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{{Short description|1943 race riot by U.S. Armed Forces servicemen against Latinos in Los Angeles}}
{{Redirect|Zoot Suit Riot|the album by the Cherry Poppin' Daddies|Zoot Suit Riot (album)|that album's title song|Zoot Suit Riot (song)}} {{Redirect|Zoot Suit Riot|the album by the Cherry Poppin' Daddies|Zoot Suit Riot (album)|that album's title song|Zoot Suit Riot (song)}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=June 2018}}
{{Infobox civilian attack
| title = Zoot Suit Riots
| partof =
| image = Victims of the Zoot Suit Riots.jpg
| image_size =
| image_upright =
| alt =
| caption = Youths stripped and beaten by U.S. Navy sailors
| map =
| map_size =
| map_alt =
| map_caption =
| location = ], ], ]
| target = ] youths and other ] wearers
| date = June 3–8, 1943
| injuries = 150+
| victims = 500+ arrested
| perpetrators = American servicemen, police officers, and white civilians
| motive = Racism, removal of ] and "hoodlums"
}}


{{discrimination sidebar}}
The '''Zoot Suit Riots''' were a series of ]s in 1943 during ] that broke out in ], ], between ] ] and ] stationed in the city, and ] youths, who were recognizable by the ]s they favored. ] and ] ] were the main parties in the riots, and some ] and ]/] youths were involved as well.<ref>{{cite web
|url=http://www.oovrag.com/essays/essay2003a-1.shtml
|title=With Style: Filipino Americans and the Making of American Urban Culture
|work=our own voice |date=January 2003
|accessdate=2013-01-28
|first=Victor Hugo |last=Viesca
}} (originally delivered as a talk at the 9th Biennial Filipino American National Historical Society Conference in Los Angeles on July 27, 2002.)</ref> The Zoot Suit Riots were in part the effect of the infamous ] trial which followed the death of a young Latino man in a ] near Los Angeles. The incident triggered similar attacks against Latinos in ], ], ], ], ], ], ], and ].<ref>{{cite book
|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=zZhjWwXS2X8C&pg=PA98&lpg=PA98&dq=zoot+suit+riots+sparked&source=bl&ots=2ALoCck7cw&sig=O1rovDzZo_9aNxD3XF6tmCTRBzo&hl=en&ei=jjaLSuPHAdOwmAfU2vyuDQ&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=4#v=onepage&q=zoot%20suit%20riots%20sparked&f=false
|title=Everything you need to know about Latino history
|chapter=Mexican Americans
|authorlink=Himilce Novas |first=Himilce |last=Novas |page=98
|lccn=2007032941 |edition=2008
|location=New York |publisher=] |year=2007 |isbn=9780452288898
}}</ref>


{{Chicano and Mexican American history sidebar|state=collapsed}}
==History==
The zoot suit riots began in Los Angeles, California amidst a period of rising tensions between ] servicemen stationed in ] and Los Angeles' Mexican-American population. Although Mexican-American men were over-represented in the military as a percentage of their population,<ref>Some 500,000 Mexican Americans served in the U.S. armed services (around 17% of their population compared to under 10% for the general public) where they had the highest percentage of Congressional Medal of Honor winners (17) of any minority in the United States. Between 1942 and 1967, over four million Mexicans and Puerto Ricans were contracted by the United States under the ] to alleviate the labor shortage caused by WWII.</ref> many European-American servicemen resented the sight of Latinos socializing in clothing considered extravagant and unpatriotic during wartime.<ref name=Osgerby>{{cite encyclopedia| last = Osgerby| first = Bill| authorlink = | editor = Patrick L. Jamieson & Daniel Romer, eds| encyclopedia = The Changing Portrayal of Adolescents in the Media Since 1950| title = Understanding the 'Jackpot Market': Media, Marketing, and the Rise of the American Teenager| year = 2008| publisher = Oxford University Press US| location = Nfvvzcew York| pages = 31–32| isbn=0-19-534295-X}}</ref><ref name="Almanac"> Los Angeles Almanac</ref>


The '''Zoot Suit Riots''' were a series of riots<ref name=pagan>{{Cite journal|last=Pagan|first=Eduardo Obregon|date=2000|title=Los Angeles Geopolitics and the Zoot Suit Riot, 1943|url=https://muse.jhu.edu/article/32139|journal=Social Science History|volume=24|issue=1|pages=223–256|doi=10.1017/S0145553200010129|s2cid=145233558|issn=1527-8034}}</ref> that took place June 3–8, 1943, in ], ], United States, involving ] stationed in ] and young Latino and ] city residents.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.history.com/topics/world-war-ii/zoot-suit-riots|title=Zoot Suits Riots|date=August 9, 2023 }}</ref> It was one of the dozen wartime industrial cities where race-related riots occurred during the summer of 1943, along with ]; ]; ]; and ].
==Origins==
]
During the 20th century, in addition to those whose families had already been in the ] before 1848, many Mexicans immigrated to places such as ], ], and California.<ref name = census1960>{{cite book | last1 = U.S. Bureau of Census | title = Historical statistics of the United States: colonial times to 1957 | chapter = C | volume = 62 | publisher = Superintendent of Documents, U. S. Govt. Print Off., 1960 | year = 1960 | location = Washington, DC | pages = 57–58 | url = http://books.google.com/books?id=hyI1AAAAIAAJ&dq=mexican%20immigration%201940&pg=PA58#v=onepage&q&f=false | accessdate = 2010-09-11}}</ref> In the early 1930s in Los Angeles County, more than 12,000 people of Mexican descent—including many American citizens<ref>{{cite journal |first1=Kevin R. |last1=Johnson |year=2005 |title=The Forgotten 'Repatriation' of Persons of Mexican Ancestry and Lessons for the 'War on Terror' |journal=Pace Law Review |volume=26 |issue=1 |pages=1–26 |url=http://digitalcommons.pace.edu/lawrev/39}}</ref>—were deported to Mexico (see ]). Despite the deportations, by the late 1930s there were still about 3 million Mexican Americans in the United States. Los Angeles had the highest concentration of Mexicans outside of Mexico.<ref name='Obregon2009'>{{cite book|authorlink1=Eduardo Obregón Pagán | last1 = Obregón Pagán | first1 = Eduardo| title = Murder at The Sleepy Lagoon | chapter = 2| publisher = ReadHowYouWant.com | date = June 3, 2009 | pages = 23–28| url = http://books.google.com/books?id=Dyj_NbiuzdQC&lpg=PA26&dq=mexican%20population%20los%20angeles%201940&pg=PA26#v=onepage&q&f=false| accessdate = 2010-09-11 | isbn = 1-4429-9501-7}}</ref> The Latinos were segregated into an area of the city with the oldest, most run-down housing.<ref name = Obregon2009/> In addition to this, job discrimination in Los Angeles forced many Mexicans to work for below-poverty level wages.<ref name='Reisler1976'>{{cite book | last1 = Reisler | first1 = Mark | title = By the sweat of their brow: Mexican immigrant labor in the United States, 1900-1940 | publisher = ] | year = 1976 | pages = 95–97 | oclc = 2121388 | accessdate = 2010-09-12 | isbn = 0-8371-8894-6 | quote = Mexican workers helped fulfill the unskilled labor needs of American industry as well as agriculture. Noting their availability at a time of declining European immigration and their willingness to accept low wages, nonagricultural employers began to rely upon Mexican workers as early as World War I.}}</ref><ref name='Ryan2006'>{{cite book | last1 = Ryan | first1 = James Gilbert | last2 = Schlup | first2 = Leonard C. | title = Historical dictionary of the 1940s | publisher = ] | year = 2006 | pages = 250–251 | url = http://books.google.com/books?id=-t3Hx4ASLKUC&lpg=PA250&dq=mexican%20labor%20discrimination%201940&pg=PA250#v=onepage&q&f=false | accessdate = 2010-09-12 | isbn = 0-7656-0440-X | quote = The establishment of the Fair Employment Office and Coordinating Committee on Latin American Affairs and the Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs dealt specifically with Mexican American concerns. The prevailing racial violence ensured that federal efforts would continue, but discrimination lived on. By 1945, however, reforms were no longer deemed necessary ; protective innovations ceased, yet migration continued}}</ref> The Los Angeles newspapers described Mexicans by using racially inflammatory propaganda.<ref name='McWilliams2001'>{{cite book |authorlink1=Carey McWilliams (journalist) | last1 = Carey | first1 = McWilliams| last2 = Stewart | first2 = Dean | last3 = Gendar | first3 = Jeannine| title = Fool's paradise: a Carey McWilliams reader | publisher = Heyday Books| year = 2001 | pages = 180–183| url = http://books.google.com/books?id=Eteiy0eVyboC&lpg=PA181&dq=inauthor%3A%22Carey%20McWilliams%22%20sleepy%20lagoon&pg=PA181#v=onepage&q&f=false| accessdate = 2010-09-12 | isbn = 1-890771-41-4| quote = To appreciate the social significance of the Sleepy Lagoon case, it is necessary to have a picture of the concurrent events. The anti-Mexican press campaign which had been whipped up through the spring and early summer of 1942 finally brought recognition, from the officials, of the existence of an 'awful' situation in reference to 'Mexican juvenile delinquency.' }}</ref><ref name='Obregon20092'>{{cite book | last1 = Obregón Pagán | first1 = Eduardo | title = Murder at The Sleepy Lagoon | publisher = ReadHowYouWant.com | date = June 3, 2009 | pages = 130–132 | url = http://books.google.com/books?id=Dyj_NbiuzdQC&lpg=PA26&dq=mexican%20population%20los%20angeles%201940&pg=PA131#v=onepage&q&f=false | accessdate = 2010-09-12 | quote = In the early stages of the grand jury investigation, many of the larger newspapers devoted no more than a few brief lines to . Yet from the beginning, the Los Angeles Evening Herald and Express latched on to the term 'Sleepy Lagoon' and immediately turned it on the accused youths. 'Goons of Sleepy Lagoon' was a favorite moniker that skewed the brief and otherwise bland reporting of the grand jury investigation and subsequent trial. | isbn = 9781442995017}}</ref><ref>{{cite book | last1 = Rule | first1 = James B | title = Theories of Civil Violence | volume = 1 | publisher = ] | year = 1989 | pages = 102–108 | url = http://books.google.com/books?id=35Pu0qHvSZ0C&lpg=PA106&pg=PA106#v=onepage&q&f=false | accessdate = 2010-09-12 | quote = The authors surveyed references to Mexicans in the Los Angeles Times during the period leading up to that city's anti-Mexican riots of 1943; these events were called 'zoot suit riots' at the time. Turner found that, as the riots approached, newspaper references to 'zoot suiters' rose whereas other references to Mexicans bearing less emotional and negative connotations declined. The zoot suit had become a symbol or code expression for the 'bad' Mexican, even though it appeared that few of the Mexican youths involved in the riots actually wore the notorious outfit.}}</ref> These factors caused much racial tension between Latinos and whites.<ref>Solomon, Larry. ''Roots of Justice Stories of Organizing in Communities of Color''. New York: Chardon, 1998. Pg 22.</ref>


