This page was created by Anonymous. 

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

[Photograph] "Stores Suffer in Harlem Riots," Decatur Daily Review, March 22, 1935, 20.

Full caption: This is the way one store looked after a basket had been thrown through it during the day of rioting in Harlem, New York City's Negro district. More than 100 persons were wounded and 120 arrested as police halted the race disturbance."

The photograph shows a display window with a basket sitting in the middle of the display, around which the glass is shattered. Much of the window remains intact, suggesting that only the basket had hit it. Some shows can be seen on a display in the back of the window; the front of the window is empty, suggesting that only the merchandise that could be reached through the hole created by the basket had been taken. Two white men are standing on the right of the image, looking at the camera. In the bottom of the window the last letters of the store name are visible in a section of unbroken glass: "RY HAT CO."

This copyrighted photograph can be viewed in Newspapers.com: https://www.newspapers.com/clip/93580413/stores-suffer/

In Miscellaneous Newspapers

This page is referenced by: