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The Chicago Race Riots: July, 1919 by Carl Sandburg,Walter Lippmann,Paul Buhle
Nearly a century ago, an African-American teenager crossed an invisible line of segregation at a Chicago beach and paid with his life. The incident set off days of violence that resulted in several dozen deaths and hundreds of injuries as well as the destruction of homes and businesses. This contemporary account was written by Pulitzer Prize–winning author and poet Carl Sandburg, who reported on the riots for the Chicago Daily News. Few other journalists of the era explored the issues of discrimination in housing, politics, and organized labor that fueled the 1919 riots in Chicago and across America. Sandburg offered readers rare insights into the plight of black Americans, whose voices were seldom heard in white publications. His in-depth reports on the living and working conditions of Chicago's black community, written before and after the riots, illuminate the social conditions that fostered racial tensions.
Table of Contents for The Chicago Race Riots: July, 1919
| Introductory Note by Walter Lippman | | Preface to the Dover Edition | | I. The Chicago Race Riots | | II. The Background | | III. The Negro Migration | | IV. Real Estate | | V. Demand for Negro Labor | | VI. Nwe Industrial Opportunities | | VII. After Each Lynching | | VIII. Trades for Colored Women | | IX. Negroes and Rising Rents | | X. Unions and the Color Line | | XI. Abouth Lynchings | | XII. Negro Crime Tales | | XIII. Colored Gamblers | | XIV. An Official of the Packers | | XV. Mr. Julius Rosenwald Interviewed | | XVI. For Federal Action |
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