American servicemen and white ] attacked and stripped children, teenagers, and youths who wore ]s, ostensibly because they considered the outfits, which were made from large amounts of fabric, to be unpatriotic during ]. Rationing of fabrics and certain foods was required at the time for the ]. While most of the white mobs targeted ] youth, they also attacked ] and ] young adults and children.<ref>{{cite book | last=Peiss | first=Kathy | year=2011 | page=33 | title=Zoot Suit | publisher=University of Pennsylvania Press | isbn=
It was during the late 1930s that young Latinos in California, for whom the media usually used the then-derogatory term Chicanos, which some Mexican-Americans today still use to refer to themselves, created a youth culture.<ref>{{cite book
9780812223033 | quote=Over the next few days, crowds of white civilians joined in the rampage, targeting mainly Mexican American youths but also some African Americans and Filipinos.}}</ref>
|editor1-first=Vicki L. |editor1-last=Ruiz |editor2-first=Virginia Sanchez |editor2-last=Korrol|title=Latinas in the United States: A Historical Encyclopedia|publisher=] |year=2006}}{{page needed|date=September 2012}}<br />Long a disparaging term in Mexico, the term Chicano gradually transformed from a class-based term of derision to one of ethnic pride and general usage within Mexican-American communities beginning with the rise of the ] in the 1960s.</ref><ref>{{cite book|first=Maria |last=Herrera-Sobek |title=Chicano folklore: a handbook|publisher=Greenwood Press |location=] |year=2006|lccn=2006000652 |isbn=9780313333255|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=peqMQP4dTq4C&printsec=frontcover&dq=Herrera-Sobek,+Maria+%282006%29.+Chicano+folklore+:+a+handbook.&hl=en&sa=X&ei=uEAHUfT0HfCB0QH6zoHYAQ&ved=0CDAQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=Herrera-Sobek%2C%20Maria%20%282006%29.%20Chicano%20folklore%20%3A%20a%20handbook.&f=false|accessdate=2013-01-28}}{{page needed|date=September 2012}}</ref> Lalo Guerrero became known as the father of Chicano music, as they adopted their own music, language and dress. For the men, the style was to wear a ]—a flamboyant long coat with baggy pegged pants, a ], a long key chain, and shoes with thick soles. They called themselves "]s." In the early 1940s, many arrests and negative stories in the '']'' fueled a negative perception of these pachuco gangs in the broader community.<ref name="Cosgrove"/> In the summer of 1942 the ] case made national news when teenage members of the ] were accused of murdering a man named José Díaz in an abandoned quarry pit. This created much ] and the nine men were convicted and sentenced to long prison terms. As one author puts it, "Many Angelenos saw the death of José Díaz as a tragedy that resulted from a larger pattern of lawlessness and rebellion among Mexican American youths, discerned through their self-conscious fashioning of difference, and increasingly called for stronger measures to crack down on juvenile delinquency."<ref>{{cite book
|last=Pagán |first=Eduardo Obregón|title=Murder at the Sleepy Lagoon: Zoot Suits, Race, and Riot in Wartime L.A.|location=Chapel Hill |publisher=]|year=2006 |page=145 |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=3W-rk4EaeYEC&printsec=frontcover&dq=Murder+at+the+Sleepy+Lagoon:+Zoot+Suits,+Race,+and+Riot+in+Wartime+L.A&hl=en&sa=X&ei=90MHUZyLC4Lr0gHHmoGwBw&ved=0CDgQ6AEwAA#v=snippet&q=stronger%20measures%20to%20crack%20down%20on%20juvenile%20delinquency&f=false |accessdate=2013-01-28 |lccn=2003048891 |isbn=0807828262}}</ref> Although ultimately the convictions of the nine young men were overturned, the case caused much animosity toward Mexican Americans, much of which had to do with the police and press characterizing all Mexican youths as "pachuco hoodlums and baby gangsters."<ref>{{cite journal |first1=Richard Griswold |last1=del Castillo |title=The Los Angeles 'Zoot Suit Riots' Revisited: Mexican and Latin American Perspectives |journal=Mexican Studies |volume=16 |issue=2 |year=2000 |pages=367–91 |jstor=1052202 |doi=10.1525/msem.2000.16.2.03a00080}}</ref><ref>Pagan, Eduardo O. ''Murder at the Sleepy Lagoon: Zoot Suits, Race, and Riot in Wartime L.A.'', New York: The University of North Carolina, 2006. Pg. 159.</ref>


The Zoot Suit Riots followed the ] trial, after the death of a young Latino man in what was then an unincorporated commercial area near Los Angeles. Similar racist violence against Latinos happened in ], ], ], ], ], and ] as well.<ref>{{cite book |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=zZhjWwXS2X8C&pg=PA98 |title=Everything you need to know about Latino history |chapter=Mexican Americans |author-link=Himilce Novas |first=Himilce |last=Novas |page=98 |lccn=2007032941 |edition=2008 |location=New York City |publisher=] |year=2007 |isbn=9780452288898}}</ref> The defiance of zoot suiters became inspirational for ]s during the ].<ref>{{Cite book|last=Sandoval|first=Denise M.|title=Black and Brown in Los Angeles: Beyond Conflict and Coalition|publisher=]|location=Berkeley, California|year=2013|isbn=9780520956872|editor-last=Kun|editor-first=Josh|pages=197|chapter=The Politics of Low and Slow/Bajito y Suavecito: Black and Chicano Lowriders in Los Angeles, from the 1960s through the 1970s|editor-last2=Pulido|editor-first2=Laura}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book|last=Mazón|first=Mauricio|url=https://archive.org/details/zootsuitriotspsy0000mazo/page/118|title=The Zoot-Suit Riots: The Psychology of Symbolic Annihilation|publisher=University of Texas Press|year=1989|isbn=9780292798038|pages=}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book|first1=Garcia|last1=Berumen|first2=Frank|last2=Javier|title=Latino Image Makers in Hollywood: Performers, Filmmakers and Films Since the 1960s|publisher=]|location=Jefferson, North Carolina|year=2016|isbn=9781476614113|pages=145}}</ref>
The Zoot Suit Riots sharply revealed a polarization between two youth groups within wartime society: the gangs of predominantly black and Mexican youths who were at the forefront of the zoot suit subculture, and the predominantly Anglo American servicemen stationed along the ]. The riots primarily had racial and social resonances, although some argue that the primary issue may have been patriotism and attitudes to the war.


==Background==
With the entry of the United States into the war in December 1941 following the ], the nation had to come to terms with the restrictions of ] and the prospects of ]. In March 1942, the ]'s first rationing act had a direct effect on the manufacture of suits and all clothing containing wool. In an attempt to institute a 26% cut-back in the use of fabrics, the War Production Board drew up regulations for the wartime manufacture of what '']'' magazine called, "streamlined suits by Uncle Sam."<ref>{{cite book|first=O. E. |last=Schoeffler |author2=William Gale|title=Esquire’s encyclopedia of 20th century men’s fashions|location=New York |publisher=]|lccn=72009811|year=1973 |page=24 |isbn=0070554803}}</ref> The regulations effectively forbade the manufacture of zoot suits, and most legitimate tailoring companies ceased to manufacture or advertise any suits that fell outside the War Production Board's guidelines. However, the demand for zoot suits did not decline and a network of ] tailors based in Los Angeles and ] continued to manufacture the garments. Thus, the polarization between servicemen and pachucos was immediately visible: the chino shirt and battledress were evidently uniforms of patriotism, whereas wearing a zoot suit was a deliberate and public way of flouting the regulations of rationing. The zoot suit was a moral and social scandal in the eyes of the authorities, not simply because it was associated with petty crime and violence, but because it openly snubbed the laws of rationing.<ref name="Cosgrove" />
===Mexicans in Los Angeles===
] was a part of Mexico for 27 years, and part of the ] for centuries, before becoming part of the United States following the ]. Because of this history, there has always been a large Latino population in California. During the early 20th century, many Mexicans immigrated for work to US border states that needed workers, areas such as ], ], and ].<ref name = census1960>{{cite book | last1 = U.S. Bureau of Census | title = Historical statistics of the United States: colonial times to 1957 | chapter = C | volume = 62 | publisher = Superintendent of Documents, U. S. Govt. Print Off., 1960 | year = 1960 | location = Washington, DC | pages = 57–58 | chapter-url = https://books.google.com/books?id=hyI1AAAAIAAJ&q=mexican%20immigration%201940&pg=PA58 | access-date = September 11, 2010}}</ref> They were recruited by farmers for work on the large farms and also worked in those states in non-agricultural jobs.


During the ], in the early 1930s, the United States deported between 500,000 and 2 million people of Mexican descent (including the expulsion of up to 1.2&nbsp;million children who were U.S. citizens but accompanied their parents back to Mexico.)<ref>{{cite journal |first1=Kevin R. |last1=Johnson |year=2005 |title=The Forgotten 'Repatriation' of Persons of Mexican Ancestry and Lessons for the 'War on Terror' |journal=Pace Law Review |volume=26 |issue=1 |pages=1–26 |doi=10.58948/2331-3528.1147 |s2cid=140417518 |url=http://digitalcommons.pace.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1147&context=plr |access-date=June 5, 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160822070322/http://digitalcommons.pace.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1147&context=plr |archive-date=August 22, 2016 |url-status=live |df=mdy-all |doi-access=free }}</ref> to Mexico (see ]), in order to reduce demands on limited American economic resources. By the late 1930s, about three million Mexican Americans resided in the United States. ] had the highest concentration of ethnic Mexicans outside Mexico.<ref name="Obregon2009">{{cite book |author-link1=Eduardo Obregón Pagán | last1 = Pagán | first1 = Eduardo Obregón | title = Murder at The Sleepy Lagoon | publisher = ReadHowYouWant.com | date = June 3, 2009 | pages = 23–28| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=Dyj_NbiuzdQC&pg=PA26 | isbn = 978-1-4429-9501-7}}</ref>
== Immediate runup to the riots ==
Following the Sleepy Lagoon case, a series of violent incidents erupted between Mexicans wearing zoot suits and U.S. service personnel in ], ], ], ], Los Angeles, and cities and towns of California. The most serious of these broke out in Los Angeles.


Job discrimination in Los Angeles forced minorities to work for ] level wages.<ref name="Reisler1976">{{cite book | last1 = Reisler | first1 = Mark | title = By the Sweat of Their Brow: Mexican Immigrant Labor in the United States, 1900–1940 | publisher = ] | location=Westport, Connecticut| year = 1976 | pages = 95–97 | oclc = 2121388 | isbn = 978-0-8371-8894-2 | quote = Mexican workers helped fulfill the unskilled labor needs of American industry as well as agriculture. Noting their availability at a time of declining European immigration and their willingness to accept low wages, non-agricultural employers began to rely upon Mexican workers as early as World War I.}}</ref><ref name="Ryan2006">{{cite book | last1 = Ryan | first1 = James Gilbert | last2 = Schlup | first2 = Leonard C. | title = Historical dictionary of the 1940s | publisher = ] | location=Armonk, New York|year = 2006 | pages = 250–251 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=-t3Hx4ASLKUC&q=mexican%20labor%20discrimination%201940&pg=PA250 | isbn = 978-0-7656-0440-8 | quote = The establishment of the Fair Employment Office and Coordinating Committee on Latin American Affairs and the Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs dealt specifically with Mexican American concerns. The prevailing racial violence ensured that federal efforts would continue, but discrimination lived on. By 1945, however, reforms were no longer deemed necessary ; protective innovations ceased, yet migration continued | access-date = December 26, 2015 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20160430082605/https://books.google.com/books?id=-t3Hx4ASLKUC&lpg=PA250&dq=mexican%20labor%20discrimination%201940&pg=PA250 | archive-date = April 30, 2016 | url-status = live | df = mdy-all }}</ref> The Los Angeles newspapers described Mexicans with ], suggesting a problem with juvenile delinquency.<ref name="McWilliams2001">{{cite book | author-link1 = Carey McWilliams (journalist) | last1 = Carey | first1 = McWilliams | last2 = Stewart | first2 = Dean | last3 = Gendar | first3 = Jeannine | title = Fool's Paradise: A Carey McWilliams Reader | publisher = Heyday Books | year = 2001 | pages = 180–183 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=Eteiy0eVyboC&q=inauthor%3A%22Carey%20McWilliams%22%20sleepy%20lagoon&pg=PA181 | isbn = 978-1-890771-41-6 | quote = To appreciate the social significance of the Sleepy Lagoon case, it is necessary to have a picture of the concurrent events. The anti-Mexican press campaign that had been whipped up through the spring and early summer of 1942 finally brought recognition, from the officials, of the existence of an 'awful' situation in reference to 'Mexican juvenile delinquency.' | access-date = December 26, 2015 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20160502190723/https://books.google.com/books?id=Eteiy0eVyboC&lpg=PA181&dq=inauthor:%22Carey%20McWilliams%22%20sleepy%20lagoon&pg=PA181 | archive-date = May 2, 2016 | url-status = live | df = mdy-all }}</ref><ref name="Obregon20092">{{cite book | last1 = Pagán | first1 = Eduardo Obregón | title = Murder at The Sleepy Lagoon | publisher = ReadHowYouWant.com | date = June 3, 2009 | pages = 130–132 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=Dyj_NbiuzdQC&pg=PA131 | quote = In the early stages of the grand jury investigation, many of the larger newspapers devoted no more than a few brief lines to . Yet from the beginning, the Los Angeles Evening Herald and Express latched on to the term 'Sleepy Lagoon' and immediately turned it on the accused youths. 'Goons of Sleepy Lagoon' was a favorite moniker that skewed the brief and otherwise bland reporting of the grand jury investigation and subsequent trial. | isbn = 978-1-4429-9501-7}}</ref><ref>{{cite book | last1 = Rule | first1 = James B | title = Theories of Civil Violence | volume = 1 | publisher = ] | location=Berkeley, California|year = 1989 | pages = 102–108 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=35Pu0qHvSZ0C&pg=PA106 | quote = The authors surveyed references to Mexicans in the Los Angeles Times during the period leading up to that city's anti-Mexican riots of 1943; these events were called 'zoot suit riots' at the time. Turner found that, as the riots approached, newspaper references to 'zoot suiters' rose whereas other references to Mexicans bearing less emotional and negative connotations declined. The zoot suit had become a symbol or code expression for the 'bad' Mexican, even though it appeared that few of the Mexican youths involved in the riots actually wore the notorious outfit. | isbn = 9780520067967 | access-date = December 26, 2015 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20160518020958/https://books.google.com/books?id=35Pu0qHvSZ0C&lpg=PA106&pg=PA106 | archive-date = May 18, 2016 | url-status = live | df = mdy-all }}</ref> These factors caused much racial tension between Mexican immigrants, those of Mexican descent, and ].<ref>{{cite book|first=Larry|last=Solomon|title=Roots of Justice Stories of Organizing in Communities of Color|publisher=]|location=Hoboken, New Jersey|date=1998|isbn= 9780787961787 |page=22}}</ref>
Two conflicts between Mexicans and white military personnel had a great effect on the start of the riots. The first occurred on May 30, 1943, four days before the start of the riots. The altercation involved a dozen sailors and soldiers including ] Joe Dacy Coleman. The group was walking down ] when they spotted a group of young Mexican women on the opposite side of the street. With the exception of Coleman and another soldier, the group crossed the street to approach and harass the women. Coleman continued on, walking past a small group of young men in zoot suits. As he walked by, Coleman saw one of the young men raise his arm in an allegedly threatening manner, so he turned around and grabbed it. It was then that something or someone struck the sailor in the back of the head, at which point he fell unconscious to the ground, allegedly breaking his jaw in two places. On the opposite side of the street, young men attacked the servicemen for harassing the women. In the midst of this battle, the service men managed to fight their way to Coleman and drag him to safety.<ref>{{cite journal |last=Pagán |first=Eduardo O. |title=Los Angeles Geopolitics and the Zoot Suit Riot, 1943 |journal=] |year=2000 |volume=24 |issue=1 |doi=10.1215/01455532-24-1-223 |jstor= |pages=223–256 }}</ref>


During this time, Los Angeles was undergoing an expansion, which caused disruptions in communal sites, family sites, and family patterns of social interactions due to poor city planning. One major decision was to put a million-dollar Naval training school for the ] in the ], a primarily working-class and immigrant area for Mexican-Americans. As young Mexican-American men from the neighborhood grew agitated and began a campaign of harassment, intimidation, and resistance a year prior to the riots, the Chavez Ravine area would later be a hot spot for encounters between the zoot suiters and sailors.<ref name="Eduardo Obregon Pagan 1943">Eduardo Obregon Pagán. "Los Angeles Geopolitics and the Zoot Suit Riot, 1943". ''Social Science History'' no.1 (2000): 223–256.</ref>
The second incident took place four days later on the night of June 3, 1943. About eleven sailors got off a bus and started walking along Main Street in ]. At some point they ran into a group of young Mexicans dressed in zoot suits and got in a verbal argument. The sailors stated that they were jumped and beaten by this gang of zoot suiters. The ] responded to the incident, many of them off-duty officers calling themselves the Vengeance Squad, who went to the scene "seeking to clean up Main Street from what they viewed as the loathsome influence of pachuco gangs." The next day, 200 members of the ] got a convoy of about 20 taxicabs and headed for ]. When the sailors spotted their first victims, most of them 12- to 13-year-old boys, they clubbed the boys and any adults who tried to stop them. They also stripped the boys of their zoot suits and burned the tattered clothes in a pile. They were determined to attack and strip all minorities that they came across wearing zoot suits. It was with this attack that the Zoot Suit Riots started.<ref>{{cite book |last=Alvarez |first=Luis A. |title=The Power of the Zoot: Race, Community, and Resistance in American Youth Culture, 1940-1945 |location=Austin |publisher=University of Texas |year=2001 |page=204 |isbn= }}</ref>


] became known as the father of ] music, as young people adopted music, language, and dress of their own. Young men wore ]s—a flamboyant long jacket with baggy ] pants, sometimes accessorized with a ], a long watch chain, and thick-soled shoes. They called themselves ]. In the early 1940s, arrests of Mexican-American youths and negative stories in the '']'' fueled a perception that these pachuco gangs were delinquents who were a threat to the broader community.<ref name="Cosgrove">{{cite journal |doi=10.1093/hwj/18.1.77 |url=http://invention.smithsonian.org/centerpieces/whole_cloth/u7sf/u7materials/cosgrove.html |title=The Zoot-Suit and Style Warfare |year=1984 |last1=Cosgrove |first1=Stuart |journal=History Workshop Journal |volume=18 |pages=77–91 |access-date=August 4, 2009 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140813123335/http://invention.smithsonian.org/centerpieces/whole_cloth/u7sf/u7materials/cosgrove.html |archive-date=August 13, 2014 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all }}</ref>
== The riots ==
]'')]]
As the violence escalated over the ensuing days, thousands of white servicemen joined the attacks, marching abreast down streets, entering bars and movie houses and assaulting any young Latino males they encountered. In one incident, sailors dragged two zoot suiters on-stage as a film was being screened, stripped them in front of the audience, and then urinated on their suits.<ref name="Cosgrove"/> Although police accompanied the rioting servicemen, they had orders not to arrest any of them. After several days, more than 150 people had been injured and police had arrested more than 500 Latinos on charges ranging from "rioting" to "vagrancy".<ref name="Almanac"/>


In the summer of 1942, the ] case made national news. Nine teenage members of the ] were accused of murdering a civilian man named José Díaz in an abandoned ] pit. The nine defendants were convicted at trial and sentenced to long prison terms. ] wrote:
A witness to the attacks, journalist Carey McWilliams wrote,


<blockquote>Many Angelenos saw the death of José Díaz as a tragedy that resulted from a larger pattern of lawlessness and rebellion among Mexican American youths, discerned through their self-conscious fashioning of difference, and increasingly called for stronger measures to crack down on juvenile delinquency.<ref>{{cite book |last1= Pagán |first1= Eduardo Obregón |title= Murder at The Sleepy Lagoon |publisher= ReadHowYouWant.com |date= June 3, 2009 |page= 215 |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=Dyj_NbiuzdQC&pg=PA215 |isbn= 978-1-4429-9501-7}}</ref></blockquote>
<blockquote>"Marching through the streets of downtown Los Angeles, a mob of several thousand soldiers, sailors, and civilians, proceeded to beat up every zoot suiter they could find. Pushing its way into the important motion picture theaters, the mob ordered the management to turn on the house lights and then ran up and down the aisles dragging Mexicans out of their seats. Streetcars were halted while Mexicans, and some Filipinos and Negroes, were jerked from their seats, pushed into the streets and beaten with a sadistic frenzy."<ref>{{cite book |first1=Carey |last1=McWilliams |authorlink=Carey McWilliams (journalist) |year=1990 |title=North from Mexico: the Spanish-speaking people of the United States |series=Contributions in American History |publisher=Greenwood Press |isbn=978-0-313-26631-7}}{{page needed|date=September 2012}}</ref></blockquote>


The convictions of the nine young men were ultimately overturned, but the case generated much animosity within the United States toward Mexican Americans. The police and press characterized all Mexican youths as "pachuco hoodlums and baby ]s".<ref>{{cite journal |first1=Richard Griswold |last1=del Castillo |title=The Los Angeles 'Zoot Suit Riots' Revisited: Mexican and Latin American Perspectives |journal=Mexican Studies |publisher=]|location=Berkeley, California|volume=16 |issue=2 |date=July 2000 |pages=367–91 |jstor=1052202 |doi=10.1525/msem.2000.16.2.03a00080}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1= Pagán |first1= Eduardo Obregón |title= Murder at The Sleepy Lagoon |publisher= ReadHowYouWant.com |date= June 3, 2009 |pages= 191–194 |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=Dyj_NbiuzdQC&pg=PA191 |isbn= 978-1-4429-9501-7}}</ref>
The local press lauded the attacks by the servicemen, describing the assaults as having a "cleansing effect" that were ridding Los Angeles of "miscreants" and "hoodlums".<ref>{{cite book
|authorlink=Carey McWilliams (journalist) |first=Carey |last=McWilliams
|chapter=Blood on the Pavements |title=Fool's Paradise: A Carey McWilliams Reader
|publisher=] |year=2001 |isbn=978-1-890771-41-6
|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=Eteiy0eVyboC&dq=Fool%27s+Paradise:+A+Carey+McWilliams+Reader&hl=en&sa=X&ei=YTUHUZHbNI-E0QHykICYDQ&sqi=2&ved=0CDUQ6AEwAA
|accessdate=2013-01-28
}}{{page needed|date=September 2012}}</ref> As the riots progressed the media reported the arrest of Amelia Venegas, a female zoot suiter charged with carrying a ]. While the revelation of female pachucos' (pachucas) involvement in the riots led to frequent coverage of the activities of female pachuco gangs, the media suppressed any mention of the Anglo-American pachuco gangs that were also involved.<ref name="Cosgrove"/>


