This is a photo of Kellerman in the swimsuit that prompted her fame:
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Revere Beach is also famous for a riot.
On a hot August night in 1920, a riot broke out when a Revere police officer arrested a US sailor for drunken disorderliness. Other sailors rushed the arresting officer, and when the officer tried to fight them off, some marines backed the sailors, triggering a group of army soldiers to back the marines, then a bunch of civilians jumped in and the arrest of one drunken sailor turned into the Revere Beach Riot of 1920.
Within a half-hour, about 400 US servicemen surrounded the police station, hurling rocks and firing non-lethal rounds from guns they took from all the beach-carnival shooting galleries. (I’d like to have seen that)
The Revere Police captain requested help from federal troops at Fort Banks and the Boston Navy Yard, and the nearby Chelsea Police Department sent a bunch of their officers to help bring order.
A Fort Banks army unit poised with fixed bayonets cordoned the police station, sailors from the navy yard helped police clear the streets and the beach, and the US Navy ordered the arrest of every drunken sailor in Revere.
By morning, over 100 sailors had been arrested, a bunch of police and civilians were being treated for injuries, mostly from flying rocks, and the police station suffered broken windows and smashed furniture.