Harlem in Disorder: A Spatial History of How Racial Violence Changed in 1935Main MenuREAD ME: Help Navigating This BookIntroductionOn the StreetsIn the CourtsUnder InvestigationThe Mayor's Commission on Conditions in HarlemOver TimeEventsSourcesStephen Robertsona1bf8804093bc01e94a0485d9f3510bb8508e3bfStanford University Press
US Census, 1930, Enumeration District 31-931, Sheet 10A, New York City, New York, New York (Ancestry.com).
12020-04-09T18:36:30+00:00Thomas Suares assaulted15plain2024-02-02T22:56:12+00:00Around 1:15 AM, twenty-seven-year-old Thomas Suares, a Black man walking on West 134th Street near Lenox Avenue, was "struck by a milk bottle which some unknown person threw at him," he told police. He lived only a block to the east, at 12 West 134th Street, the heart of Black Harlem, but near the northern boundary of the disorder. Around this time outbreaks of violence spanned the blocks of Lenox Avenue from West 125th Street to where Suares was hit. He was likely assaulted in the context of that violence, perhaps caught between a crowd and a business they targeted.
Dr. Payne of Harlem Hospital treated Suares' injury, which the New York Evening Journalreported as lacerations of his right leg. The wound was not serious enough for him to be admitted to hospital; instead he left for home after treatment.
The New York Evening Journalwas the only newspaper that included Suares in its lists of those injured in the disorder. The list identified only his age, address, and injury. The circumstances of the alleged assault were recorded only in the book of aided cases at the 32nd Police Precinct. The precinct's district began at 130th Street. There were only four incidents in that book that occurred during the disorder. Neither the newspaper story nor the book identified Suares' race. However, he did appear in the 1930 census schedules, living with a cousin on 5th Avenue, just around the corner from his address in 1935.