===World War II===
The ] approved a resolution criminalizing the wearing of "zoot suits with reat {{sic}} pleats within the city limits of LA" after Councilman Norris Nelson stated "''The zoot suit has become a badge of hoodlumism''". No ordinance was ever approved by the City Council or signed into law by the ], although the council did encourage the War Production Board to take steps "to curb illegal production of men's clothing in violation of WPB limitation orders." White sailors and Marines had initially targeted only pachucos, African-Americans in zoot suits were also attacked in the ] corridor area. This escalation compelled the Navy and Marine Corps command staffs to intervene on June 7, confining sailors and Marines to barracks and declaring Los Angeles off limits to all military personnel with enforcement by U.S. Navy ] personnel. Their official position remained that their men were acting in self defense.<ref name="Almanac" />
With the entry of the United States into World War II in December 1941 following the ], the nation had to deal with the restrictions of ] and the prospects of ]. In March 1942, the ] (WPB) regulated the manufacture of men's suits and all clothing that contained ]. To achieve a 26% cut-back in the use of fabrics, the WPB issued regulations for the manufacture of what '']'' magazine called, "streamlined suits by ]".<ref>{{cite book|first1=O. E. |last1=Schoeffler |first2=William|last2=Gale|title=Esquire's encyclopedia of 20th century men's fashions|location=New York City|publisher=]|lccn=72009811|year=1973 |page=24 |isbn=978-0070554801}}</ref> The regulations effectively forbade the manufacture of the wide-cut zoot suits and full women's skirts or dresses. Most legitimate tailoring companies ceased to manufacture or advertise any suits that fell outside the War Production Board's guidelines. But the demand for zoot suits did not decline; a network of ] tailors based in Los Angeles and ] continued to produce the garments. Youths also continued to wear clothes which they already owned.<ref name="Cosgrove" />


Meanwhile, ], ], and ] from across the country travelled to Los Angeles in large numbers as part of the war effort; they were given ] while awaiting to be shipped out to the ]. Servicemen and zoot suiters in Los Angeles were both immediately identifiable by their dress. Some servicemen and others in the community felt that the continued wearing of zoot suits represented the youths' public flouting of rationing regulations. Officials began to cast wearing of zoot suits in moral terms and associated it with the commission of petty crime, violence and the snubbing of national wartime rules.<ref name="Cosgrove" /> In 1943, many servicemen resented the sight of young Latinos wearing zoot suits after clothing restrictions had been published, especially as most came from areas of the country with little experience or knowledge of Mexican-American culture.{{Where|date=December 2018}}<ref name=Osgerby>{{cite encyclopedia| last = Osgerby| first = Bill| editor = Patrick L. Jamieson & Daniel Romer| encyclopedia = The Changing Portrayal of Adolescents in the Media Since 1950| title = Understanding the 'Jackpot Market': Media, Marketing, and the Rise of the American Teenager| year = 2008| publisher = Oxford University Press US| location = New York City| pages = | isbn = 978-0-19-534295-6| url = https://archive.org/details/changingportraya0000jami/page/31}}</ref><ref name="Almanac">{{cite web |url=http://www.laalmanac.com/history/hi07t.htm |title=Los Angeles Zoot Suit Riots |publisher=Laalmanac.com |date=June 3, 1943 |access-date=July 5, 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160423074129/http://www.laalmanac.com/history/hi07t.htm |archive-date=April 23, 2016 |url-status=live |df=mdy-all }}</ref> Although Mexican-Americans were overrepresented in the ], they were not common or respected enough to defuse these tensions.<ref>Some 500,000 Mexican Americans served in the U.S. armed services (around 17% of their population, compared to under 10% for the general public) where they had the highest percentage of Congressional Medal of Honor recipients (17%) of any minority in the United States. Between 1942 and 1967, over four million Mexicans and Puerto Ricans were contracted by the United States under the ] to alleviate the labor shortage caused by WWII.</ref>
By the middle of June, the riots in Los Angeles were dying out but the riots spread throughout California and to cities in Texas and Arizona while incidents broke out in northern cities such as Detroit, New York City, and Philadelphia, where two members of ] dance band were beaten up for wearing the band's zoot suit stage costumes. A zoot suit riot at ] in ] was initially dismissed as an "adolescent imitation" of the Los Angeles riots; however, within weeks, Detroit was in the midst of the ].<ref name="Cosgrove">{{cite journal |doi=10.1093/hwj/18.1.77 |url=http://invention.smithsonian.org/centerpieces/whole_cloth/u7sf/u7materials/cosgrove.html |title=The Zoot-Suit and Style Warfare |year=1984 |last1=Cosgrove |first1=Stuart |journal=History Workshop Journal |volume=18 |pages=77–91}}</ref>


One of the first conflicts between the sailors and the zoot suiters was in August 1942, near ]. The sailors who trained in the ] went to Chinatown on leave. A sailor and his girlfriend were walking when four zoot suiters blocked the sidewalk in front of them. The zoot suiters refused to let them pass and pushed the sailor into the street. The young zoot-suiter and the sailor stood their ground in silence until finally, the sailor backed away.<ref name="Eduardo Obregon Pagan 1943"/>
== Reactions ==


=== Zoot suits ===
As the riots subsided, nation-wide public condemnation of the military and civil officials followed. The most urgent concern of officials, however, was relations with ], as the economy of Southern California relied on the importation of Mexican labor to assist in the harvesting of California crops. After the Mexican ] lodged a formal protest with the ], ] of California ordered the creation of the ''McGucken committee'' to investigate and determine the cause of the riots.<ref name="Cosgrove"/> In 1943, the committee issued its report; it determined racism to be a central cause of the riots, further stating that it was "an aggravating practice (of the media) to link the phrase ''zoot suit'' with the report of a crime." The governor appointed the Peace Officers Committee on Civil Disturbances, chaired by ], president of the ] to make recommendations to the police.<ref name="Kenney"> ]{{page needed|date=September 2012}}</ref> Human relations committees were appointed and police departments were required to train their officers to treat all citizens equally.<ref name="LAA">{{cite web | last = | first = | title = Los Angeles Zoot Suit Riots | work = Los Angeles Almanac | url = http://www.laalmanac.com/history/hi07t.htm | accessdate = July 27, 2010 }}</ref> At the same time, Mayor ] came to his own conclusion. The riots, he said, were caused by Mexican juvenile delinquents and by white Southerners, a group arising out of a region in which both overt legal and socially sanctioned white racial discrimination held sway until the 1960s. Racial prejudice, according to Mayor Bowron, was not a factor.<ref name="LAA"/>
]. ]]
] fashion found its origins in the urban black scene during the 1940s.<ref>{{Cite magazine|url=https://www.smithsonianmag.com/arts-culture/brief-history-zoot-suit-180958507/|title=A Brief History of the Zoot Suit|last=Gregory|first=Alice|magazine=]|language=en|date=April 2016|access-date=October 11, 2019}}</ref> This style of clothing cultivated a sense of racial pride and significance; however, the fashion statement soon made its way into the wardrobes of young Southern Californian Mexican Americans, Italians and Filipinos, who became the quintessential wearers of the zoot suit. The transfer and sharing of the zoot suit fashion indicated a growing influence of African American popular culture on young ], ] and ]. Additionally, "analysis of the Los Angeles zoot-suit riot and journalists' and politicians' in and the outfit's connections with ], slang, ] and dance permit an understanding of the politics and social significance of what is trivial in itself -- popular culture and its attendant styles".<ref name=":0">{{Cite journal|last=Daniels|first=Douglas Henry|date=2002|title=Los Angeles Zoot: Race "Riot," the Pachuco, and Black Music Culture|journal=]|publisher=]|location=Chicago, Illinois|volume=87|pages=98–118|issn=1548-1867|jstor=1562494|doi=10.1086/JAAHv87n1p98|s2cid=224831340}}</ref>


The zoot suit was originally a statement about creating a new wave of music and dress, but it also held significant political meaning. The flamboyant and colorful material indicated a desire to express oneself against the boring and somber slum lifestyle. The zoot suit provided young African American and Mexican youth a sense of individualistic identity within their cultures and society as they discovered "highly charged emotional and symbolic meaning" through the movement, music, and dress.<ref name=":1">{{Cite journal|first=Sarah Elizabeth|last=Howard|date=January 2010|title=Zoot to Boot: The Zoot Suit as Both Costume and Symbol|journal=Studies in Latin American Popular Culture|publisher=]|location=Austin, Texas|language=en|volume=28|issue=1|pages=112–131|doi=10.1353/sla.0.0004|pmid=20836266|s2cid=30345366|issn=2157-2941}}</ref><ref name=":0" />
A week later, ] ] commented on the riots, which the local press had largely attributed to criminal actions by Mexican Americans, in her newspaper column. "The question goes deeper than just suits. It is a racial protest. I have been worried for a long time about the Mexican racial situation. It is a problem with roots going a long way back, and we do not always face these problems as we should." &ndash; June 16, 1943<ref name="LAA"/>


The zoot suit typically included bright-colored fabric, long suit coats that often reached the knees, wide shoulders, and gathered or tapered pants. The arm and ankle areas were often much tighter than the rest of the fabric, giving the whole look a triangular shape.<ref name=":1" />
This led to an outraged response from the '']'' which printed an editorial the following day, in which it accused Mrs. Roosevelt of having ] leanings and stirring "race discord".<ref>Eduardo Obregón Pagán. ''Murder at the Sleepy Lagoon: Zoot Suits, Race, and Riot in Wartime L.A.'' Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. 2004.{{page needed|date=September 2012}}</ref>


Often the suit was paired with accessories such as chains and leather-soled shoes, which were typically worn to exaggerate and prove a point of rebellion standing against the wealth and status that many of these youth were unable to access due to their economic and racial identities.<ref name=":1" />
On June 21, 1943, the State Un-American Activities Committee under State Senator ] arrived in Los Angeles with orders to "determine whether the present Zoot Suit Riots were sponsored by Nazi agencies attempting to spread disunity between the United States and Latin-American countries." Although Tenney claimed he had evidence the riots were "xis-sponsored", the evidence was never presented, although the claims were supported in the minds of the public by Japanese propaganda broadcasts accusing the United States' government of ignoring the brutality of U.S. Marines toward Mexicans. In late 1944, ignoring the findings of the McGucken committee and the unanimous reversal of the convictions in the ] on October 4, the ] announced that the ] was an "effective communist front."<ref name="Cosgrove"/><ref name="Kenney"/>


=== Pachucas and Chicanas ===
Many post-war activists such as ], ], and ] have claimed that they were inspired by the Zoot Suit Riots. ] was a zoot suiter when he first became interested in politics and zoot suiter ] took part in the Harlem zoot suit riots.<ref name="Cosgrove"/>
].]]


The urban, Mexican-American youth often called themselves "]s".<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://vintagedancer.com/1940s/1940s-zoot-suit-girls/|title=1940s Zoot Suit Girls|website=vintagedancer.com|access-date=2019-10-11}}</ref> The female parallels were called "]" and wore tight sweaters and relatively full, flared skirts, often paired with high hair-dos, large earrings, and heavy makeup.<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":2">{{Cite book|title=The Woman in the Zoot Suit|last=Ramírez|first=Catherine S.|date=2010-07-01|publisher=]|location=Durham, North Carolina|isbn=9780822388647|doi = 10.1215/9780822388647}}</ref> Many young Mexican-American women who were not pachucas avoided these clothing styles and hairstyles in order to avoid being seen as troublemakers by white people. Some women even reported that they had heard of pachucas hiding knives in their hair.<ref name=":2" />
==In popular culture==
*The Zoot Suit Riots form the backdrop for the events in the play ] and the ] based on the play.


