Zoot Suit Riots

In 1943, with the country two years into an escalating World War, the streets of Los Angeles erupted in mob violence. Find out more about the riots and what ignited them.

This story was created for the Google Expeditions project by ePublishing Partners, now available on Google Arts & Culture

By Gordon CosterLIFE Photo Collection

Fads, fights and civil rights

This incident, known as the ‘Zoot Suit Riots,’ is often relegated to a footnote of history and even considered amusing due to its association with a clothing fad. However, the Zoot Suit Riots were a brutal event that influenced the Latino and Chicano civil rights movements and minority youth culture for years to follow. 

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The Cotton Club, Harlem, New York City

The Cotton Club, formerly located at Lenox and 125th Streets in New York City, was the center of the 1930s and 1940s East Coast jazz scene.

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At the time, jazz was rebellious, youth-oriented, and specifically minority-associated, but nonetheless wildly popular with audiences of all races. With jazz came fashion, including the zoot suit.

By Marie HansenLIFE Photo Collection

Swing Jazz

‘Swing’ refers to both a style of jazz and the athletic dancing that went with it. Male swing dancers wore billowy trousers that tapered to the ankle, allowing movement in the hips while preventing tripping on cuffs. Narrow-waisted jackets emphasized a slender, athletic shape.

Print of Cab Calloway and dancers performing (1930s)Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture

Cab Calloway

Bandleader Cab Calloway popularized a wildly exaggerated ‘zoot suit’ and its accessories. 

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Youth culture

Jazz and swing were youth-oriented and associated with minorities. This gave zoot suits a reputation as ‘thug-’ or ‘gang-related’ clothing, a false characterization that led to grave consequences.

Zoot Suit (1940-42)Los Angeles County Museum of Art

This suit is a great example of Cab's influence, including a knee length jacket, flashy shoes, and a fedora hat, sometimes with a single feather.

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The Sleepy Lagoon Murder, Los Angeles, 1942

Just off the Los Angeles river was once a reservoir known as Sleepy Lagoon. Denied entry to public pools and swimming areas, Latino youths often hung out at this pond to swim and socialize. They belonged to the zoot-suit wearing Pachuco subculture, which was about to land in the public eye.

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José Diaz

On 2 August 1942, young José Díaz was found unconscious near Sleepy Lagoon. He later died of an injury that was consistent with falling or being struck by a car. The previous evening, Díaz had been at a party that had ended with a brawl.

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Arrests

With almost no evidence other than the brief fight at the party, Los Angeles police pursued the idea of a gang war among zoot-suit wearing Pachucos. They arrested 24 young men and charged them with Díaz’ ‘murder.’

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Trial

The Latino defendants received a grossly unfair trial. They were made to testify in the unwashed zoot suits they’d been arrested in. They were not allowed to sit near their lawyers. The judge allowed openly racist ‘expert’ testimony. Not surprisingly, 17 were convicted.

Alleged Zoot Suit leaders await the Los Angeles Grand Jury inquiry into the series of riots between Zoot-suiters and servicemen (1943) by Herald-Examiner Collection/ Los Angeles Public LibraryCalifornia State Archives

Publicity

The Los Angeles press used the trial to inflame the idea of wild, zoot-suit wearing Latino gangs terrorizing victims. Pachuco culture, with its bold, flamboyant suits and racism-defying pride, was characterized as delinquent and thuggish.

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Naval Reserve Armory, Los Angeles, California

When World War II broke out, the U.S. army built and expanded enormous new bases, camps, and labs across the country.

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Some were in isolated areas, while others were necessarily located near city transportation hubs. The Naval Reserve Armory, near today’s Dodger Stadium, took over land once known as Chavez Ravine, a Latino neighborhood of Los Angeles.

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Eminent Domain

The U.S. government has the right to seize private property to develop for public use in a process known as eminent domain or appropriation. In practice, redevelopment projects using eminent domain have disproportionately harm minority property owners. The demolition of Cesar Canyon created tensions with displaced Latino residents.

