Watts Riots

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The term Watts Riots refers to a large-scale riot which lasted six days in the Watts neighborhood of Los Angeles, California, in August 1965.

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[edit] Background

The riots began on August 11, 1965, in Watts, a suburb of Los Angeles, when Lee Minikus, a California Highway Patrol motorcycle officer, pulled over Marquette Frye, who Minikus believed was intoxicated because of his observed erratic driving. Frye failed to pass sobriety tests; including walking in a straight line and touching his nose, and was arrested soon after. Minikus refused to let Frye's brother, Ronald, drive the car home, and radioed for it to be impounded. As events escalated, a crowd of onlookers steadily grew from dozens to hundreds.[1] The mob became violent, throwing rocks and other objects while shouting at the police officers. A struggle ensued shortly resulting in the arrest of Frye, Ronald, and their mother.

Though the riots began in August, there had previously been a build up of racial tension in the area. On May 7, two Caucasian police officers pulled over Leonard Deedwyler, an African American man rushing his pregnant wife to the hospital. The younger policeman approached the car and stuck the barrel of a gun in the window, moments later Deedwyler fell sideways in his seat, dead. The verdict cleared the police officer of all accusations, claiming the car had swayed suddenly. The riots that began on August 11 resulted from an amalgamation of such events in Watts and the arrest of the three Fryes broke the tension as violence spilled onto the streets of Watts for six days.

After the news and emerging rumors spread from the angry mob to other residents, aggressive acts of violence broke out across the city making Watts a serious danger zone. Watts suffered from various forms and degrees of damage from the looting, fighting, and vandalism that seriously threatened the security of the city. Some participants chose to intensify the level of violence by getting in a physical fight with police, blocking the firemen from their safety duties, or even beating white motorists. Others joined the riot by breaking into stores, stealing whatever they could, and setting the stores themselves on fire. The majority of the residents simply wandered the streets choosing to encourage the active rioters and give the police a difficult time rather than getting directly involved. A few did not join in the violence at all just choosing to continue their daily routine while observing the chaos. [2] The police chief also fueled the radicalized tension that already threatened to combust, by publicly labeling the people he saw involved in the riots as "monkeys in the zoo". [2] Overall, an estimate of 40 million dollars in damage was caused as almost 1,000 buildings were damaged or destroyed. Most of the physical damage was confined to businesses that were said to have caused resentment in the neighborhood due to perceived unfairness. Homes were not attacked, although some caught fire due to proximity to other fires.

[edit] Day-by-day breakdown

[edit] Wednesday, August 11

  • A white California highway patrolman, Lee Minikus, arrested Marquette Frye at around 7 p.m. after Frye failed a sobriety test.
  • By 7:23 all three Fryes, Marquette, his brother Ronald, and his mother, had been arrested as a crowd of a couple hundred gathered around the scene.
  • The police withdrew by 7:40, leaving behind an angered, tense crowd.
  • For the last 4 hours of the night, the mob stoned cars and threatened police in the area.

[edit] Thursday, August 12

  • Black leaders such as preachers, teachers, and businessmen tried to restore order in the community after a night of rampage, telling people to stay indoors.
  • Around 10 a.m. community workers and officers called residents in the area, telling them to remain in their houses.
  • At 2 p.m. a community meeting was held, at which members representing different neighborhood groups, discussed solutions to the problem at hand – the meeting failed.
  • At 5 p.m. the Police Chief, William Parker, after learning the meeting had failed, called the California National Guard in Sacramento to let them know he may need the guard to come in and help to control the situation.

[edit] Friday, August 13

  • At 8 a.m. rioting grew in the business district and Parker called in the guard due to the absence of the governor.
  • At 5 p.m. the lieutenant governor signed a proclamation officially calling the guard.
  • First death during the riots occurred between 6 and 7 p.m. and events escalated, and police were shooting at rioters.
  • Troops were deployed at 10 p.m.

[edit] Saturday, August 14

  • By 1 a.m. there were around 100 fire brigades in the areas, trying to put out fires started by rioters.
  • Over 3,000 national guardsmen had joined the police by this time in trying to maintain order on the streets.
  • By midnight there were around 13,900 guardsmen were in the area.
  • A curfew was set at 8 p.m. to keep people inside their houses – allowing the government officials to gain more control of the situation.

[edit] Sunday, August 15

  • The riots died down, leaving behind lots of damage – around $200 million in property damage.
  • Churches, community groups, and government agencies gave out aid.
  • The vandalism ceased and the curfew was lifted by Tuesday, August 17
  • By the following Sunday, a week later, less than 300 national guardsmen remained to help out with the aftermath.