Pachucas formed their own gangs, joined the male pachuco gangs, and carried weapons. This behavior was often said to have been a divergence from the expected feminine beauty and manners of the middle-class.<ref name=":2" /> Often, for parents of Mexican-American girls, the pachucas "embodied not only a dissident femininity but a threatening, distinctly ] as well".<ref name=":2" /> For some young women, the characteristics of the style promoted a sense of ] and "cultural hybridity" that was expressed through "increased interracial/ethnic relations, ], and ]".<ref name=":2" />
*The ] released a 1997 compilation album entitled ].


Pachucas and Chicanas were less referred to in the media, partly because they threatened the gender and sexuality norms that existed at the time.<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":2" /> When acknowledged, they were regarded mainly as secondary members to the male gang members. Many scholars exclude the pachuca narrative in major events in the ]. Events like the ] incident of 1942 and Zoot Suit Riots of 1943 have been described as "a boyish fight over a pretty girl" and a brawl involving "homeboys".<ref name=":2" /> However, records show that many women also participated in these events and had important roles in shaping their outcomes. In the Sleepy Lagoon incident, both men and women were attacked by a group of youths that later court documents referred to as the "Downey Boys". The pachucos and pachucas left Sleepy Lagoon after the attack, heading to the ] neighborhood to gather reinforcements. They returned to Sleepy Lagoon to find that the Downey Boys had departed, and then headed to a party at the Williams Ranch where a fight broke out upon their arrival. Claims have asserted that there were women screaming and yelling as the fighting ensued.<ref name=":2" />
*The movie '']'' included a riot between servicemen and youths sporting zoot suits (another of this film's anachronisms was a re-enactment of ]).


Continuing into the end of ], Mexican-American women were at the center of much conflict between Anglo-American servicemen and Mexican American youths. In the weeks before the riots, servicemen reported that pachucos had been harassing, molesting, raping, and insulting their wives, girlfriends, and relatives. One local ] newspaper included a story of two young women who had allegedly been abducted in downtown and raped in a "zoot suit orgy".<ref name=":2" /> Many of these reports began building up and was one of the major instigators of the coming riots, as servicemen had declared that they will take matters into their own hands since the ] (LAPD) had supposedly done nothing to stop the attacks from pachucos on their women.<ref name=":2" /> On the contrary, Horace R. Cayton, a writer for the '']'', "attributed the riots to non-Mexican servicemen, who he claimed envied Mexican American male zooters and desired the 'pretty brown creatures' with whom they consorted".<ref name=":2" /> However, the press was dominated by the stories which often claimed that "loose . . . girls of the Los Angeles Mexican quarter" were responsible for taking advantage of unaware sailors who had money.<ref name=":2" />
*The riots feature in the prologue of the ] novel '']'' and a flashback scene in '']'' film takes place during the Zoot Suit Riots.


== Prelude ==
*The film '']'' opened with a depiction of the riots, in which the main character Santana's mother is raped by sailors.
{{moresources|section|date=December 2022}}
Following the Sleepy Lagoon case, U.S. service personnel got into violent altercations with young Mexican Americans in zoot suits in ], ], ], ], Los Angeles, and smaller cities and towns in California. During this period, the immense war buildup attracted tens of thousands of new workers to factories and shipyards in the ], including African Americans from the ] in the ] of the ].


The most serious ethnic conflicts erupted in Los Angeles. Two altercations<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.britannica.com/event/Zoot-Suit-Riots|title=Zoot Suit Riots {{!}} Summary, Causes, Significance, & Facts|work=Encyclopedia Britannica|access-date=2018-09-27|language=en|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180927133424/https://www.britannica.com/event/Zoot-Suit-Riots|archive-date=September 27, 2018|url-status=live|df=mdy-all}}</ref> between military personnel and zoot suiters catalyzed the larger riots. The first occurred on May 30, 1943, at around 8:00&nbsp;p.m., four days before the start of the riots. A dozen sailors, including ] Joe Dacy Coleman, were walking down ] in Los Angeles when they spotted a group of Mexican women on the opposite side. The group, except for Coleman, crossed the street to speak to the women. Coleman continued, walking past two zoot suiters when the sailor turned and grabbed the arm of one of the young men.
*The novel '']'' by ] features a small segment about zoot suits and the Zoot Suit Riots.


==Riots==
*The riots are mentioned in '']'' episode ] by ] to ] due to Raj wanting to "put on his best zoot suit" and go to " a salute to Swing music in the center court near Macy’s. 5pm to 9pm".
]'')]]

===Attacks begin===
On the night of June 3, 1943, about eleven sailors got off a bus and started walking along Main Street in ]. Encountering a group of young Mexican Americans in zoot suits, they got into an argument. The sailors later told the LAPD that they were jumped and beaten by this gang, while the zoot suiters claimed the altercation was started by the sailors. The LAPD responded to the incident, including many off-duty officers who identified as the Vengeance Squad. The officers went to the scene "seeking to clean up ] from what they viewed as the loathsome influence of pachuco gangs".<ref name="alvarez"/>

The next day, 200 sailors got a convoy of about 20 taxicabs and headed for ], the center of Mexican-American settlement. The sailors spotted a group of young zoot suiters and assaulted them with clubs. They stripped the boys of the zoot suits and burned the tattered clothes in a pile. They attacked and stripped everyone they came across who were wearing zoot suits. Media coverage of the incidents then started to spread, inducing more people to join in the mayhem.<ref name="alvarez">{{cite book |last=Alvarez |first=Luis A. |title=The Power of the Zoot: Race, Community, and Resistance in American Youth Culture, 1940–1945 |location=Austin |publisher=University of Texas |year=2001 |page=204}}</ref>

===Attacks spread===
During the next few days, thousands of servicemen and residents joined the attacks, marching abreast down streets, entering bars and movie houses, and assaulting any young Mexican American males they encountered. In one incident, sailors dragged two zoot suiters on-stage as a film was being screened, stripped them in front of the audience, and then urinated on their suits.<ref name="Cosgrove"/> Although police accompanied the rioters, they had orders not to arrest any, and some of them joined in the rioting. After several days, more than 150 people had been injured, and the police had arrested more than 500 Mexican American civilians on charges ranging from "rioting" to "vagrancy".<ref name="Almanac"/>

A witness to the attacks, journalist ] wrote,

<blockquote>Marching through the streets of downtown Los Angeles, a mob of several thousand soldiers, sailors, and civilians, proceeded to beat up every zoot suiter they could find. Pushing its way into the important motion picture theaters, the mob ordered the management to turn on the house lights and then ran up and down the aisles dragging Mexicans out of their seats. Streetcars were halted while Mexicans, and some Filipinos and Negroes, were jerked from their seats, pushed into the streets and beaten with a sadistic frenzy.<ref>{{cite book |first1=Carey |last1=McWilliams |author-link=Carey McWilliams (journalist) |year=1990 |title=North from Mexico: The Spanish-speaking People of the United States |series=Contributions in American History |publisher=] |location=Santa Barbara, California|isbn=978-0-313-26631-7|page=243}}</ref></blockquote>

]

The local press lauded the attacks, describing them as having a "cleansing effect" to rid Los Angeles of "miscreants" and "hoodlums".<ref>{{cite book
|author-link=Carey McWilliams (journalist) |first=Carey |last=McWilliams
|chapter=Blood on the Pavements |title=Fool's Paradise: A Carey McWilliams Reader
|publisher=] |year=2001 |isbn=978-1-890771-41-6
|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Eteiy0eVyboC&q=Fool%27s+Paradise:+A+Carey+McWilliams+Reader
}}{{page needed|date=September 2012}}</ref> As the riots progressed, the media reported the arrest of Amelia Venegas, a female zoot suiter charged with carrying a ]. While the revelation of female pachucos' (]) involvement in the riots led to frequent coverage of the activities of female pachuca gangs, the media suppressed any mention of the white mobs that were also involved.<ref name="Cosgrove"/>

The ] approved a resolution criminalizing the wearing of "zoot suits with reat {{sic}} pleats within the city limits of LA" with the expectation that ] ] would sign it into law. Councilman ] had stated, "The zoot suit has become a badge of hoodlumism." No ordinance was approved by the City Council or signed into law by the Mayor, but the council encouraged the WPB to take steps "to curb illegal production of men's clothing in violation of WPB limitation orders".<ref name="Almanac"/> While the mobs had first targeted only pachucos, they also attacked African Americans in zoot suits who lived in the ] corridor area. The Navy and Marine Corps command staffs intervened on June 8 to reduce the attacks, confining sailors and Marines to barracks and ordering that Los Angeles be declared off-limits to all military personnel; this was enforced by Navy ] personnel. Their official position was that their men were acting in self-defense.<ref name="Almanac"/>

==Reactions==
]
As the riots subsided, the most urgent concern of officials was relations with Mexico, as the economy of ] relied on the importation of cheap Mexican labor to assist in the harvesting of California crops.<ref>{{Cite journal|url=https://www.rand.org/pubs/reprints/RP245-1.html|title=Mexican labor in California's economy : from rapid growth to likely stability|last=Vernez|first=Georges|date=1994|website=www.rand.org|language=en|access-date=2018-12-20|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181214181605/https://www.rand.org/pubs/reprints/RP245-1.html|archive-date=December 14, 2018|url-status=live|df=mdy-all}}</ref> After the Mexican ] lodged a formal protest with the ], ] of California ordered the creation of the McGucken Committee (headed by Los Angeles bishop ]) to investigate and determine the cause of the riots.<ref name="Cosgrove"/> In 1943, the committee issued its report; it determined ] to be a central cause of the riots, further stating that it was "an aggravating practice (of the media) to link the phrase ''zoot suit'' with the report of a crime". The governor appointed the Peace Officers Committee on Civil Disturbances, chaired by ], president of the ] to make recommendations to the police.<ref name="Kenney">{{cite web |url=https://archive.org/stream/myfirstfortyyear00kenn/myfirstfortyyear00kenn_djvu.txt |title=Full text of "My first forty years in California politics, 1922–1962 oral history transcript" |year=1964 |page=123 |access-date=July 5, 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160320161224/https://archive.org/stream/myfirstfortyyear00kenn/myfirstfortyyear00kenn_djvu.txt |archive-date=March 20, 2016 |url-status=live |df=mdy-all }}</ref> Human relations committees were appointed, and police departments were required to train their officers to treat all citizens equally.<ref name="LAA">{{cite web | title = Los Angeles Zoot Suit Riots | work = Los Angeles Almanac | url = http://www.laalmanac.com/history/hi07t.htm | access-date = July 27, 2010 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20100801235501/http://www.laalmanac.com/history/hi07t.htm | archive-date = August 1, 2010 | url-status = live | df = mdy-all }}</ref> Mayor Fletcher Bowron downplayed the role racial prejudice played in the riots and blamed Mexican youth gangs.<ref name="LAA"/>

On June 16, 1943, a week after the riots, ] ] commented on the riots in her newspaper column. "The question goes deeper than just suits. It is a racial protest. I have been worried for a long time about the Mexican racial situation. It is a problem with roots going a long way back, and we do not always face these problems as we should."<ref name="LAA"/> The '']'' published an editorial the next day expressing outrage: it accused Mrs. Roosevelt of having ] leanings and stirring "race discord".<ref>{{cite book |last=Pagán |first=Eduardo Obregón |author-link1=Eduardo Obregón Pagán |title=Murder at the Sleepy Lagoon: Zoot Suits, Race, and Riot in Wartime L.A. |location=Chapel Hill |publisher=] |year=2004 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=3W-rk4EaeYEC |isbn=9780807862094 |access-date=December 26, 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160603222605/https://books.google.com/books?id=3W-rk4EaeYEC&printsec=frontcover |archive-date=June 3, 2016 |url-status=live |df=mdy-all }}{{page needed|date=September 2012}}</ref>