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Sailors

Sailors on leave stayed at the Naval Reserve Armory. They often passed through adjacent Latino neighborhoods on their way to downtown LA. Some residents complained that sailors could be loud, drunk, and lewd with local women. Locals, in turn, often harassed passing sailors.

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Tensions while Traveling

Though Latinos served in the Armed Forces in WWII, there was tension between the military and Latino communities. Many Latino farm and factory workers stayed in the U.S. during the war to produce needed food and goods, and they were looked down on for this.

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The Inciting Incident

On May 31st, 1943, a group of sailors bumped into a group of zoot-suit wearing pachucos. Tensions and harassment were expected, but this time, the confrontation escalated to violence that would soon engulf the city.

Zoot Suits (1942-09) by Marie HansenLIFE Photo Collection

Zoot Suits and Rationing

During World War II, many consumer goods were rationed. Fabrics were restricted to save cloth for soldier’s uniforms, parachutes, tents, and other wartime goods. Baggy zoot suits were considered an extravagant waste of fabric.

By Marie HansenLIFE Photo Collection

Pachucos vs. Patriots

Though their suits were likely old, the Pachucos presented a flamboyant, defiant image that the sailors considered unpatriotic. Another possible spark to the fight was the presence of Pachucas, girls who sometimes wore what were considered at the time to be revealing dresses.

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A Physical Fight

Somewhere near this spot, an argument between Pachucos and sailors turned violent. A sailor named Joe Dacy Coleman was pushed or punched to the ground, where he broke his jaw. The incident sparked a powder keg.

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The Riot

Following the incident involving Joe Dacy Coleman on May 31, 1943, sailors in and around Los Angeles formed mobs to avenge Coleman and punish the zoot suit wearing Pachucos. During the Zoot Suit Riots, gangs of soldiers sought out first Pachucos, then any Latino, and eventually any minority, for fierce beatings and humiliation.

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Orpheum Theater Incident

In one typical incident, Vincente Morales was in the Orpheum Theater when a mob of soldiers grabbed him and dragged him from the venue. On the street, they violently beat him, stripped him naked, and urinated on his zoot suit.

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Police

When police arrived at the Orpheum, instead of coming to Morales’s aid, they waited until the sailors had finished with him, and then arrested Morales for ‘disturbing the peace.’ Off-duty police officers formed the second-largest group of rioters, after sailors.

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Escalation

The riots escalated from a specific clash between two cultures to open racial war. One report described an African-American man wearing a uniform from his job at a defense plant being pulled from a streetcar and mutilated.

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Uncontrolled Violence

The riots expanded. Police and civilians joined soldiers in chasing down and beating Pachucos and other minorities. Sailors and soldiers took buses and cabs from other cities to LA to join in.

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The Press and National Reaction

Though the violence of the Zoot Suit Riots was largely one-sided, pro-military wartime sentiment and prevalent racism helped draw a biased picture of the events. The press, and eventually the laws, came down solidly on the side of the rioters.

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The Los Angeles Times

Though more cautious than tabloids that openly celebrated the beatings, the Los Angeles Times described zoot suits as a ‘badge of delinquency’ and claimed, ‘Zoot Suiters Learn Lesson.’ Other publications praised the sailors for ‘cleaning up the streets.’

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An End in LA

Local authorities did not put an end to the rioting, which continued for over a week. Eventually, the U.S. military banned servicemen from leaving the Armory, and the riots quieted down.

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Spreading to other Cities

Even after the riot in Los Angeles ended, similar violence flared up in Texas, Arizona, and places as far away as Philadelphia. Luckily, no deaths resulted from any of the rioting—only injuries.

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The Official Response

The one gesture the Los Angeles authorities made toward ending the violence was to ban the wearing of zoot suits within city limits. Technically, you could still be arrested for the crime today.

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