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On March 5, 1959, a fire raged through the locked dormitory at Arkansas’s Negro Boys Industrial School. 69 Black boys, aged 13–17, were trapped—doors padlocked from outside, windows covered in heavy iron mesh, no fire escapes or alarms. 21 boys died. 48 survived, many badly burned after clawing through screens with bare hands. This preventable disaster stemmed from chronic neglect, racial disparity, and ignored warnings. Many boys were there for minor offenses like truancy or homelessness. A grand jury criticized the system but charged no one. The site was bulldozed within days. For decades, the victims lay in unmarked graves until a 2018 memorial finally honored their names. This episode shares that dark, forgotten chapter of injustice.#arkansas #history #arkansashistory #ozarks #podcast
By Nathan Rogers5
55 ratings
On March 5, 1959, a fire raged through the locked dormitory at Arkansas’s Negro Boys Industrial School. 69 Black boys, aged 13–17, were trapped—doors padlocked from outside, windows covered in heavy iron mesh, no fire escapes or alarms. 21 boys died. 48 survived, many badly burned after clawing through screens with bare hands. This preventable disaster stemmed from chronic neglect, racial disparity, and ignored warnings. Many boys were there for minor offenses like truancy or homelessness. A grand jury criticized the system but charged no one. The site was bulldozed within days. For decades, the victims lay in unmarked graves until a 2018 memorial finally honored their names. This episode shares that dark, forgotten chapter of injustice.#arkansas #history #arkansashistory #ozarks #podcast

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