On June 21, 1943, the State Un-American Activities Committee, under state senator ], arrived in Los Angeles with orders to "determine whether the present Zoot Suit Riots were sponsored by ] agencies attempting to spread disunity between the ]". Although Tenney claimed he had evidence the riots were "xis]]-sponsored", no evidence was ever presented to support this claim. Japanese propaganda broadcasts accused the U.S. government of ignoring the brutality of U.S. Marines toward Mexicans. In late 1944, ignoring the findings of the McGucken committee and the unanimous reversal of the convictions by the appeals court in the ] on October 4, the ] announced that the ] was an "effective communist front".<ref name="Cosgrove"/><ref name="Kenney"/>

Later scholars generally characterize the Zoot Suit riots as a "] against the Mexican American community".<ref name=pagan /> Many post-war civil rights activists and authors, such as ], ], and ], have said they were inspired by the Zoot Suit Riots. ] and ] were both zoot suiters as young men who later became political activists.<ref name="Cosgrove"/>

On June 9, 2023, roughly 80 years after the attacks, the ] publicly condemned the Zoot Suit riots and apologized for its role in contributing to it.<ref>{{cite web | title=Los Angeles apologizes for Zoot Suit Riots 80 years later | website=NBC News | date=2023-06-10 | url=https://www.nbcnews.com/now/video/los-angeles-apologizes-for-zoot-suit-riots-80-years-later-181564997799 | access-date=2023-06-24}}</ref>


==See also== ==See also==
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* ], Australia, 1942 * ], Australia, 1942
* ] in Wellington, New Zealand, 1943 * ] in Wellington, New Zealand, 1943
* ], England, 1943
* ]
* ]
* ]
*], a political party which some have attempted to link to the unrest.


==References== ==References==
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* Alvarez, Luis. ''The Power of the Zoot: Youth Culture and Resistance During World War II'' (University of California Press, 2008) * Alvarez, Luis. ''The Power of the Zoot: Youth Culture and Resistance During World War II'' (University of California Press, 2008)
*{{cite journal |first1=Richard Griswold |last1=del Castillo |title=The Los Angeles 'Zoot Suit Riots' Revisited: Mexican and Latin American Perspectives |journal=] |volume=16 |issue=2 |year=2000 |pages=367–91 |jstor=1052202 |doi=10.1525/msem.2000.16.2.03a00080}} *{{cite journal |first1=Richard Griswold |last1=del Castillo |title=The Los Angeles 'Zoot Suit Riots' Revisited: Mexican and Latin American Perspectives |journal=] |volume=16 |issue=2 |year=2000 |pages=367–91 |jstor=1052202 |doi=10.1525/msem.2000.16.2.03a00080}}
*Mazon, Maurizio. ''The Zoot-Suit Riots: The Psychology of Symbolic Annihilation.'' University of Texas Press, Austin, TX. 2002 ISBN 0-292-79803-2 ISBN 9780292798038 *Mazon, Maurizio. ''The Zoot-Suit Riots: The Psychology of Symbolic Annihilation.'' University of Texas Press, Austin, TX. 2002 {{ISBN|0-292-79803-2}} {{ISBN|9780292798038}}
*{{cite journal |doi=10.1215/01455532-24-1-223 |title=Los Angeles Geopolitics and the Zoot Suit Riot, 1943 |year=2000 |last1=Pagan |first1=Eduardo Obregon |journal=] |volume=24 |pages=223–56 |url=http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/ssh/summary/v024/24.1pagan.html}} *{{cite journal |doi=10.1215/01455532-24-1-223 |title=Los Angeles Geopolitics and the Zoot Suit Riot, 1943 |year=2000 |last1=Pagán |first1=Eduardo Obregon |journal=] |volume=24 |pages=223–56 |doi-broken-date=November 1, 2024 |url=http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/ssh/summary/v024/24.1pagan.html}}
*Pagán, Eduardo Obregón. ''Murder at the Sleepy Lagoon: Zoot Suits, Race & Riots in Wartime L.A.'' Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. 2003. ISBN 0-8078-5494-8 ISBN 9780807854945 *{{cite book |last=Pagán |first=Eduardo Obregón |author-link1=Eduardo Obregón Pagán |title=Murder at the Sleepy Lagoon: Zoot Suits, Race, and Riot in Wartime L.A. |location=Chapel Hill |publisher=] |year=2004 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=3W-rk4EaeYEC |isbn=9780807862094}}
*''Zoot Suit Riots''. '']'' series, produced by Joseph Tovares. ], 2001. 60 mins. PBS Video. *''Zoot Suit Riots''. '']'' series, produced by Joseph Tovares. ], 2001. 60 mins. PBS Video.


==External links== ==External links==
{{Commons category|Zoot Suit Riots}}
* '']''.
* '']''.
* written about the Zoot Suit Riots. * written about the Zoot Suit Riots.
*, from the University of California * {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080726185428/http://www.calisphere.universityofcalifornia.edu/browse/keyword/%22Zoot+Suit+Riots%22 |date=July 26, 2008 }}, from the University of California
*{{cite journal |doi=10.1093/hwj/18.1.77 |url=http://invention.smithsonian.org/centerpieces/whole_cloth/u7sf/u7materials/cosgrove.html |title=The Zoot-Suit and Style Warfare |year=1984 |last1=Cosgrove |first1=Stuart |journal=] |volume=18 |pages=77–91}} *{{cite journal |doi=10.1093/hwj/18.1.77 |url=http://invention.smithsonian.org/centerpieces/whole_cloth/u7sf/u7materials/cosgrove.html |title=The Zoot-Suit and Style Warfare |year=1984 |last1=Cosgrove |first1=Stuart |journal=] |volume=18 |pages=77–91}}


{{Chicano and Mexican American topics}} {{Chicano and Mexican American topics}}
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Latest revision as of 18:59, 10 December 2024

1943 race riot by U.S. Armed Forces servicemen against Latinos in Los Angeles "Zoot Suit Riot" redirects here. For the album by the Cherry Poppin' Daddies, see Zoot Suit Riot (album). For that album's title song, see Zoot Suit Riot (song).

Zoot Suit Riots
Youths stripped and beaten by U.S. Navy sailors
LocationLos Angeles, California, United States
DateJune 3–8, 1943
TargetMexican American youths and other zoot suit wearers
Injured150+
Victims500+ arrested
PerpetratorsAmerican servicemen, police officers, and white civilians
MotiveRacism, removal of zoot suits and "hoodlums"
Part of a series on
Discrimination
Forms
Attributes
Social
Religious
Ethnic/national
Manifestations
Policies
Countermeasures
Related topics
This article is part of a series on the
History of Chicanos
and Mexican Americans
Early-American period
Juan Crow
Chicano Movement
Post-Chicano Movement
Supreme Court cases
by region

The Zoot Suit Riots were a series of riots that took place June 3–8, 1943, in Los Angeles, California, United States, involving American servicemen stationed in Southern California and young Latino and Mexican American city residents. It was one of the dozen wartime industrial cities where race-related riots occurred during the summer of 1943, along with Mobile, Alabama; Beaumont, Texas; Detroit, Michigan; and New York City.

American servicemen and white Angelenos attacked and stripped children, teenagers, and youths who wore zoot suits, ostensibly because they considered the outfits, which were made from large amounts of fabric, to be unpatriotic during World War II. Rationing of fabrics and certain foods was required at the time for the war effort. While most of the white mobs targeted Mexican American youth, they also attacked African American and Filipino American young adults and children.

The Zoot Suit Riots followed the Sleepy Lagoon murder trial, after the death of a young Latino man in what was then an unincorporated commercial area near Los Angeles. Similar racist violence against Latinos happened in Chicago, San Diego, Oakland, Evansville, Philadelphia, and New York City as well. The defiance of zoot suiters became inspirational for Chicanos during the Chicano Movement.

Background

Mexicans in Los Angeles

California was a part of Mexico for 27 years, and part of the Viceroyalty of New Spain for centuries, before becoming part of the United States following the Mexican–American War. Because of this history, there has always been a large Latino population in California. During the early 20th century, many Mexicans immigrated for work to US border states that needed workers, areas such as Texas, Arizona, and California. They were recruited by farmers for work on the large farms and also worked in those states in non-agricultural jobs.

During the Great Depression, in the early 1930s, the United States deported between 500,000 and 2 million people of Mexican descent (including the expulsion of up to 1.2 million children who were U.S. citizens but accompanied their parents back to Mexico.) to Mexico (see Mexican Repatriation), in order to reduce demands on limited American economic resources. By the late 1930s, about three million Mexican Americans resided in the United States. Los Angeles had the highest concentration of ethnic Mexicans outside Mexico.

Job discrimination in Los Angeles forced minorities to work for below poverty level wages. The Los Angeles newspapers described Mexicans with racially inflammatory propaganda, suggesting a problem with juvenile delinquency. These factors caused much racial tension between Mexican immigrants, those of Mexican descent, and European Americans.

During this time, Los Angeles was undergoing an expansion, which caused disruptions in communal sites, family sites, and family patterns of social interactions due to poor city planning. One major decision was to put a million-dollar Naval training school for the Naval Reserve Armory in the Chavez Ravine, a primarily working-class and immigrant area for Mexican-Americans. As young Mexican-American men from the neighborhood grew agitated and began a campaign of harassment, intimidation, and resistance a year prior to the riots, the Chavez Ravine area would later be a hot spot for encounters between the zoot suiters and sailors.

Lalo Guerrero became known as the father of Chicano music, as young people adopted music, language, and dress of their own. Young men wore zoot suits—a flamboyant long jacket with baggy pegged pants, sometimes accessorized with a pork pie hat, a long watch chain, and thick-soled shoes. They called themselves pachucos. In the early 1940s, arrests of Mexican-American youths and negative stories in the Los Angeles Times fueled a perception that these pachuco gangs were delinquents who were a threat to the broader community.

In the summer of 1942, the Sleepy Lagoon murder case made national news. Nine teenage members of the 38th Street Gang were accused of murdering a civilian man named José Díaz in an abandoned quarry pit. The nine defendants were convicted at trial and sentenced to long prison terms. Eduardo Obregón Pagán wrote:

Many Angelenos saw the death of José Díaz as a tragedy that resulted from a larger pattern of lawlessness and rebellion among Mexican American youths, discerned through their self-conscious fashioning of difference, and increasingly called for stronger measures to crack down on juvenile delinquency.

The convictions of the nine young men were ultimately overturned, but the case generated much animosity within the United States toward Mexican Americans. The police and press characterized all Mexican youths as "pachuco hoodlums and baby gangsters".

World War II

With the entry of the United States into World War II in December 1941 following the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, the nation had to deal with the restrictions of rationing and the prospects of conscription. In March 1942, the War Production Board (WPB) regulated the manufacture of men's suits and all clothing that contained wool. To achieve a 26% cut-back in the use of fabrics, the WPB issued regulations for the manufacture of what Esquire magazine called, "streamlined suits by Uncle Sam". The regulations effectively forbade the manufacture of the wide-cut zoot suits and full women's skirts or dresses. Most legitimate tailoring companies ceased to manufacture or advertise any suits that fell outside the War Production Board's guidelines. But the demand for zoot suits did not decline; a network of bootleg tailors based in Los Angeles and New York City continued to produce the garments. Youths also continued to wear clothes which they already owned.

