Chicago 1919: Confronting the Race Riots

Opening event test - embedded resources

Saturday, February 23, 2019, 2:00 p.m. - 5:00 p.m.
DuSable Museum of African American History

740 E. 56th Place, Chicago, IL 60637  (Map)

Program Description

The Chicago 1919 Race Riots were the most violent week in Chicago history, sparked by the death of Eugene Williams, an African American teenager stoned and drowned by a white man for floating his raft over an invisible line into a whites-only South Side beach. The police refused to arrest the white perpetrator, and the city erupted in arson, looting, and thirty-eight deaths (23 black, 15 white), until the National Guard was called to restore order.

The riots inflicted lasting scars on the city, still visible in the lines of segregation throughout the city's built environment, its schools, and its selective policing.

Join the Opening Event of our year-long series of conversations on the history and legacy of the 1919 race riots.  What happened one hundred years ago on a Chicago beach during a sweltering summer day? How and why did violence erupt across the city? What were the effects of the riots in the ensuing decades? And what can we learn from the past that might help us imagine a better future?

Following a dramatic, multi-media presentation about the riots—with Jabari Chiphe playing the role of Eugene Williams and Robin Williams narrating—audience members will have the opportunity to join in breakout conversations about the following topics. Each session will occur twice:The afternoon will conclude with a poetry reading by acclaimed Chicago poet Eve L. Ewing from her new book of poems about the 1919 riots.

Key Program Organizers

Karen Christianson, Director of Public Engagement, The Newberry Library
Calmetta Coleman, Senior Vice President of External Affairs, The Chicago Urban League
Elizabeth Cummings, Public Programs Manager, The Newberry Library
Erica Griffin, Director of Education, The Dusable Museum of African American History
D. Bradford Hunt, Vice President for Research and Academic Programs, The Newberry Library
Liesl Olson, Director of Chicago Studies, The Newberry Library

Robin Robinson, Director of Public Affairs, Chicago Police Department

 

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