Long, hot summer of 1967

Summer of 1967

Kerner Commission established

85+[1]

2,100+

11,000+

History[edit]

A history of institutionalized unemployment, abusive policing, and poor housing was already present in certain areas of the United States. Riots began to flare up across the country but especially during the summer months. With rioting in urban areas across the country, and the Summer of Love occurring in hippie communities,[7] Americans were witnessing US troop movements in the Vietnam War shown on the nightly television news. At the end of July, President Lyndon B. Johnson set up the Kerner Commission to investigate the riots; in 1968 it released a report blaming pervasive societal inequalities in American ghettos for the riots. By September 1967, 83 people were dead, thousands were injured, tens of millions of dollars worth of property had been destroyed and entire neighborhoods had been burned.[8]

United States racial unrest (2020–present)

Ferguson unrest

George Floyd protests

King assassination riots

List of incidents of civil unrest in the United States

Red Summer

McLaughlin, Malcolm (2014). The Long, Hot Summer of 1967: Urban Rebellion in America. Palgrave Macmillan.  9781137269638.

ISBN

McLay, Mark (2018). . The Historical Journal. 61 (4). Cambridge University Press: 1089–1111. doi:10.1017/S0018246X17000504. S2CID 159854923.

"The Republican Party and the Long, Hot Summer of 1967 in the United States"

and Howard Winant, Racial formation in the United States: from the 1960s to the 1990s (1994)

Michael Omi

Walter C. Rucker and James N. Upton, eds. Encyclopedia of American Race Riots (2007) 930 pages –