Meanwhile, American soldiers, sailors, and Marines from across the country travelled to Los Angeles in large numbers as part of the war effort; they were given leave while awaiting to be shipped out to the Pacific theater. Servicemen and zoot suiters in Los Angeles were both immediately identifiable by their dress. Some servicemen and others in the community felt that the continued wearing of zoot suits represented the youths' public flouting of rationing regulations. Officials began to cast wearing of zoot suits in moral terms and associated it with the commission of petty crime, violence and the snubbing of national wartime rules. In 1943, many servicemen resented the sight of young Latinos wearing zoot suits after clothing restrictions had been published, especially as most came from areas of the country with little experience or knowledge of Mexican-American culture. Although Mexican-Americans were overrepresented in the armed forces, they were not common or respected enough to defuse these tensions.

One of the first conflicts between the sailors and the zoot suiters was in August 1942, near Chinatown. The sailors who trained in the Chavez Ravine went to Chinatown on leave. A sailor and his girlfriend were walking when four zoot suiters blocked the sidewalk in front of them. The zoot suiters refused to let them pass and pushed the sailor into the street. The young zoot-suiter and the sailor stood their ground in silence until finally, the sailor backed away.

Zoot suits

This photograph of three men sporting variations on the zoot suit was taken by Oliver F. Atkins.

Zoot suit fashion found its origins in the urban black scene during the 1940s. This style of clothing cultivated a sense of racial pride and significance; however, the fashion statement soon made its way into the wardrobes of young Southern Californian Mexican Americans, Italians and Filipinos, who became the quintessential wearers of the zoot suit. The transfer and sharing of the zoot suit fashion indicated a growing influence of African American popular culture on young Mexican American, Italian American and Filipino Americans. Additionally, "analysis of the Los Angeles zoot-suit riot and journalists' and politicians' in and the outfit's connections with race relations, slang, jazz music and dance permit an understanding of the politics and social significance of what is trivial in itself -- popular culture and its attendant styles".

The zoot suit was originally a statement about creating a new wave of music and dress, but it also held significant political meaning. The flamboyant and colorful material indicated a desire to express oneself against the boring and somber slum lifestyle. The zoot suit provided young African American and Mexican youth a sense of individualistic identity within their cultures and society as they discovered "highly charged emotional and symbolic meaning" through the movement, music, and dress.

The zoot suit typically included bright-colored fabric, long suit coats that often reached the knees, wide shoulders, and gathered or tapered pants. The arm and ankle areas were often much tighter than the rest of the fabric, giving the whole look a triangular shape.

Often the suit was paired with accessories such as chains and leather-soled shoes, which were typically worn to exaggerate and prove a point of rebellion standing against the wealth and status that many of these youth were unable to access due to their economic and racial identities.

Pachucas and Chicanas

Three young Pachuca women held in the Los Angeles County Jail during the 1943 Sleepy Lagoon trial.

The urban, Mexican-American youth often called themselves "pachucos". The female parallels were called "pachucas" and wore tight sweaters and relatively full, flared skirts, often paired with high hair-dos, large earrings, and heavy makeup. Many young Mexican-American women who were not pachucas avoided these clothing styles and hairstyles in order to avoid being seen as troublemakers by white people. Some women even reported that they had heard of pachucas hiding knives in their hair.

Pachucas formed their own gangs, joined the male pachuco gangs, and carried weapons. This behavior was often said to have been a divergence from the expected feminine beauty and manners of the middle-class. Often, for parents of Mexican-American girls, the pachucas "embodied not only a dissident femininity but a threatening, distinctly American identity as well". For some young women, the characteristics of the style promoted a sense of social mobility and "cultural hybridity" that was expressed through "increased interracial/ethnic relations, bilingualism, and pachuco slang".

Pachucas and Chicanas were less referred to in the media, partly because they threatened the gender and sexuality norms that existed at the time. When acknowledged, they were regarded mainly as secondary members to the male gang members. Many scholars exclude the pachuca narrative in major events in the Chicano movement. Events like the Sleepy Lagoon incident of 1942 and Zoot Suit Riots of 1943 have been described as "a boyish fight over a pretty girl" and a brawl involving "homeboys". However, records show that many women also participated in these events and had important roles in shaping their outcomes. In the Sleepy Lagoon incident, both men and women were attacked by a group of youths that later court documents referred to as the "Downey Boys". The pachucos and pachucas left Sleepy Lagoon after the attack, heading to the 38th Street neighborhood to gather reinforcements. They returned to Sleepy Lagoon to find that the Downey Boys had departed, and then headed to a party at the Williams Ranch where a fight broke out upon their arrival. Claims have asserted that there were women screaming and yelling as the fighting ensued.

Continuing into the end of World War II, Mexican-American women were at the center of much conflict between Anglo-American servicemen and Mexican American youths. In the weeks before the riots, servicemen reported that pachucos had been harassing, molesting, raping, and insulting their wives, girlfriends, and relatives. One local Los Angeles newspaper included a story of two young women who had allegedly been abducted in downtown and raped in a "zoot suit orgy". Many of these reports began building up and was one of the major instigators of the coming riots, as servicemen had declared that they will take matters into their own hands since the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) had supposedly done nothing to stop the attacks from pachucos on their women. On the contrary, Horace R. Cayton, a writer for the Pittsburgh Courier, "attributed the riots to non-Mexican servicemen, who he claimed envied Mexican American male zooters and desired the 'pretty brown creatures' with whom they consorted". However, the press was dominated by the stories which often claimed that "loose . . . girls of the Los Angeles Mexican quarter" were responsible for taking advantage of unaware sailors who had money.

Prelude

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Following the Sleepy Lagoon case, U.S. service personnel got into violent altercations with young Mexican Americans in zoot suits in San Jose, Oakland, San Diego, Delano, Los Angeles, and smaller cities and towns in California. During this period, the immense war buildup attracted tens of thousands of new workers to factories and shipyards in the West Coast, including African Americans from the South in the second wave of the Great Migration.

The most serious ethnic conflicts erupted in Los Angeles. Two altercations between military personnel and zoot suiters catalyzed the larger riots. The first occurred on May 30, 1943, at around 8:00 p.m., four days before the start of the riots. A dozen sailors, including Seaman Second Class Joe Dacy Coleman, were walking down Main Street in Los Angeles when they spotted a group of Mexican women on the opposite side. The group, except for Coleman, crossed the street to speak to the women. Coleman continued, walking past two zoot suiters when the sailor turned and grabbed the arm of one of the young men.

Riots

"Authorities meet to discuss the Zoot Suit Riots" (photo: Los Angeles Daily News)

Attacks begin

On the night of June 3, 1943, about eleven sailors got off a bus and started walking along Main Street in Downtown Los Angeles. Encountering a group of young Mexican Americans in zoot suits, they got into an argument. The sailors later told the LAPD that they were jumped and beaten by this gang, while the zoot suiters claimed the altercation was started by the sailors. The LAPD responded to the incident, including many off-duty officers who identified as the Vengeance Squad. The officers went to the scene "seeking to clean up Main Street from what they viewed as the loathsome influence of pachuco gangs".

The next day, 200 sailors got a convoy of about 20 taxicabs and headed for East Los Angeles, the center of Mexican-American settlement. The sailors spotted a group of young zoot suiters and assaulted them with clubs. They stripped the boys of the zoot suits and burned the tattered clothes in a pile. They attacked and stripped everyone they came across who were wearing zoot suits. Media coverage of the incidents then started to spread, inducing more people to join in the mayhem.

Attacks spread

During the next few days, thousands of servicemen and residents joined the attacks, marching abreast down streets, entering bars and movie houses, and assaulting any young Mexican American males they encountered. In one incident, sailors dragged two zoot suiters on-stage as a film was being screened, stripped them in front of the audience, and then urinated on their suits. Although police accompanied the rioters, they had orders not to arrest any, and some of them joined in the rioting. After several days, more than 150 people had been injured, and the police had arrested more than 500 Mexican American civilians on charges ranging from "rioting" to "vagrancy".

A witness to the attacks, journalist Carey McWilliams wrote,

Marching through the streets of downtown Los Angeles, a mob of several thousand soldiers, sailors, and civilians, proceeded to beat up every zoot suiter they could find. Pushing its way into the important motion picture theaters, the mob ordered the management to turn on the house lights and then ran up and down the aisles dragging Mexicans out of their seats. Streetcars were halted while Mexicans, and some Filipinos and Negroes, were jerked from their seats, pushed into the streets and beaten with a sadistic frenzy.

No soldiers were arrested as a result of the beatings. Many Mexican American youth, instead, were arrested after being attacked by the soldiers.

The local press lauded the attacks, describing them as having a "cleansing effect" to rid Los Angeles of "miscreants" and "hoodlums". As the riots progressed, the media reported the arrest of Amelia Venegas, a female zoot suiter charged with carrying a brass knuckleduster. While the revelation of female pachucos' (pachucas) involvement in the riots led to frequent coverage of the activities of female pachuca gangs, the media suppressed any mention of the white mobs that were also involved.

The Los Angeles City Council approved a resolution criminalizing the wearing of "zoot suits with reat [sic] pleats within the city limits of LA" with the expectation that Mayor Fletcher Bowron would sign it into law. Councilman Norris Nelson had stated, "The zoot suit has become a badge of hoodlumism." No ordinance was approved by the City Council or signed into law by the Mayor, but the council encouraged the WPB to take steps "to curb illegal production of men's clothing in violation of WPB limitation orders". While the mobs had first targeted only pachucos, they also attacked African Americans in zoot suits who lived in the Central Avenue corridor area. The Navy and Marine Corps command staffs intervened on June 8 to reduce the attacks, confining sailors and Marines to barracks and ordering that Los Angeles be declared off-limits to all military personnel; this was enforced by Navy Shore Patrol personnel. Their official position was that their men were acting in self-defense.

Reactions

The Coordinating Council for Latin American Youth sent this telegram to President Franklin Roosevelt urging his attention to the riots in Los Angeles. National Archives, General Records of the Department of State

As the riots subsided, the most urgent concern of officials was relations with Mexico, as the economy of Southern California relied on the importation of cheap Mexican labor to assist in the harvesting of California crops. After the Mexican Embassy lodged a formal protest with the State Department, Governor Earl Warren of California ordered the creation of the McGucken Committee (headed by Los Angeles bishop Joseph McGucken) to investigate and determine the cause of the riots. In 1943, the committee issued its report; it determined racism to be a central cause of the riots, further stating that it was "an aggravating practice (of the media) to link the phrase zoot suit with the report of a crime". The governor appointed the Peace Officers Committee on Civil Disturbances, chaired by Robert W. Kenny, president of the National Lawyers Guild to make recommendations to the police. Human relations committees were appointed, and police departments were required to train their officers to treat all citizens equally. Mayor Fletcher Bowron downplayed the role racial prejudice played in the riots and blamed Mexican youth gangs.

On June 16, 1943, a week after the riots, First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt commented on the riots in her newspaper column. "The question goes deeper than just suits. It is a racial protest. I have been worried for a long time about the Mexican racial situation. It is a problem with roots going a long way back, and we do not always face these problems as we should." The Los Angeles Times published an editorial the next day expressing outrage: it accused Mrs. Roosevelt of having communist leanings and stirring "race discord".

