17-year-old Loretta Holmes was at an illegal bar on the night that sparked five days of civil unrest. She and her sister Carolyn Colvard were celebrating the return of two Vietnam veterans, when local police raided the club. Today, she reflects on the vibrancy that she says has been lost in her community.
This is part of a series of eyewitnesses to the civil unrest that broke out in Detroit in 1967, after a summer of nationwide outbursts. The violence lasted five days and left 43 people killed, 1189 injured, over 7000 arrests and more than 2000 buildings destroyed, making it the deadliest instance of civil disorder since the Civil War draft riots. It served as a catalyst for Pres. Johnson’s establishment of the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders, which was tasked with finding the cause of these outbreaks. Their conclusion: “We are moving toward two societies, one black, one white – separate and unequal.”
JULY 27, 2024
August 5, 2024JULY 27, 2024
August 5, 2024
Lawsuits Target Programs Focused on Helping Minorities
March 17, 2024Lawsuits Target Programs Focused on Helping Minorities
March 17, 2024
MARCH 16, 2024
March 17, 2024MARCH 16, 2024
March 17, 2024
Ford Foundation President on Funding fight for Equality
April 30, 2023Ford Foundation President on Funding fight for Equality
April 30, 2023
New Rosa Parks Documentary Dispels the Myth of Her "Accidental" Role in Civil Rights Movement
October 23, 2022New Rosa Parks Documentary Dispels the Myth of Her "Accidental" Role in Civil Rights Movement
October 23, 2022
OCTOBER 22, 2022
October 23, 2022OCTOBER 22, 2022
October 23, 2022
Civil rights scholar says America ‘at a moment of reckoning in so many areas’
June 8, 2022Civil rights scholar says America ‘at a moment of reckoning in so many areas’
June 8, 2022
FEBRUARY 26, 2022
February 27, 2022FEBRUARY 26, 2022
February 27, 2022