Беспорядки в Уоттсе (Восстание в Уоттсе, англ. Watts Riots) — гражданские беспорядки в пригороде Лос-Анджелеса Уоттс в период с 11 по 17 августа 1965 года. В результате шестидневных беспорядков тридцать четыре человека погибло, 1032 человека получили ранения, 3438 были арестованы, ...
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Диссертация 2006 года на тему Молодежное протестное движение в США : вторая половина 1950-х - первая половина 1970-х годов. Автор: Колбасина, Ольга Владимировна, кандидат исторических наук. Специальность: Всеобщая история (соответствующего периода), код специальности (шифр ВАК): ...
Armed National Guardsmen march toward smoke on the horizon during the Watts riots in Los Angeles, California, August 1965.
Беспорядки в Уоттсе (Восстание в Уоттсе, англ. Watts Riots) — гражданские беспорядки в пригороде Лос-Анджелеса Уоттс в период с 11 по 17 августа 1965 года.
What truly triggered six days of rioting and rebellion in the Watts neighborhood of Los Angeles in August 1965 remains somewhat hazy. It depends, largely and predictably, on who you ask.
What truly triggered six days of rioting and rebellion in the Watts neighborhood of Los Angeles in August 1965 remains somewhat hazy. It depends, largely and predictably, on who you ask.
Watts Riots of 1965, series of violent confrontations between Los Angeles police and residents of Watts and other predominantly African American neighbourhoods of South-Central Los Angeles that began August 11, 1965, and lasted for six days.
The Watts Riots, also known as the Watts Rebellion, was a large series of riots that broke out August 11, 1965, in the predominantly black neighborhood of Watts in Los Angeles. The Watts Riots lasted for six days, resulting in 34 deaths, 1,032 injuries and 4,000 arrests, involving 34...
In spite of the protest, the Watts Rebellion did not significantly improve the lives of the community’s black population.
This week marks the 50th anniversary of the Watts Riots in Los Angeles in August 1965.
11, 1965, that Los Angeles police officer Lee Minikus tried to arrest Marquette Frye for driving drunk in the city’s Watts neighborhood—an event that led to one of the most infamous race riots in American history.
On August 12, 1965, the first headlines hit newsstands and journalists began to write the first draft of the history of the Watts Riots.