Detroit’s Sojourner Truth Housing Riot of 1942 Detroit’s Sojourner Truth Housing Riot of 1942

Detroit’s Sojourner Truth Housing Riot of 1942

Prelude to the Race Riot of 1943

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Descrição da editora

During World War II, no American city suffered a worse housing shortage than Detroit, and no one suffered that shortage more than the city's African American citizens. In 1941, the federal government began constructing the Sojourner Truth Housing Project in northeast Detroit to house 200 black war production workers and their families. Almost immediately, whites in the neighborhood vehemently protested. On February 28, 1942, a confrontation between black tenants and white protesters erupted in a riot that sent at least 40 to the hospital and more than 220 to jail. This confrontation was the precursor to the bloodiest race riot of the war just sixteen months later. Gerald Van Dusen, author of Detroit's Birwood Wall, unfolds the background and events of this overlooked moment in Motor City history.

GÉNERO
História
LANÇADO
2020
24 de agosto
IDIOMA
EN
Inglês
PÁGINAS
160
EDITORA
The History Press
TAMANHO
11,2
MB

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