Home / Full timeline / Racial violence erupts in Tennessee after a Black musician fails to perform at a rock concert and some of the Black youths were denied refunds for their admission fees. They began vandalizing the building, until the unrest spread into the streets.
Racial violence erupts in Tennessee after a Black musician fails to perform at a rock concert and some of the Black youths were denied refunds for their admission fees. They began vandalizing the building, until the unrest spread into the streets.
1971 (May 21 - 26)
Racial violence erupted in Chattanooga, Tennessee, after a Black musician failed to perform at a rock concert in the city auditorium. When some of the Black youths did not get refunds for their admission fees, they began vandalizing the building. The disorder later spread into the streets. On May 24, Governor Winfield Dunn ordered 2,000 national guardsmen into the city after local police were unable to contain the arson and sniping which was centered in the Black neighborhoods located on the outskirts of the downtown area. On May 25, a young Black man was killed by police who said they fired after the man hurled bricks at them. Black witnesses said the victim, Leon Anderson, was apparently drunk, and they charged that police shot him without provocation. The incident increased tensions but did not lead to heightened violence. On May 26, a rigid dusk-to-dawn curfew was lifted in the city and Governor Dunn announced that guardsmen would be gradually withdrawn.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.