The 1968 Pittsburgh riots were a series of urban disturbances that erupted in Pittsburgh on April 5, 1968, following the assassination of Martin Luther King. Pittsburgh, along with 110 other cities, burned for several days and 3,600 National Guardsmen were needed to quell the disorder.

Overview

The neighborhoods most impacted were the Hill District, North Side, and Homewood. More than one hundred businesses were either vandalized or looted with arsonists setting 505 fires.

One person was killed and thirty-six were injured.

Aftermath

After six days, order was finally restored on April 11, with property damage surpassing $600,000 (equivalent to $5.43 million in 2024). One thousand arrests were made by law enforcement. Many of the neighborhoods impacted never fully recovered in the following decades.

See also

  • List of incidents of civil unrest in the United States

Other Civil Rights-Era riots in Pennsylvania

  • 1964 Philadelphia Riot
  • 1969 York Riot

References


Protests of 1968 — Google Arts & Culture

Democratic Convention Protests Vivid Color Photos From 1968 TIME

A few photos from the 1968 riots and occupation of Wilmington

Today’s protests remind some Pittsburghers of the riots after MLK’s

Democratic Convention Protests Vivid Color Photos From 1968