Collection

17 photos of Black Panther Party “Disturbance in Good Park,” Des Moines, Iowa

collection of 17 snapshot photographs showing the incident “Disturbance in Good Park,” April 13, 1969.
“North Side Revolutionaries in the Civil Rights Struggle”
by Bruce Fehn and Robert Jefferson
The Annals of Iowa 69 (Winter 2010)
Excerpt:
“During fall 1968 and spring 1969, as racial tensions intensified in Des Moines schools and elsewhere, Charles Knox became the militant face of the Des Moines Black Panther Party. Knox first came to prominence when, on October 10, 1968, a spectacular fire destroyed the Jewett Lumber Company on Des Moines’s east side. Five African Americans, including Knox, Joeanna Cheatom, and the latter’s 16-year-old son Marvin, were arrested and charged with setting the fire. Furthermore, while he was still under indictment for arson in the Jewett Lumber case, police arrested Knox in Good Park on April 13, 1969, for defying orders to stop speaking over a portable address system. On that day Knox and other Black Panther Party members had attended a rally at the park to promote a free breakfast program for impoverished children of the near north side neighborhood.50 The rally proceeded smoothly, and nearly came to a close, when about 12 police officers moved in to arrest participants on charges of unlawful assembly and resisting arrest. Des Moines police sergeant Ed Harlan told reporters that when police ar- rived at Good Park, Knox “turned his attention to the officers and advised the crowd to ‘rise up and strike out’ and to turn on the Des Moines pigs.” As police moved to arrest Knox, BPP member Charles Edward Smith came to the aid of his fellow Panther by trying to pull Knox from the clutches of arresting officers. At the same time, boisterous groups moved down University Avenue, hurling rocks and bricks at squad cars and passing vehicles, smashing windshields in the process.51 By nightfall, University Avenue had taken on features of a war zone, with Forest and University avenues closed to traffic and patrolmen stationed at every corner…

Evelyn, Clive, and Hobart DePatten Jr. were among the battered and bruised. As Hobart DePatten Sr. recalled, “They arrested my son Clive, and then my other son, Hobart Jr., when he protested the arrest of Clive. When my wife, Evelyn, asked police what was happening, they arrested her too.”

Mayor Thomas Urban tried to quell black community unrest by holding a special meeting on April 15, 1969, to discuss problems contributing to the most recent Good Park riot… During the meeting, citizens demanded to know why police were on hand at the rally since there was no threat of violence.

Date

April 13, 1969

Location

Des Moines Iowa

Media Type

PhotographSnapshot