Grief Turns to Anger seventh and s streets nw at shaw-howard U metro station
thursday evening, april 4, 1968. The news that the Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., has been assassinated in Memphis makes its way like lightning through the city. Nearby at 14th and U Streets — once the cultural heart of DC’s African American community and a bustling area where hundreds change buses and shop — faces register first shock and then anger. People demand that businesses close out of respect for Dr. King. Then individuals begin breaking windows, looting some places, burning others. The violence spreads along U Street to this intersection, where, over the next three days, almost every white-owned business on Seventh between S Street and Florida Avenue is destroyed. A United Planning Organization leader tells the Washington Post that day, “Black Americans feel more divided from white Americans than at any time in this century.” In addition to expressing grief, the 1968 riots were a response to historical inequities in housing, jobs, and schools, and to the city’s neglect of black neighborhoods. “We’re burning the rats and roaches along with everything else,” proclaimed a youngster who had just set fire to a store here. The rubble and crime left behind scarred this neighborhood for years, and those who once enjoyed its restaurants and clubs stayed away. While officials and activists worked on rebuilding plans almost immediately — a playground opened in summer 1969 where Waxie Maxie’s had stood at 1836 Seventh Street — it would take many long years and the 1991 opening of this Metro station to make substantial progress.
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