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

[Photograph] "Man Arrested in Harlem Riot," March 20, 1935 [International Photo].

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Full International Photo caption: "Police officers lead a looting suspect out of his apartment building. The man was suspected of looting a butcher shop after a major riot in Harlem was sparked by the rumor of a beating at a five-and-dime store." [Note, this information is incorrect. The man, Charles Alston, was one of a group of four arrested for allegedly shooting at police officers.]

Norfolk Journal and Guide, March 30, 1935, 16 - caption: "LOOTING SUSPECT -- Policemen, one with a drawn revolver, are shown leading a man suspected of looting a butcher shop during the Harlem riot from a building where he was captured. He was identified as Charles Alston and was so badly injured that he was taken to the hospital in a dying condition. He hurt himself leaping from a roof and hitting a ledge four stories below."
New York World-Telegram, March 20, 1935, 3 -  caption: “Police take a man suspected of looting from a wrecked store. The suspect rubs his head, one patrolman uses his pistol as a club."
This photograph was part of the Bettman Collection, which has been absorbed into Getty Images, where it has been made available for embedding in non-commercial websites.

In the Norfolk Journal and Guide
In the New York World-Telegram

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