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

[Photograph] "Lino Rivera with Police Lieutenant Samuel J. Battle and a group of newspaper reporters...," March 20, 1935, ANS Photo.

Full caption: "The central figure in this group photo is the Negro youth, Lino Rivera, 16, pictured here with Police Lieutenant Samuel J. Battle, the noted Negro police officer, and a group of newspaper reporters to whom he is relating the incident that brought on Harlem's serious race riots on March 19th. Six persons were seriously injured; hundreds of shop windows were broken, and window displays were looted; uncounted scores received minor injuries, as police, Negroes and whites battled through the district with clubs, guns, and missiles of all kinds, and it all started when Rivera, allegedly, got into difficulties in a 5-10-25 cent store, on West 125th Street. The story as told by police, relates that Rivera was caught in the store taking a cheap bag of candy, and bit the hand of a clerk. Rumors spread throughout the district that a Negro boy had been badly beaten by the shop owner."

Indianapolis Recorder, March 30, 1935, 1. Caption: "He Should Know "Inside" Story. The central figure in this group is Lino Rivera, 16-year-old youth and he is pictured with police Lieut. Samuel J. Battle, noted New York police officer, and a group of newspaper reporters to whom he is relating the incidents that brought on the serious riots in Harlem last week. Rivera is shown giving facts ten hours after the rumors spread thick and fast through Harlem that he had been murdered by a store merchant. Four have died as a result of the rioting, scores were treated for injuries and three more expected to die according to reports from New York, Thursday of this week."

Norfolk Journal and Guide, April 6, 1935, 3. Caption: "Trouble Dogs His Footsteps. Young Lino Rivera, the unintentional cause of the Harlem riot, seems to have hard luck. Following his arrest and dismissal with a warning for swiping a cheap knife from a store--an incident that magnified into his "death by brutal beating"--he was arrested again for seeking to put a slug in a subway coin box. This time he was again released, but under the eye of a probation officer. Rivera is shown above with reporters and Police Captain Samuel Battle of New York, the first of his race to reach his high rank in the Gotham force, shortly after the riot of two weeks ago."

La Prensa, March 23, 1935, 1. [Reporters cropped out] Headline: "Oltra vz Lino..." Caption: "Lino Rivera y el teniente S. J. Battle." Above story on Rivera's appearance in the Adolescents Court in Brooklyn.

Brooklyn Citizen, March 22, 1935, 13. [Reporters cropped out] Caption: "Innocent Cause of Harlem Riots: Police Lieut. S. J. Battle with Lino Rivera, Puerto Rican boy said to have stolen knife in a store in New York's Negro district. Communist handbills reporting the youth's death from a beating started the disorders."

In the Brooklyn Citizen
In La Prensa
In the Norfolk Journal and Guide

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