- Division Street Riots
-
The Division Street Riots were episodes of rioting and civil unrest, which occurred between June 12 and June 14, 1966 in Chicago, Illinois in the United States.
History and cause
During the first downtown Puerto Rican Parade in Chicago on June 12, 1966, the first Puerto Rican riot in the U.S. began on Division Street. The riot was a community response to the shooting of a young Puerto Rican man by Chicago Police. It was one of many urban disturbances across the nation in the 1960s. There was rioting until June 19, 1966, when community leaders rallied in the park to devise strategies to calm the crowds.
The underlying cause of the riots was the deteriorating economic conditions facing Puerto Ricans and African Americans, which embodied many aspects of the national urban crisis. Ethnic conflicts, especially those between young Puerto Ricans and Polish Americans, prevailed during the transition period.[citation needed]
Aftermath
The Division Street riot was a key moment in the history of Puerto Ricans in Chicago. It drew attention to the continued displacement of Puerto Ricans from downtown and the lakefront areas of Chicago by city-sponsored urban renewal projects. The additional issues of poverty and strained relations between Puerto Ricans and Chicago's police department also played a major role and was considered the spark to the violence.
A month after the riot, the Chicago Commission on Human Relations held open hearings, which provided a forum for Puerto Rican and other Spanish-speaking residents of Chicago to discuss problems facing these communities, such as displacement and discrimination in housing, discriminatory practices by the police and fire departments, and poor educational opportunities.[citation needed] As a result of these meetings, specific policy recommendations were proposed and implemented in the Puerto Rican community.
The riots, directly and indirectly, inspired the creation of many Puerto Rican community organizations, such as the Spanish Action Committee of Chicago (SACC); the Latin American Defense Organization (LADO); the Bickerdike Revedelopment Corporation; and in the late 1960s and early 1970s, ASPIRA Association; and the Young Lords. Several cultural centers also became part of organizing, such as the Ruiz Belvis Cultural Center, the Escuela Superior Puertorriqueña (which is now named Dr. Pedro Albizu Campos Puerto Rican High School), the Juan Antonio Corretjer Puerto Rican Cultural Center, . These organizations, which were more militant than earlier organizations such as the Caballeros de San Juan, Damas de Maria and the Puerto Rican Congress, emerged from the riots. They worked to get community concerns such as education, housing, health, and employment addressed by the city and to assert ethnic Puerto Rican presence in city politics. The Young Lords Lords announced a political candidate in 1973. They ran their founder, Jose Cha-Cha Jimenez, as the first Latino candidate for alderman to oppose Richard J. Daley's Democratic machine.
Riots and civil unrest in Illinois Race riot Springfield Race Riot of 1908 · East St. Louis Riot, 1917 · Chicago Race Riot of 1919 · Airport Homes Race Riots, 1946 · Fernwood Park Race Riots, 1947 · Park Manor Race Riots, 1949 · Englewood Race Riots, 1949 · Cicero Race Riots, 1951 · Trumbull Park Race Riots, 1953 · Calumet Park Race Riot, 1957 · Cairo riot, 1967Other Riots Banditti of the Prairie, 1830s-1840s · Lager Beer Riot, 1855 · Charleston Riot, 1864 · Haymarket affair, 1886 · Pullman Strike, 1894 · 1905 Chicago Teamsters' strike · Aldermen's Wars, 1916-1921 · Memorial Day massacre of 1937 · Division Street Riots, 1966 · 1968 Chicago riots · DNC protest activity, 1968 · Days of Rage Weatherman riot, 1969Categories:- Riots and civil unrest in Illinois
- Racially motivated violence in the United States
- History of Chicago, Illinois
- Crime in Chicago, Illinois
- Race riots in the United States
- Race riots
- Riots and civil disorder in the United States
- 1966 in Illinois
- 1966 riots
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.