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Series of riots connected to the Red Summer of 1919
Baltimore riots of 1919 Map of the Washington, Fort Meade, Baltimore and Annapolis
Date Summer of 1919 Location Baltimore , United States Participants
October Riot - Soldiers from Fort Meade fighting local Black community, Baltimore PD
April – June
Morgan County, WV (April 10)
Jenkins, GA (April 13)
Sylvester, Georgia (April 14)
Pickens, Mississippi (May 5)
Philadelphia (May 9)
Charleston, SC (May 10)
Sylvester, Georgia (May 10)
El Dorado, Arkansas (May 21)
Milan, Georgia (May 26)
Putnam County, GA (May 27–28)
New London, CT (May 30)
Monticello, Mississippi (May 31)
Macon, MS (June 7)
Memphis, Tennessee (June 13)
Bibb County, Alabama (June 18)
Annapolis (June 27)
Macon, Mississippi (June 27)
New London, CT (June 29)
July
Bisbee, AZ (July 3)
Dublin, Georgia riot (July 6)
Philadelphia (July 7)
Coatesville, PA (July 8)
Tuscaloosa, Alabama (July 9)
Longview, TX (July 10–12)
Baltimore (July 11)
Garfield Park, IN (July 14)
Port Arthur, TX (July 15)
Louise, Mississippi (July 15)
Washington D.C. (July 19–24)
New York City (July 20)
Norfolk, VA (July 21)
New Orleans, Louisiana (July 23)
Darby, PA (July 23)
Newberry, SC (July 24)
Hobson City, Alabama (July 26)
Chicago (July 27–August 3)
Newberry, South Carolina (July 28)
Bloomington, Illinois (July 31)
Philadelphia (July 31)
Syracuse, NY (July 31)
August – November
Whatley, AL (August 1)
Lincoln, Arkansas (August 3)
Hattiesburg, Mississippi (August 4)
Texarkana, Texas riot of 1919 (August 6)
New York City (August 21)
Austin, TX (August 22)
Laurens County, GA (August 27–29)
Knoxville (August 30–31)
Bogalusa, Louisiana (August 31)
Clarksdale, Mississippi (September 10)
Omaha (September 28–29)
Montgomery, Alabama (September 29)
Elaine, AR (September 30–October 1)
Baltimore (October 1–2)
Corbin, KY (October 31)
Macon, Georgia (November 2)
Ocoee, FL (November 2–3)
Magnolia, Arkansas (November 11)
Wilmington, DE (November 13)
Bogalusa, LA (November 22)
The Baltimore riots of 1919 were a series of riots connected to the Red Summer of 1919 . As more and more African-Americans moved from the south to the industrial north they started to move into predominantly white neighborhoods. This change in the racial demographics of urban areas increased racial tension that occasionally boiled over into civil unrest.
The Haynes' report, as summarized in the New York Times , lists a race riot as taking place on July 11.
Another Baltimore riot occurred between 11 PM October 1, 1919, until 2 AM October 2. It is at the end of the Red Summer riots of 1919. A small group of soldiers from Fort Meade (one paper says 4, another 7) were walking near Eastern avenue and Spring street when a bottle was thrown from a house hit one of them. "The doughboys began yelling at the negroes and daring them to leave their homes." There was fear that a riot would develop. Baltimore police were called and they forced the soldiers to leave the area.
An hour later they returned "with fifty or sixty more" and began shooting at any black person they encountered. When the police arrived, they shot at the soldiers. A riot call produced "two patrol loads" of police. Four soldiers were arrested and the others withdrew. They returned half an hour later in greater numbers and "charged along Eastern Avenue ". They were met by the police "with heavy clubs". Two more soldiers were arrested, and order was restored.
The six men arrested were ordered to pay small fines by Magistrate Gerecht in Baltimore's Eastern Police Court.
These confrontations were among numerous incidents of civil unrest that began in the so-called Red Summer of 1919. The Summer consisted of attacks on black communities in more than three dozen cities and counties. In most cases, white mobs attacked black neighborhoods. In some cases, black community groups resisted the attacks, especially in Chicago and Washington, D.C. Most deaths occurred in rural areas during events such as the Elaine Race Riot in Arkansas , where an estimated 100 to 240 black people and 5 white people were killed. Also occurring in 1919 was the Chicago Race Riot and Washington D.C. race riot which killed 38 and 39 people respectively, both having many more non-fatal injuries and extensive property damage.
