metro » A half-century later: Understanding The 1967 RI T Jewish business owners recall tough decisions. Robin Schwartz | Contributing Writer V ivid memories remain in the hearts and minds of Jewish busi- ness owners nearly 50 years after the 1967 Detroit riot — from the jarring sound of broken glass, to the sight of flames and smoke rising over the city, heavily armed military members swooping in and the fear that ultimately drove tens of thousands of white Detroiters to relo- cate to the suburbs. The five days of disorder, destruction and violence that brought commerce to a standstill from July 23-27 left 2,509 stores looted, burned or in ruins. The majority of damaged businesses were grocery stores, 611 in all, along with hundreds of cleaners and laundromats, clothing stores, depart- ment stores and furriers, liquor stores, bars and lounges, drugstores, furniture stores and other businesses. Before the riot, Jews owned 78 stores or 15 percent of the businesses in the 12th Street area alone. By Day Five of the uprising, only 39 Jewish businesses remained. “A lot of people believed that black- owned stores were spared because a lot of black store owners wrote ‘Soul Brother’ on their doors, but that really isn’t true. Stores were looted indiscriminately,” says Danielle McGuire, an award-winning author and associate professor of history at Wayne State University. McGuire is work- ing on a book about three black teenagers murdered at the Algiers Motel during the 14 June 23 • 2016 riot. The boys were shot and killed by Detroit police. “People [who rioted] really saw all store owners as exploitative with high prices, high interest rates and a pattern of treat- ing certain customers with disrespect,” McGuire says. Some businesses remained intact simply because workers took up arms to protect the properties. Bruce Colton of Bloomfield Hills remembers that all too well. “Six months before the riot, my dad bought a case of shotguns,” he recalls. “I asked him, ‘Why are you doing this?’ and he said, ‘Times are not looking so good, and someday we may need them.’ Boy, was he right!” Colton’s father, Sol, and grandfather, Isaac Liebson, founded Domestic Linen Supply in 1926. The company had one plant at 3800 18th St. in Detroit; they laundered and supplied uniforms, towels, aprons and linens to Detroit businesses. In 1967, Domestic Linen Supply employed about 100 people, half of whom lived in nearby neighborhoods. “When the riot started, we picked up some key employees and went down to the facility and set up with the shotguns to protect the property,” Colton says. “They were burning down buildings all around us. There was no law and order.” Colton says his family gave workers “war pay,” which amounted to triple their normal wages, so they would sit up on Bruce Colton's family started Domestic Linen Supply in 1926 in Detroit. Its headquarters now is in Farmington Hills; a processing facility remains in Detroit. the roof with shotguns. Some stayed over- night. A building across the street, which the company used for storage, burned to the ground. But, the main plant remained unscathed. “There were a lot of people who wanted to save the business so they would have a job,” Colton says. “You’d fire off a shotgun blast or two and people went someplace else.” When the smoke cleared, a number of the company’s customers were shut down. But business and deliveries slowly started up again. Domestic Linen Supply received some insurance money for their burned storage building but opted not to rebuild; instead, they turned the land into a parking lot. Colton watched as a steady stream of residents and businesses moved out of the city, but his company stayed. They still have the Detroit loca- tion to this day. “We had a lot invested in that facility, all of our machinery,” he says. “It would have cost a fortune to move it.” Now called Domestic Uniform Rental, the multi-generational family business continues to grow and thrive. Today, their headquarters are in Farmington Hills; they own eight processing facilities, including the Detroit plant, and have customers in 14 states. NEAR GROUND ZERO Parker Brothers Shoes and Menswear was near ground zero — at 12th Street and Clairmount Avenue — in the building right next to the unlicensed, after-hours bar (known as a “blind pig’’) raided by police, touching off the riot. Lester Shindler, 89, of Farmington Hills owned the store. His father-in-law, Julius Parker, had opened it decades earlier. “We sold men’s, women’s and children’s shoes, men’s clothing, shirts and pants, suits, and we had a shoe repair,” he recalls. “Leather shoes, made in America, were $7.99, Levis were $2.99, and work shirts were 99 cents.” On the night of the riot, as buildings Lester Shindler, 89, owned Parker Brothers Shoes and Menswear at 12th Street and Clairmount, next door to the “blind pig” Detroit Police raided, touching off the riot.