Incident Overview · Music Festival Riot
Cherry Blossom Music FestivalRichmond City Stadium
On 27 April 1974, violence broke out during the first day of the planned two-day Cherry Blossom Music Festival at City Stadium in Richmond, Virginia. Sources agree police possession-related arrests were the trigger point; later reporting says the second day was cancelled and Richmond barred large outdoor rock concerts for three years.
What Happened
Core Findings
The incident is best described as a riot and disorder event at a music festival rather than a crowd crush disaster. Published and institutional sources place it at Richmond City Stadium / City Stadium in Richmond, Virginia, on Saturday 27 April 1974.
Summary
A Festival That Turned
The festival was promoted as a two-day open-air concert with major acts including Steve Miller, Boz Scaggs, Dr. John, Kool & the Gang, Mandrill, and George Clinton/Funkadelic.
Sources agree the disorder followed police possession-related arrests. Later accounts describe a four-hour confrontation, damaged police vehicles, injuries, arrests, fire and wreckage around the stadium.
The strongest repeated points are the date, venue, broad trigger, cancelled second day, and later restriction on major outdoor rock concerts. The exact arrest count, injury count, and damage total remain disputed.
View Conflicts →Quick View
Incident Highlights
First day of the planned two-day festival.
The Valentine and Boomer Magazine use around 14,000.
Richmond magazine reports 11 police cars destroyed or wrecked.
Later reporting says Richmond barred major outdoor rock concerts for three years.
Chronology
Known Sequence
Festival promoted
A two-day open-air concert was planned for 27 and 28 April 1974 at City Stadium, with several major national acts promoted.
Crowd gathers
Institutional and later sources place about 14,000 people at Richmond’s City Stadium.
Possession arrests begin
Sources agree police began making possession-related arrests, which became the immediate flashpoint.
Disorder escalates
Later accounts describe bottles thrown, officers rushed, damaged vehicles, and a prolonged confrontation with police.
Second day cancelled
The planned second day did not proceed. Later reporting says Richmond then barred large-scale outdoor rock concerts for three years.
Conflicting Information
What Does Not Line Up
Disputed Detail
Number arrested
Sources do not agree on the arrest total.
Editorial note: both appear as later or secondary presentations of earlier reporting rather than a directly reviewed police or court record.
Disputed Detail
Injury count
The available sources use different scopes and numbers.
Editorial note: the figures may separate hospital transfers, total treatment, and police-only injuries. The 31-officer claim was not treated as verified.
Disputed Detail
Property damage
Damage estimates also vary by source quality.
Editorial note: $50,000 is the stronger figure because it appears in published Richmond magazine material with named reporting and photos.
Unverified Details
Modern address identified, but contemporaneous 1974 street-address wording was not verified.
No directly reviewed primary police report or court record was available in the source pack.
Final official arrest and injury totals were not verified from a primary contemporary source.
No verified fatalities were found in the reviewed sources.
The 31-officer injury claim came from lower-confidence public-post search text only.
The $100,000 damage claim was not treated as verified.
Sources
Reference Cards
Richmond magazine · News article
Rock and Roll Riot
March 30, 2011
Retrospective on the festival and riot. Supports the planned April 27–28 event at City Stadium, the violence, 11 police cars destroyed, 15 people sent to emergency rooms, around $50,000 damage, and a three-year ban on large outdoor rock concerts in Richmond.
Visit Source →Richmond Times-Dispatch / Richmond.com · News archive
From the Archives: The day the music rioted in Richmond
April 28, 2023
Archive feature on the 1974 riot. The available snippet ties the article to the Cherry Blossom festival riot and mentions missing football helmets and baseball bats after the disturbance.
Visit Source →Richmond Times-Dispatch / Richmond.com · News archive
In 1974, a Richmond music festival turned into a full-on riot
June 8, 2025
Archive-based retrospective on the Cherry Blossom festival riot. The search snippet identifies the piece as covering the 1974 festival and the 28 April 1974 riot photo/archive material.
Visit Source →Richmond magazine · Magazine article
Web Extra: Rock and Roll Riot
March 29, 2016
Photo essay and retrospective on the Cherry Blossom Music Festival Riot of 1974. It identifies organiser Marc Arenstein, describes police intervention, and repeats the 11 police cars wrecked and around $50,000 damage figures.
Visit Source →Richmond magazine · Magazine article
Rock ’n’ Roll Riot: Extended Play
March 29, 2011
Extended companion piece to the main Richmond magazine account. Useful for detail on police clashes, 11 police cars wrecked, and estimated property damage.
Visit Source →Style Weekly · Magazine article
Richmond’s Aural History: The 1970s
February 25, 2014
Cultural-history feature containing an excerpt on the Cherry Blossom Music Fest Riot of 1974. It cites Richmond News Leader reporting on youths rushing officers, bottles thrown, police retreating, and about 100 arrests.
Visit Source →SLANTblog · Website article
Richmond police riots in 1974
April 20, 2011
Commentary post that references the festival and reproduces a summary of a four-hour battle with police after possession arrests, with 76 arrests and “scores” treated for injuries.
Visit Source →RVANews · Website article
A look back at the Cherry Blossom Festival riot
April 7, 2011
Short post directing readers to Richmond magazine’s coverage. Repeats the description of “blood, fire and wreckage at City Stadium.”
Visit Source →Super Seventies · Website article
April 1974
No page date stated
Day-by-day historical entry. States that a four-hour battle with police followed the festival in Richmond, that police began making possession arrests, that 76 people were arrested, and that “scores” were treated for injuries.
Visit Source →The Valentine · Institutional timeline
Richmond, Virginia’s History Timeline
No page date stated
Institutional timeline entry naming the Cherry Blossom Music Festival Riot and stating that an estimated 14,000 people gathered at Richmond’s City Stadium during the April 1974 two-day festival.
Visit Source →Richmond Kickers · Venue page
City Stadium
No page date stated
Current venue page used only to support the modern City Stadium name and present address at 3201 Maplewood Avenue, Richmond, VA 23221. Not a source for 1974 operational facts.
Visit Source →Boomer Magazine · Website article
Transition and Turmoil of the 1970s
May 22, 2020
Retrospective on Richmond in the 1970s. States that 14,000 people attended the Cherry Blossom Music Festival at City Stadium in April 1974 and that the event ended in a riot after a drug arrest angered some festival-goers.
Visit Source →Open The Material
Source Link Banners
Richmond Times-Dispatch / Richmond.com
From the Archives: The day the music rioted in Richmond
April 28, 2023 · News archive
Open →Richmond Times-Dispatch / Richmond.com
In 1974, a Richmond music festival turned into a full-on riot
June 8, 2025 · News archive
Open →The Valentine
Richmond, Virginia’s History Timeline
No page date stated · Institutional timeline
Open →