Notes
References
July
Bisbee, Arizona (July 3)
Dublin, Georgia (July 6)
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (July 7)
Coatesville, Pennsylvania (July 8)
Tuscaloosa, Alabama (July 9)
Longview, Texas (July 10–12)
Baltimore, Maryland (July 11)
Garfield Park riot of 1919 (July 14)
Port Arthur, Texas (July 15)
Louise, Mississippi (July 15)
Washington, D.C. (July 19–24)
New York City, New York (July 20)
Norfolk, Virginia (July 21)
New Orleans, Louisiana (July 23)
Darby, Pennsylvania (July 23)
Gilmer, Texas (July 24)
Newberry, SC (July 24)
Hobson City, Alabama (July 26)
Chicago, Illinois (July 27–Aug 3)
Newberry, South Carolina (July 28)
Bloomington, Illinois (July 31)
Syracuse, New York (July 31)
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (July 31)
Before 1900 1900–1940 After 1940
Multiple victims
Death of Joseph Smith (Joseph Smith , Hyrum Smith ) (1844)
Marais des Cygnes, KS, massacre (1858)
Great Hanging at Gainesville, TX (1862)
New York City draft riots (1863)
Detroit race riot (1863)
? Lachenais and four others (1863)
Fort Pillow, TN, massacre (1864)
Plummer Gang (1864)
Memphis massacre (1866)
Gallatin County, KY, race riot (1866)
New Orleans massacre of 1866
Reno Brothers Gang (1868)
Camilla, GA, massacre (1868)
Steve Long and two half-brothers (1868)
Pulaski, TN, riot (1868)
Samuel Bierfield and Lawrence Bowman (1868)
Opelousas, LA, massacre (1868)
Bear River City riot (1868)
Chinese massacre of 1871
Meridian, MS, race riot (1871)
Colfax, LA, massacre (1873)
Election riot of 1874 (AL)
Juan, Antonio, and Marcelo Moya (1874)
Benjamin and Mollie French (1876)
Ellenton, SC, riot (1876)
Hamburg, SC, massacre (1876)
Thibodeax, LA, massacre (1878)
Mart and Tom Horrell (1878)
Nevlin Porter and Johnson Spencer (1879)
Elijah Frost, Abijah Gibson, Tom McCracken (1879)
T.J. House, James West, John Dorsey (1880)
New Orleans 1891 lynchings (1891)
Ruggles Brothers (CA) (1892)
Thomas Moss, Henry Stewart, Calvin McDowell (TN) (1892)
Porter and Spencer (MS) (1897)
Phoenix, SC, election riot (1898)
Wilmington, NC, insurrection (1898)
Julia and Frazier Baker (1898)
Pana, IL, riot (1899)
Watkinsville lynching (1905)
1906 Atlanta race massacre
Kemper County, MS (1906)
Walker family (1908)
Springfield race riot of 1908
Slocum, TX, massacre (1910)
Laura and L.D. Nelson (1911)
Harris County, GA, lynchings (1912)
Newberry, FL, lynchings (1916)
East St. Louis, IL, riots (1917)
Lynching rampage in Brooks County, GA (1918)
Jenkins County, GA, riot (1919)
Longview, TX, race riot (1919)
Elaine, AR, race riot (1919)
Omaha race riot of 1919
Knoxville riot of 1919
Red Summer (1919)
Duluth, MN, lynchings (1920)
Ocoee, FL, massacre (1920)
Tulsa race massacre (1921)
Perry, FL, race riot (1922)
Rosewood, FL, massacre (1923)
Jim and Mark Fox (1927)
Thomas Shipp and Abram Smith (1930)
Tate County, MS (1932)
Thomas Harold Thurmond and John M. Holmes (1933)
Roosevelt Townes and Robert McDaniels (1937)
Beaumont, TX, Race Riot (1943)
O'Day Short, wife, and two children (1945)
Moore's Ford, GA, lynchings (1946)
Harry and Harriette Moore (1952)
Anniston, AL (1961)
Freedom Summer Murders (James Chaney , Andrew Goodman , Michael Schwerner ) (1964)
Henry Hezekiah Dee and Charles Eddie Moore (1964)