[edit] Aftermath

Financial damages were not the only consequence of the abrupt widespread violence. The streets of the Los Angeles neighborhood stood in flames as the burnings and shootings continued, quickly crowding the local hospitals with about 950 wounded patients who required immediate attention from nurses and doctors.[3] Furthermore, nearly 4,000 people were arrested sporadically or in groups because of their accused participation in the riot. Many were taken into custody on two separate occasions as part of government agency studies. The first occasion in the Riots Participation Study targeted juveniles and the second in the Watts Riot Arrest study targeted people with past police and court records.[2]

In these six days, 34 people died, 1,032 were injured, and 3,952 were arrested.[4] Of the 1,032 injured in Watts, there were 90 Los Angeles police officers, 36 firemen, 10 National Guardsmen, and 23 people from government agencies. 977 establishments were damaged, burned, looted, and destroyed, which included businesses, private buildings, and public buildings.[5]

Businesses & Private Buildings Public Buildings Total
Damaged/burned: 257 Damaged/burned: 14
Looted: 192 Destroyed: 1
Both damaged/burned & looted: 288
Destroyed: 267 Total: 977

[edit] Government intervention

Eventually, the California National Guard was called to active duty to assist in controlling the rioting. On Friday night, a battalion of the 160th Infantry and the 1st Reconnaissance Squadron of the 18th Armored Cavalry were sent into the riot area (about 2,000 men). Two days later, the remainder of the 40th Armored Division was sent into the riot zone. A day after that, units from northern California arrived (a total of around 15,000 troops). These National Guardsmen put a cordon around a vast region of South Central Los Angeles, and for all intents and purposes the rioting was over by Sunday. Due to the seriousness of the riots, martial law had been declared.[citation needed] The initial commander of National Guard troops was Colonel Bud Taylor, then a motorcycle patrolman with the Los Angeles Police Department, who in effect became superior to Chief of Police Parker. A California gubernatorial commission investigated the riots, identifying the causes as high unemployment, poor schools, and other inferior living conditions. Subsequently, the government made little effort to address the problems or repair damages. The riots were also a response to Proposition 14, a constitutional amendment sponsored by the California Real Estate Association that had in effect repealed the Rumford Fair Housing Act.[6]

[edit] Watts: then and now

Since this area was known to be under much racial and social tension, debates have surfaced over what really happened in Watts. Reactions and reasoning about the Watts incident greatly vary because those affected by and participated in the chaos that followed the original arrest were from a diverse crowd. The government tried to help by releasing The McCone Report, claiming that it was a detailed study of the riot, but it turned out to be a short summary with just 15 pages of the report devoted to actually describing the whole event.[2] These different arguments and opinions still continue to promote these debates over the underlying cause of Watts Riots.[2] Martin Luther King Jr. spoke two days after the riots happened in Watts.

A California gubernatorial commission investigated the riots in the aftermath, identifying the main causes as high unemployment, poor schools, and other inferior living conditions. Subsequently, the government made little effort to address the problems or repair damages. The riots were also a response to Proposition 14, a constitutional amendment sponsored by the California Real Estate Association that had in effect repealed the Rumford Fair Housing Act.[6] Today, Watts still faces problems of poverty, crime, and poor education, but racial issues and the violence it has caused have decreased considerably since the outbreak of the riots.

