William Tell Coleman

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William Tell Coleman
William Tell Coleman

William Tell Coleman (1824-1893) was an American pioneer.[1] He was born in Cynthiana, Harrison County, Kentucky, and was educated at St. Louis University. In 1849 he went to California and eventually settled in San Francisco, where he engaged in the shipping and commission business. Coleman was a leading figure in both the 1851 and 1856 Committees of Vigilance, which usurped civic power in order to drive out the Democratic Party machine and ostensibly to establish law and order. Under Coleman, these committees ignored habeas corpus, conducted secret trials, lynchings, and deportations, and raised a militia. The 1856 Committee of Vigilance disbanded, but after transferring power to the new People's Party, which soon merged with the Republican Party and controlled San Francisco until 1867.[2][3]

After a protest in sympathy with the Great Railroad Strike of 1877 turned into an anti-Asian riot, Coleman again mobilized troops to quell the unrest. This time, however, he and his colleagues determined that extra-legal vigilante action was not called for. Coleman formed the Committee of Safety as a supplementary force to the city police (which was doubled in strength during the unrest). Fearing that the Committee of Safety troops would only exacerbate violence and disorder, they were not given firearms. Instead, they were armed with pick handles and became known as the "Pick Handle Brigade." Coleman's concern was less for the well-being of the local Chinese community than fear that a working class party would take power in San Francisco.[4] Nevertheless, the Workingman's Party was formed under the leadership of Dennis Kearney. Its slogan was "The Chinese Must Go!" and the party helped foster the racism and political momentum that culminated with the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882.

After opening a branch in New York, Coleman established a steamship line between that city and San Francisco in 1856. In 1857 he moved to New York and conducted his business from that city until 1864. One of his most noteworthy achievements was the embellishment and extension of the town of San Rafael, California

[edit] References

  1. ^ Thelma Taylor. William Tell Coleman.
  2. ^ What is a Vigilante Man? by Mike Davis.
  3. ^ Ethington, Philip J. (1994). The Public City: The Political Construction of Urban Life in San Francisco. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press. Retrieved on 2007-12-05. 
  4. ^ Philip J. Ethington, "Vigilantes and the Police: The Creation of a Professional Police Bureaucracy in San Francisco, 1847-1900," Journal of Social History, Vol. 21, No. 2 (Winter, 1987), pp. 197-227

[edit] See also