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A vintage map of Harlem used is as a background image.
Crowd assessing the damage to storefronts after the riot.

Harlem in Disorder

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A Spatial History of how Racial Violence Changed in 1935

The violence that spread across Harlem on the night of March 19, 1935 was the first large-scale racial disorder in the United States in more than a decade and the first occurrence in the nation’s leading Black neighborhood. However, as many observers pointed out, the events were “not a race riot” of the kind that had marked the decades after the Civil War. Racial violence took a new form in 1935.

Through a granular analysis of those events and the mapping of their locations, Harlem in Disorder reveals just what changed. Tracing the legal and government investigations that followed, Harlem in Disorder highlights how that violence came to be distorted, diminished, and marginalized by the concern of white authorities to maintain the racial order, and by the unwillingness of Harlem's Black leaders and their white allies to embrace fully such direct forms of protest.

Focused on capturing rather than simplifying the complexity of the new form of racial violence, Harlem in Disorder is a multi-layered, hyperlinked narrative that connects different scales of analysis: individual events, aggregated patterns, and a chronological narrative. Its structure foregrounds individual events to counter the assumption that data dehumanizes the past, and to make transparent the interpretations involved in the creation of data from uncertain and ambiguous sources.

Stephen Robertson is Professor of History at George Mason University.