[edit] Cultural references

  • The film There Goes My Baby features the riots.
  • Singer-songwriter Phil Ochs composed in "In the Heat of the Summer" about the riots, shortly after they took place. The song was most famously covered by Judy Collins, who included it on her Fifth Album in late 1965.
  • The novel The New Centurions, by Joseph Wambaugh, not only culminates in the Watts Riot but examines the negative impact of racist police in minority communities in the years preceding it.
  • In the film Dark Blue, Detective Eldon Perry (Kurt Russell) talks to his partner about the beating of Rodney King. He tells his partner of being a teenager during the riots, in the wake of the Rodney King riots set in the actual film timeline. He talks of shooting several African Americans who were looting a Woolworth's store with his Daddy's hunting rifle.
  • Frank Zappa wrote a lyrical commentary inspired by the Watts Riots, entitled "Trouble Every Day", containing such lines as "Wednesday I watched the riot / Seen the cops out on the street / Watched 'em throwin' rocks and stuff /And chokin' in the heat". The song was originally released on his debut album Freak Out! (with the original Mothers of Invention), and later slightly rewritten as "More Trouble Every Day", available on Roxy and Elsewhere and The Best Band You Never Heard In Your Life, among other albums.
  • The title article in Tom Wolfe's collection of essays, The Pump House Gang, is about a group of surfers from Windansea Beach in La Jolla, California who "attended the Watts riots as if it were the Rose Bowl game in Pasadena." (See [1] for an excerpt.)
  • In the U.S. television series, Quantum Leap, an episode called "Black on White on Fire" features Sam Beckett (Scott Bakula) put into the body of a black medical student who is in love with the white daughter of a police captain. This episode begins on the eve of the Watts riots.
  • The rallying cry of "burn, baby, burn" came from KGFJ radio personality Magnificent Montague. Montague was not directly responsible; he was fond of yelling "Burn!" when he played a record that particularly interested him and his listeners followed suit when they called him on the air.
  • "Burn, Baby, Burn" is also the title of an episode of the television series Dark Skies, which takes place in the midst of the Watts riots.
  • A fictitious version of the Watts riots is depicted in the NBC miniseries The '60s.
  • The 1990 film Heat Wave depicts the Watts Riots from the perspective of journalist Bob Richardson as a resident of Watts and a reporter of the riots for the LA Times.
  • The 1993 movie Menace II Society also made mentioning of the infamous riots in the beginning of the film as a precursor to the slowly emerging drug and gang culture in Los Angeles.
  • Uncle Phil from the Fresh Prince of Bel Air says he was at the Watts Riots.
  • In the first chapter of the novel Blood on the Moon by James Ellroy, Lloyd Hopkins, the main character, participates in the pacification of the Watts neighbourhood as a member of the National Guard. He later becomes an L.A.P.D. officer.
  • The riot is mentioned in the film American History X in which the Nazi skinhead main character Derek Vinyard argues with his mother and her date about how racial tensions build into riots.
  • The riot may have been the inspiration for the song "Down Rodeo" by L.A. band Rage Against the Machine.
  • Conquest of the Planet of the Apes, the 4th film in the Planet of the Apes film series, reputedly drew inspiration from the Watts Riots.
  • California punk rock band American Steel, in their song "Loaded Gun", reference the riots in the line "I didn't see Watts burn, but I felt the embers."
  • The song "One More Time" by The Clash from the album Sandinista! contains the verse "You don't need no silicone to calculate poverty/ watch when Watts Town burns again, the bus goes to Montgomery."
  • The band My Life With the Thrill Kill Kult has a song titled "Rivers of blood, years of darkness," which may or may not have relation to the book of the same title written by Robert Conot. (The book relates to the riots and is listed below in further reading)
  • On the television series Sanford and Son, set in Watts, Lamont is presented a toaster from his uncle Edgar. Edgar claimed he bought the toaster as a gift, but Fred Sanford said "You know good and well you didn't buy that toaster. That's something you had left from the riots."
  • There is an album by Don Adams recorded in 1969 which was not released until 2007 by sonorama records called "Watts Happening"

[edit] See also

[edit] Further reading

  • Cohen, Jerry and William S. Murphy, Burn, Baby, Burn! The Los Angeles Race Riot, August 1965, New York: Dutton, 1966.
  • Conot, Robert, Rivers of Blood, Years of Darkness, New York: Bantam, 1967.
  • Guy Debord, Decline and Fall of the Spectacle-Commodity Economy, 1965. A situationist interpretation of the riots
  • Horne, Gerald, Fire This Time: The Watts Uprising and the 1960s, Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press, 1995.
  • Thomas Pynchon, "A Journey into the Mind of Watts", 1966. full text
  • Violence in the City -- An End or a Beginning?, A Report by the Governor's Commission on the Los Angeles Riots, 1965, John McCone, Chairman, Warren M. Christopher, Vice Chairman. Official Report online\
  • David O' Sears The politics of violence: The new urban Blacks and the Watts riot
  • Clayton D. Clingan Watts Riots
  • Paul Bullock Watts: The Aftermath New York: Grove Press, Inc., 1969
  • The book little scarlet takes place during the race riots
  • Johny Otis Listen to the Lambs. New York: W.W. Norton and Co.. 1968

[edit] Footnotes

  1. ^ 1 Abu-Lughod, Janet L. Race, Space, and Riots in Chicago, New York, and Los Angeles. New York: Oxford University Press, 2007.
  2. ^ a b c d e Oberschall, Anthony. "The Los Angeles Riot of August 1965" Social Problems 15.3 (1968): 322-341.
  3. ^ Beam, Maurice. "Violent Nights in Los Angeles" The American Journal of Nursing 65.10 (1965): 88-89.
  4. ^ Boskin, Joseph. Urban Racial Violence in the Twentieth Century. “The Watts Manifesto” (1965). London: The Glencoe Press, 1969.
  5. ^ 3 Fogelson, Robert M. Mass Violence in America. "The Los Angeles Riots". New York: Arno Press & The New York Times, 1960.
  6. ^ a b Tracy Domingo, Miracle at Malibu Materialized, Graphic, November 14, 2002

[edit] References

  • Division of Fair Employment Practices, California Department of Industrial Relations (1966). Negroes and Mexican Americans in South and East Los Angeles. San Francisco: State of California, Division of Fair Employment Practices, 2. 

[edit] External links