America in the summer of 1919 ran red with blood from racial violence, and yet today, 100 years later, not many people know it even happened.
It flowed in small towns like Elaine, Arkansas, in medium-size places such as Annapolis, Maryland, and Syracuse, New York, and in big cities like Washington and Chicago.
Hundreds of African-American men, women and children were burned alive, shot, lynched or beaten to death by white mobs.
Thousands saw their homes and businesses burned to the ground and were driven out, many never to return.
It was branded "Red Summer" because of the bloodshed and amounted to some of the worst white-on-black violence in the US history.
Beyond the lives and family fortunes lost, it had far-reaching repercussions, contributing to generations of black distrust of white authority.
But it also galvanised blacks to defend themselves and their neighborhoods with fists and guns; reinvigorated civil rights organisations like the NAACP and led to a new era of activism; gave rise to courageous reporting by black journalists; and influenced the generation of leaders who would take up the fight for racial equality decades later.
"The people who were the icons of the civil rights movement were raised by the people who survived Red Summer," said Saje Mathieu, a history professor at the University of Minnesota.
For all that, there are no national observances marking Red Summer.
History textbooks ignore it, and most museums don't acknowledge it.
The reason: Red Summer contradicts the post-World War I-era notion that America was making the world safe for democracy, historians say.
"It doesn't fit into the neat stories we tell ourselves," said David Krugler, author of "1919, The Year of Racial Violence: How African Americans Fought Back."
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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