Mass racial violence in the United States

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Mass racial violence in the United States, often described using the term "race riots," includes such disparate events as:

  • attacks on Irish Catholics and other early immigrants in the 19th century
  • massacres of black people in the period after Reconstruction.
  • frequent fighting among various ethnic groups in major cities, specifically in the northeast United States throughout the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
  • uprisings in African-American communities such as the 1968 riots following the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr.

Contents

[edit] Anti-immigrant and anti-Catholic violence

Riots, as defined by "race", have taken place between ethnic groups in the United States as early as the pre-Revolution era of the eighteenth century. During the early to mid nineteenth centuries, violent rioting occurred between Protestant "Nativists" and recently arriving Irish-Catholic immigrants, reaching its height during the 1840s and 1850s in cities including New York, Philadelphia, and Boston.

The San Francisco Vigilance Movements of 1851 and 1856 are often described by sympathetic historians as responses to rampant crime and government corruption, but in addition to lynching accused criminals (specifically the former Australian penal convicts of the Sydney Ducks), the vigilantes also systematically attacked Irish immigrants, and this anti-immigrant violence later focused on the Spanish and Chinese. Riots were common against Irish immigrants in Providence, Rhode Island during the early 1900s and Irish and Italian immigrants in Chicago, specifically during the Aldermen's Wars from 1916 until 1921.

During the late 1800s and early 20th Century, Italian Americans were the second most likely group (next to African Americans) to be lynched. One of the largest lynchings in US history occurred in New Orleans in 1891, when eleven Italians were violently murdered in the streets by a large lynch mob. Riots and lynchings against Italian Americans continued into the twentieth century in the South as well as in New York City, New York, Chicago, and Boston.

[edit] Post-Reconstruction massacres of black Americans

Well-known white-on-Black race riots include the Atlanta Riots (1906), the Omaha and Chicago Riots (1919), and the Tulsa Riots (1921).

Political cartoon about the East St. Louis massacres of 1917. The caption reads, "Mr. President, why not make America safe for democracy?"
Political cartoon about the East St. Louis massacres of 1917. The caption reads, "Mr. President, why not make America safe for democracy?"

In many cases, these massacres were essentially lynchings on a larger scale, and, like lynchings, they often had their roots in economic tensions or white defense of the color line. In 1887, for example, ten thousand workers at sugar plantations in Louisiana, organized by the Knights of Labor, went on strike for an increase in their pay to $1.25 a day. Most of the workers were black, but some were white, infuriating Governor Samuel Douglas McEnery, who declared that "God Almighty has himself drawn the color line." The militia was called in, but then withdrawn to give free rein to a lynch mob in Thibodaux, which killed somewhere between 20 and 300 people. A black newspaper described the scene:[1]

"Six killed and five wounded" is that the daily papers here say, but from an eye witness to the whole transaction we learn that no less than thirty-five Negroes were killed outright. Lame men and blind women shot; children and hoary-headed grandsires ruthlessly swept down! The Negroes offered no resistance; the could not, as the killing was unexpected. Those of them not killed took to the woods, a majority of them finding refuge in this city.

Labor conflict was also used to justify the racially motivated 1917 massacre of hundreds of black residents of East St. Louis - many of whom were women and children, at the hands of white workers who resented living amongst and competing for jobs with black people.

A white gang looking for blacks during the Chicago race riots of 1919.

The Chicago Race Riot of 1919 was essentially a lynching that grew into a race war when blacks fought back. A young black Chicagoan, Eugene Williams, paddled a raft near a Lake Michigan beach into "white territory", and drowned after being hit by a rock thrown by a young white man. Witnesses pointed out the killer to a policeman, who refused to make an arrest, and an indignant black mob attacked the officer.[2] Violence broke out across the city, and while the police stood by, white mobs, many of them organized around Irish clubs, began pulling black people at random off of trolley cars, attacking black businesses, and beating victims with baseball bats and iron bars. Black people began to fight back, and eventually 23 blacks and 15 whites were killed.[3] Irish violence against blacks had also occurred during the New York Draft Riots of 1863.

Buildings burning during the Tulsa race riot of 1921.
Buildings burning during the Tulsa race riot of 1921.

