July 23-28, 1967 The Twelfth Street riot, one of the biggest in U.S. history, pits inner-city black residents against police, then National Guard troops sent … Of those, three deaths gained national attention. Aubrey Pollard , Carl Cooper , and Fred Temple were shot to death at the Algiers Motel on July 26, three days after the disturbance began at 12th and Clairmount . In the summer of 1967, the Detroit riots destroyed the city, which lead to hundreds of buildings being destroyed, even more people arrested, and dozens killed and injured. Burning of Buildings during the Detroit Riots www.modernamerica2011.wikispaces.com. No one really knows why riots stop when they do. In the early morning hours of July 23, 1967, police raided an unlicensed after-hours drinking club in the office of the United Community League for Civic Action, a community civil rights group that backed local political candidates and helped to give the neighborhood a collective voice. These riots lasted for four consecutive days and nights. In Detroit in 1967, the National Guard caused even more deaths than happened during the initial riot. The 1967 Detroit riot left 43 people dead. But military forces and mass arrests, historically, do not help matters, at least not in the short term. The Detroit "riot" was the third worst riot in American history, after the New York City "Draft Riot" of 1863 (121 killed), and the 1992 Los Angeles "Rodney King Riots (60 killed)." In the summer of 1967, the simmering unrest in cities across America exploded. They started by a police raid on the unlicensed bar, and by the time they ended, 43 people were dead, 342 injured, thousands of arrested, and over 1400 buildings had been burned. How did the 1967 Detroit riots begin? The Detroit Riots of 1967 were caused by many different reasons, and the events that took place during the five days the riots lasted had a multitude of consequences. Gamma-Keystone via Getty Images. Detroit in 1967: Looting, Burning and Guerrilla War Detroit, a city with a reputation for being almost a model in race relations, erupted in mid-1967 … The National Guard was mobilized to help control the riots, and was … In a span of just 24 years — between 1943 and 1967 — two major racial conflicts left 77 people dead and blocks of Detroit … Detroit — The city is no stranger to destructive civil disorder. These analyses define Detroit as a depoliticized riot, measured by dry statistics, and devoid of political content. A demonstration turned into a riot in the streets of Detroit on August 21, 1967. Of those, three deaths gained national attention. The 1967 Detroit riots were one of the most violent and costliest riots in the United States. A more lethal riot occurred in Detroit starting on July 23.