Harlem Six

The Harlem Six was the name applied to six men in Harlem, New York, who were put on trial in March 1965. The media also referred to them as the Blood Brothers.[citation needed] Their arrests and subsequent trial stemmed from their connection with an incident known as the Little Fruit Stand Riot, which was followed twelve days later by an attack on a couple who owned a used clothing store in Harlem: Margit Sugar was fatally stabbed, and her husband Frank Sugar was injured.

The Harlem Six were Wallace Baker, Daniel Hamm, William Craig, Ronald Felder, Walter Thomas, and Robert Rice. Four of them were retried together and released in 1973. Daniel Hamm was released in 1974, and Robert Rice in 1991.[1]

  1. ^ Suddler, Carl (2018). "The Color of Justice without Prejudice: Youth, Race, and Crime in the Case of the Harlem Six". American Studies. 57 (1/2): 57–78. doi:10.1353/ams.2018.0025. JSTOR 44982664.