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*By Karen Sieber | Jun 3, 2019 *

When I began work on *Visualizing the Red Summer*
<http://visualizingtheredsummer.com/>, a comprehensive digital archive,
map, and timeline of riots and lynchings across the United States in 1919,
my initial motivation was, honestly, frustration. I first came to know
about the Red Summer not in a book or classroom, but during a spring break
visit to Knoxville, Tennessee, while asking my Airbnb host about the
history of the neighborhood I was staying in. A violent white lynch mob had
wreaked havoc on the city in late August 1919, part of a nationwide string
of violence against African Americans that summer.



I was a student in my late 30s at the time, completing my undergraduate
degree at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Outraged by my
ignorance of that summer (especially as a native Chicagoan, where some of
the worst riots erupted), I sought more information. The same regurgitated
Wikipedia information filled website after website. While I knew historic
documents had to exist, almost none were digitized or discoverable in any
manner, and those I could find were scattered across the country. For the
average student, scholar, or interested layperson, the material was
virtually inaccessible, and did not give a sense of connection to other
similar events that took place that summer.

The term “Red Summer,” coined by James Weldon Johnson of the NAACP, refers
to a series of more than three dozen geographically dispersed race riots,
lynchings, and other violent attacks targeting African Americans in 1919.
While each location’s circumstances were unique, trends and parallels
emerged. Tensions between the races had been rising for a few years during
the first wave of the Great Migration, with an increase in housing
problems, job competition, and territorial disputes. World War I had
recently ended, and African American soldiers returning home were often the
subjects of attacks, sometimes at the hands of white servicemen. Although
technically unconnected, the individual events likely fueled a collective
mindset and fear.

I felt the need to act. Armed with my own frustration and an iPhone, I set
off on a solo 7,500-mile road trip in the summer of 2015 to collect as much
material as I could find related to the riots. I started by both reaching
out to institutions near riot locations, as well as building off
bibliographies from academic publications that *did *exist
<http://visualizingtheredsummer.com/?page_id=45>. Most books and articles
focus on individual city’s riots, such as William M. Tuttle’s *Race Riot:
Chicago in the Red Summer of 1919 *(1970) or Richard C. Cortner’s *A Mob
Intent on Death: The NAACP and the Arkansas Riot Cases *(1988), although
they do occasionally mention violence elsewhere in the country. Journalist
Cameron McWhirter’s comprehensive and well-researched *Red Summer: The
Summer of 1919 and the Awakening of Black America *(2011) was also useful
as I built a list of existing materials on the topic.



https://www.historians.org/publications-and-directories/perspectives-on-history/summer-2019/an-act-of-tactical-history
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