DETROIT — The site of a transient motel in Detroit where three young Black men were killed, allegedly by white police officers, during the city's bloody 1967 race riot is receiving a historic marker.
A dedication ceremony was held Friday in a park several miles north of downtown where the Algiers Motel once stood.
As parts of Detroit burned in one of the bloodiest race riots in U.S. history, police and members of the National Guard raided the motel and its adjacent Manor House on July 26, 1967, after reports of gunfire in the area.
The bodies of Auburey Pollard, 19, Carl Cooper, 17, and Fred Temple, 18, were found later. About a half dozen others, including two young white women, had been beaten.
The marker tells how the white officers were charged with murder following the deaths of Cooper, Temple and Pollard, but never convicted.
''A historical marker cannot tell the whole story of what happened at the Algiers Motel in 1967, nor adjudicate past horrors and injustices,'' historian Danielle McGuire said. ''It can, however, begin the process of repair for survivors, victims' families and community members through truth-telling."
McGuire has spent years working with community members and the Michigan Historical Marker Commission to get a marker installed at the site.
''We have a moral duty to tell the truth about the past,'' she said Friday at the dedication. ''A historical marker cannot change the past. It is no substitute for justice, but it can help us remember.''