Home / Full timeline / Racial violence persists in Boston, MA over desegregation.
Racial violence persists in Boston, MA over desegregation.
1975 (Aug 6 - 15)
Racial violence continued in Boston, Massachusetts, the scene of sporadic incidents ever since busing to achieve school desegregation was ordered in the city in 1974. On August 6, racial fighting erupted at the Charles Street Jail and 150 police officers were called in to put down the disturbance involving seventy-five to one hundred inmates. Martin Whitkin of the Sheriff's Office said the trouble apparently started in the lunchroom with a fight between a white man and several Blacks, then escalated into a full-scale brawl throughout the jail. On August 10, Black and white swimmers threw rocks and bricks at one another on South Boston's Carson Beach. About five hundred Blacks were at the beach in the predominantly white section of the city in response to a request by Black leaders who urged them to "reassert the rights of all Boston residents to use all public facilities." There were no reports of injuries. On August 13, police patrols were increased in the predominantly Black Roxbury section of the city after young Blacks had made sporadic attacks on passing whites for three days. On August 15, three people were slightly injured during incidents of stone throwing in the city. A sixteen-year-old Black youth was arrested during the melee in the Roxbury section. Meanwhile, U.S. Senator Edward Brooke of Massachusetts joined local leaders in an attempt to ease racial tensions. Brooke said, “I think the polarization in the community is unfortunate, but it seems to be building."
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.