Because photographers were largely safe with authorities, the pictures show a stark power divide
Unlike today, when breaking news events are covered as much by civilian participants as credentialed members of the press, chronicling the Long Hot Summer of 1967 was almost exclusively the domain of professional photojournalists. It was the golden age of mass media, and though TV was commanding an increasingly bigger piece of the audience, plenty of people still got their news—and entertainment—from the printed page. Over time a rich trove of well composed archival news photos have come to define the events of that summer—but they are skewed towards the perspective of law enforcement. There are almost no pictures originating from within the simmering communities of Roxbury or Avondale at the time. Rather, our impression of how these riots played out is defined by the presence of lawmen, and the experience of the photojournalists embedded alongside them.
The riots of ‘67 weren’t tactically planned forays. They were impulsive, responsive, cathartic spurts of violence—and their participants sure as hell weren’t honoring press passes. The mostly white newsmen responding to these scenes weren’t immune from the violence. Indeed, some were targeted by rioters themselves. In Milwaukee in late July, “a UPI reporter was knocked to the ground and kicked by members of the mob. Other reporters had their cars pelted with rocks.”
Visiting photographers would have had no choice but to embed with law enforcement in order to access the action. And the result, though often enticingly cinematic, should be read within that context. In these moments, rioters appear criminal or helpless, while their arresting officers are humanized, righteous individuals in control. It was a familiar narrative for much of America: a determined authority restoring calm to a futile uprising of characterless, nearly invisible outsiders.
Note: These archival newswire photos are presented with their original captions, some of which lend insight into the biased terminologies of the time.