The 1921 Tulsa Race Riot also grew out of black resistance to the attempted lynching of 19-year old shoe-shiner Dick Rowland. 39 people (26 black, 13 white) were confirmed killed, but recent investigations suggest that the actual number of casualties could be much higher. White mobs set fire to the black Greenwood district, destroying 1,256 homes and as many as 200 businesses-- literally leveling 35 blocks of residential and commercial neighborhood. Black people were rounded up by the Oklahoma National Guard and put into several internment centers, including a baseball stadium. White rioters in airplanes shot at black refugees and dropped improvised kerosene bombs and dynamite on them.[4]

[edit] Timeline of events

[edit] Nativist Period 1700s-1860

for information about riots worldwide, see List of riots.
Rioting against African-Americans results in thousands leaving for Canada.
Irish immigrant dock workers riot against newly-hired Afican-American laborers, eventually commandeering a 6-pound cannon and shooting it through the streets of Cincinnati.[citation needed]

[edit] Civil War Period 1861-1865

[edit] Post-Civil War and Reconstruction Period: 1865 - 1889

Irish and German-American indigent emmigrants, temporarily interned at Ward's Island by the Commissioners of Emigration, begin rioting following an alterication between two residents resulting in thirty men seriously wounded and around sixty arrested. [5]
  • 1870: Meridian, Mississippi
  • 1870: Eutaw, Alabama
  • 1870: Laurens, South Carolina
  • 1870: New York City Orange Riot
  • 1871: Second New York City Orange Riot
  • 1871: Los Angeles Anti-Chinese Riot
  • 1871: Scranton Coal Riot
Violence occurrs between striking members of a miners' union in Scranton, Pennsylvania when Welsh miners attack Irish and German-American miners who chose to leave the union and accept the terms offered by local mining companies. [6]
In one of the largest civil disturbances in the city's history, fighting between Swedish, Hungarian and Polish immigrants results in the shooting death of one man and injuring several others before broken up by police. [7]

[edit] Jim Crow Period: 1890 - 1914

Further information: Nadir of American race relations
  • 1891: New Orleans Anti-Italian Riot
A lynch mob storms a local jail and hangs several Italians following the acquittal of several Sicilian immigrants alleged to be involved in the murder of New Orleans police chief David Hennessey.
  • 1894: Buffalo Riot of 1894
Two groups of Irish and Italian-Americans are arrested by police after a half hour of hurling bricks and shooting at each other resulting from a barroom brawl when visiting Italian patrons refused to pay for their drinks at a local saloon. After the mob is dispersed by police, five Italians are arrested while two others are sent to a local hospital. [8]
  • 1898: Wilmington Race Riot
  • 1898: Lake City, North Carolina
  • 1898: Greenwood County, South Carolina
  • 1899: Newburg Riot
Angered towards the recent hiring of African-American workers, a group of between 80 and 100 Arab laborers attack a group of African-American workers near the Freeman & Hammond brick yard with numerous men injured on both sides. [9]

[edit] War and Inter-War Period: 1914 - 1945

Further information: Nadir of American race relations

[edit] Civil Rights and Black Power Movements Period: 1955 - 1977

[edit] 1964

[edit] 1965

[edit] 1966

[edit] 1967

[edit] 1968

[edit] 1970

[edit] 1972

[edit] Modern

[edit] Further reading

  • Dray, Philip. At the Hands of Persons Unknown: The Lynching of Black America, New York: Random House, 2002.
  • Zinn, Howard. Voices of a People's History of the United States. New York: Seven Stories Press, 2004.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Zinn, 2004; http://www.dougriddle.com/essays/sk20021220.html, retrieved July 21, 2005.
  2. ^ Chicago Daily Tribune, http://historymatters.gmu.edu/d/4975/
  3. ^ Dray, 2002.
  4. ^ Ellsworth, Scott. The Tulsa Race Riot, retrieved July 23, 2005.
  5. ^ Riot On Ward's Island.; Terrific Battle Between German and Irish Emigrants. New York Times. 06 Mar. 1868
  6. ^ The Coal Riot. Horrible Treatment of the Laborers by the Miners. - Condition of the Wounded - A War of Races - Welsh vs. Irish and Germans. New York Times. 11 May 1871
  7. ^ A Race Riot In Denver.; One Man Killed And A Number Of Heads Broken. New York Times. 12 Apr 1887
  8. ^ Race Riot In Buffalo.; Italians and Irish Fight for an Hour and a Half in the Street. New York Times. 19 Mar. 1894
  9. ^ Race Riots In Newburg.; Negroes Employed in Brick Yards Provoke Other Laborers -- Lively Battle Between the Factions. New York Times. 29 Jul. 1899

[edit] See also