grabbing Knife Just a Whim to Riot Starter."

New York Times, March 21, 1935, 16. Caption: "Lieutenant S. J. Battle with Lino Rivera, the boy said to have stolen a knife. The report that the youth had been beaten to death started the trouble."

In the New York Sun
In the New York Post
In the New York Herald Tribune
In the New York Times

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