On June 21, 1943, the State Un-American Activities Committee, under state senator Jack Tenney, arrived in Los Angeles with orders to "determine whether the present Zoot Suit Riots were sponsored by Nazi agencies attempting to spread disunity between the United States and Latin-American countries". Although Tenney claimed he had evidence the riots were "xis-sponsored", no evidence was ever presented to support this claim. Japanese propaganda broadcasts accused the U.S. government of ignoring the brutality of U.S. Marines toward Mexicans. In late 1944, ignoring the findings of the McGucken committee and the unanimous reversal of the convictions by the appeals court in the Sleepy Lagoon case on October 4, the Tenney Committee announced that the National Lawyers Guild was an "effective communist front".

Later scholars generally characterize the Zoot Suit riots as a "pogrom against the Mexican American community". Many post-war civil rights activists and authors, such as Luis Valdez, Ralph Ellison, and Richard Wright, have said they were inspired by the Zoot Suit Riots. Cesar Chavez and Malcolm X were both zoot suiters as young men who later became political activists.

On June 9, 2023, roughly 80 years after the attacks, the Los Angeles City Council publicly condemned the Zoot Suit riots and apologized for its role in contributing to it.

See also

References

  1. ^ Pagan, Eduardo Obregon (2000). "Los Angeles Geopolitics and the Zoot Suit Riot, 1943". Social Science History. 24 (1): 223–256. doi:10.1017/S0145553200010129. ISSN 1527-8034. S2CID 145233558.
  2. "Zoot Suits Riots". August 9, 2023.
  3. Peiss, Kathy (2011). Zoot Suit. University of Pennsylvania Press. p. 33. ISBN 9780812223033. Over the next few days, crowds of white civilians joined in the rampage, targeting mainly Mexican American youths but also some African Americans and Filipinos.
  4. Novas, Himilce (2007). "Mexican Americans". Everything you need to know about Latino history (2008 ed.). New York City: Plume. p. 98. ISBN 9780452288898. LCCN 2007032941.
  5. Sandoval, Denise M. (2013). "The Politics of Low and Slow/Bajito y Suavecito: Black and Chicano Lowriders in Los Angeles, from the 1960s through the 1970s". In Kun, Josh; Pulido, Laura (eds.). Black and Brown in Los Angeles: Beyond Conflict and Coalition. Berkeley, California: University of California Press. p. 197. ISBN 9780520956872.
  6. Mazón, Mauricio (1989). The Zoot-Suit Riots: The Psychology of Symbolic Annihilation. University of Texas Press. pp. 118. ISBN 9780292798038.
  7. Berumen, Garcia; Javier, Frank (2016). Latino Image Makers in Hollywood: Performers, Filmmakers and Films Since the 1960s. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland. p. 145. ISBN 9781476614113.
  8. U.S. Bureau of Census (1960). "C". Historical statistics of the United States: colonial times to 1957. Vol. 62. Washington, DC: Superintendent of Documents, U. S. Govt. Print Off., 1960. pp. 57–58. Retrieved September 11, 2010.
  9. Johnson, Kevin R. (2005). "The Forgotten 'Repatriation' of Persons of Mexican Ancestry and Lessons for the 'War on Terror'". Pace Law Review. 26 (1): 1–26. doi:10.58948/2331-3528.1147. S2CID 140417518. Archived from the original on August 22, 2016. Retrieved June 5, 2016.
  10. Pagán, Eduardo Obregón (June 3, 2009). Murder at The Sleepy Lagoon. ReadHowYouWant.com. pp. 23–28. ISBN 978-1-4429-9501-7.
  11. Reisler, Mark (1976). By the Sweat of Their Brow: Mexican Immigrant Labor in the United States, 1900–1940. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press. pp. 95–97. ISBN 978-0-8371-8894-2. OCLC 2121388. Mexican workers helped fulfill the unskilled labor needs of American industry as well as agriculture. Noting their availability at a time of declining European immigration and their willingness to accept low wages, non-agricultural employers began to rely upon Mexican workers as early as World War I.
  12. Ryan, James Gilbert; Schlup, Leonard C. (2006). Historical dictionary of the 1940s. Armonk, New York: M.E. Sharpe. pp. 250–251. ISBN 978-0-7656-0440-8. Archived from the original on April 30, 2016. Retrieved December 26, 2015. The establishment of the Fair Employment Office and Coordinating Committee on Latin American Affairs and the Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs dealt specifically with Mexican American concerns. The prevailing racial violence ensured that federal efforts would continue, but discrimination lived on. By 1945, however, reforms were no longer deemed necessary ; protective innovations ceased, yet migration continued
  13. Carey, McWilliams; Stewart, Dean; Gendar, Jeannine (2001). Fool's Paradise: A Carey McWilliams Reader. Heyday Books. pp. 180–183. ISBN 978-1-890771-41-6. Archived from the original on May 2, 2016. Retrieved December 26, 2015. To appreciate the social significance of the Sleepy Lagoon case, it is necessary to have a picture of the concurrent events. The anti-Mexican press campaign that had been whipped up through the spring and early summer of 1942 finally brought recognition, from the officials, of the existence of an 'awful' situation in reference to 'Mexican juvenile delinquency.'
  14. Pagán, Eduardo Obregón (June 3, 2009). Murder at The Sleepy Lagoon. ReadHowYouWant.com. pp. 130–132. ISBN 978-1-4429-9501-7. In the early stages of the grand jury investigation, many of the larger newspapers devoted no more than a few brief lines to . Yet from the beginning, the Los Angeles Evening Herald and Express latched on to the term 'Sleepy Lagoon' and immediately turned it on the accused youths. 'Goons of Sleepy Lagoon' was a favorite moniker that skewed the brief and otherwise bland reporting of the grand jury investigation and subsequent trial.
  15. Rule, James B (1989). Theories of Civil Violence. Vol. 1. Berkeley, California: University of California Press. pp. 102–108. ISBN 9780520067967. Archived from the original on May 18, 2016. Retrieved December 26, 2015. The authors surveyed references to Mexicans in the Los Angeles Times during the period leading up to that city's anti-Mexican riots of 1943; these events were called 'zoot suit riots' at the time. Turner found that, as the riots approached, newspaper references to 'zoot suiters' rose whereas other references to Mexicans bearing less emotional and negative connotations declined. The zoot suit had become a symbol or code expression for the 'bad' Mexican, even though it appeared that few of the Mexican youths involved in the riots actually wore the notorious outfit.
  16. Solomon, Larry (1998). Roots of Justice Stories of Organizing in Communities of Color. Hoboken, New Jersey: Wiley-Blackwell. p. 22. ISBN 9780787961787.
  17. ^ Eduardo Obregon Pagán. "Los Angeles Geopolitics and the Zoot Suit Riot, 1943". Social Science History no.1 (2000): 223–256.
  18. ^ Cosgrove, Stuart (1984). "The Zoot-Suit and Style Warfare". History Workshop Journal. 18: 77–91. doi:10.1093/hwj/18.1.77. Archived from the original on August 13, 2014. Retrieved August 4, 2009.
  19. Pagán, Eduardo Obregón (June 3, 2009). Murder at The Sleepy Lagoon. ReadHowYouWant.com. p. 215. ISBN 978-1-4429-9501-7.
  20. del Castillo, Richard Griswold (July 2000). "The Los Angeles 'Zoot Suit Riots' Revisited: Mexican and Latin American Perspectives". Mexican Studies. 16 (2). Berkeley, California: University of California Press: 367–91. doi:10.1525/msem.2000.16.2.03a00080. JSTOR 1052202.
  21. Pagán, Eduardo Obregón (June 3, 2009). Murder at The Sleepy Lagoon. ReadHowYouWant.com. pp. 191–194. ISBN 978-1-4429-9501-7.
  22. Schoeffler, O. E.; Gale, William (1973). Esquire's encyclopedia of 20th century men's fashions. New York City: McGraw-Hill. p. 24. ISBN 978-0070554801. LCCN 72009811.
  23. Osgerby, Bill (2008). "Understanding the 'Jackpot Market': Media, Marketing, and the Rise of the American Teenager". In Patrick L. Jamieson & Daniel Romer (ed.). The Changing Portrayal of Adolescents in the Media Since 1950. New York City: Oxford University Press US. pp. 31–32. ISBN 978-0-19-534295-6.
  24. ^ "Los Angeles Zoot Suit Riots". Laalmanac.com. June 3, 1943. Archived from the original on April 23, 2016. Retrieved July 5, 2016.
  25. Some 500,000 Mexican Americans served in the U.S. armed services (around 17% of their population, compared to under 10% for the general public) where they had the highest percentage of Congressional Medal of Honor recipients (17%) of any minority in the United States. Between 1942 and 1967, over four million Mexicans and Puerto Ricans were contracted by the United States under the Bracero Program to alleviate the labor shortage caused by WWII.
  26. Gregory, Alice (April 2016). "A Brief History of the Zoot Suit". Smithsonian. Retrieved October 11, 2019.
  27. ^ Daniels, Douglas Henry (2002). "Los Angeles Zoot: Race "Riot," the Pachuco, and Black Music Culture". The Journal of African American History. 87. Chicago, Illinois: University of Chicago Press: 98–118. doi:10.1086/JAAHv87n1p98. ISSN 1548-1867. JSTOR 1562494. S2CID 224831340.
  28. ^ Howard, Sarah Elizabeth (January 2010). "Zoot to Boot: The Zoot Suit as Both Costume and Symbol". Studies in Latin American Popular Culture. 28 (1). Austin, Texas: University of Texas Press: 112–131. doi:10.1353/sla.0.0004. ISSN 2157-2941. PMID 20836266. S2CID 30345366.
  29. "1940s Zoot Suit Girls". vintagedancer.com. Retrieved October 11, 2019.
  30. ^ Ramírez, Catherine S. (July 1, 2010). The Woman in the Zoot Suit. Durham, North Carolina: Duke University Press. doi:10.1215/9780822388647. ISBN 9780822388647.
  31. "Zoot Suit Riots | Summary, Causes, Significance, & Facts". Encyclopedia Britannica. Archived from the original on September 27, 2018. Retrieved September 27, 2018.
  32. ^ Alvarez, Luis A. (2001). The Power of the Zoot: Race, Community, and Resistance in American Youth Culture, 1940–1945. Austin: University of Texas. p. 204.
  33. McWilliams, Carey (1990). North from Mexico: The Spanish-speaking People of the United States. Contributions in American History. Santa Barbara, California: Greenwood Press. p. 243. ISBN 978-0-313-26631-7.
  34. McWilliams, Carey (2001). "Blood on the Pavements". Fool's Paradise: A Carey McWilliams Reader. Heyday Books. ISBN 978-1-890771-41-6.
  35. Vernez, Georges (1994). "Mexican labor in California's economy : from rapid growth to likely stability". www.rand.org. Archived from the original on December 14, 2018. Retrieved December 20, 2018.
  36. ^ "Full text of "My first forty years in California politics, 1922–1962 oral history transcript"". 1964. p. 123. Archived from the original on March 20, 2016. Retrieved July 5, 2016.
  37. ^ "Los Angeles Zoot Suit Riots". Los Angeles Almanac. Archived from the original on August 1, 2010. Retrieved July 27, 2010.
  38. Pagán, Eduardo Obregón (2004). Murder at the Sleepy Lagoon: Zoot Suits, Race, and Riot in Wartime L.A. Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 9780807862094. Archived from the original on June 3, 2016. Retrieved December 26, 2015.
  39. "Los Angeles apologizes for Zoot Suit Riots 80 years later". NBC News. June 10, 2023. Retrieved June 24, 2023.

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