CHICAGO 1919
GHASTLY DEEDS OF RACE RIOTERS TOLD
Defender Reporter Faces Death In Attempt To Get Facts Of Mob Violence; Hospitals Are Filled With Maimed Men And Women
For fully four days this old city has been rocked in a quake of racial antagonism, seared in a blaze of red hate flaming as fiercely as the heat of day—each hour ushering in new stories of slaying, looting, arson, rapine, sending the awful roll of casualties to a grand total of 40 dead and more than 500 wounded, many of them perhaps fatally. A certain madness distinctly indicated in reports of shootings, stabbings and burning of buildings which literally pour in every minute. Women and children have not been spared. Traffic has been stopped. Phone wires have been cut.
Stores and Offices Shut
Victims lay in every street and vacant lot. Hospitals are filled; 4,000 troops rest in arms, among which are companies of the old Eighth regiment while the inadequate force of police battle vainly to save the city's honor.
Fear to Care for Bodies
Undertakers on the South Side refused to accept bodies of white victims. White undertakers refused to accept black victims. Both for the same reasons. They feared the anger of the grief stricken mourners.
Every little while bodies were found in some street, alley or vacant lot—and no one sought to care for them. Patrols were unable to accommodate them because they were being used in rushing live victims to hospitals. Some victims were dragged to a mob's "No Man's Land" and dropped.
The telephone wires in the raging districts were cut in many places by the rioters as it became difficult to estimate the number of dead victims.
Hospitals Filled with Maimed
Provident hospital, 36th and Dearborn streets, situated in the heart of the "black belt," as well as other hospitals in the surrounding districts, are filled with the maimed and dying every hour, every minute, every second finds patrols backed up and unloading the human freight branded with the red symbol of this orgy of hate. Many victims have reached the hospitals, only to die before kind hands could attend to them. So pressing as the situation became that schools, drug stores and private houses are being used. Trucks, drays and hearses are being used for ambulances.
Monday Sees "Reign Of Terror"
Following the Sunday affray, the red tongues had blabbed their fill, and Monday morning found the thoroughfares in the white neighborhoods throated with a sea of humans—everywhere—some armed with guns, bricks, clubs and an oath. The presence of a black face in their vicinity was the signal for a carnival of death and before any aid could reach the poor, unfortunate one, his body reposed in some kindly gutter, his brains spilled over a dirty pavement. Some of the victims were chased, caught and dragged into alleys and lots, where they were left for dead. In all parts of the city, while mobs dragged from surface cars, black passengers wholly ignorant of any trouble, and set upon them. An unidentified young woman and a 3 months old baby were found dead on the street at the intersection of 17th street and Wentworth avenue. She had attempted to board a car there when the mob seized her, beat her, slashed her body into ribbons and beat the baby's brains out against a telegraph pole. Not satisfied with this, one rioter severed her breasts, and a white youngster bore it aloft on a pole, triumphantly, while the crowd hooted gleefully. All the time, this was happening, several policemen were in the crowd, but did not make any attempt to make rescue until too late.
Kill Scores Coming from Yards
Rioters operating in the vicinity of the stockyards, which lies in the heart of white residences west of Halsted street, attacked scores of workers—women and men alike returning from work. Stories of these outrages began to flutter into the black vicinities and hysterical men harangued their fellows to avenge the killings—and soon they, infected with the insanity of the mob, rushed through the streets, drove high powered motor cars or waited for street cars which they attacked with gunfire and stones. Shortly after noon, all traffic south of 22d street and north of 55th street, west of Cottage Grove avenue and east of Wentworth avenue, was stopped with the exception of trolley cars. Whites who entered this zone were set upon with immeasurable fury.
Policemen employed in the disturbed sections were wholly unable to handle the situation. When one did attempt to carry out his duty, he was beaten and his gun taken from him. The fury of the mob could not be abated. Mounted police were employed but to no avail
35th Vortex of Night's Rioting
With the approach of darkness the rioting gave prospects of being continued throughout the night. Whites boarded the platforms and shot through the windows of the trains at passengers. Some of the passengers alighting from cars were thrown from the elevated structure, suffering broken legs, fractured skulls, and death.
The block between State Street and Wabash Avenue on East 35th street was the scene of probably the most shooting and rioting of the evening and a pitched battle ensued between the police, whites and blacks.
The trouble climaxed when white occupants of the Angelus apartments began firing shots and throwing missiles from their windows. One man was shot through the head, but before his name could be secured he was spirited away. The attack developed a hysterical battling fervor and the mob charged the building and the battle was on.
Police were shot. Whites were seen to tumble out of automobiles, from doorways and others places, wounded or suffering from bruises inflicted by gunshot, stones or bricks. A reign of terror literally ensued. Automobiles were stopped, occupants beaten and machines wrecked. Street cars operating in 25th street were wrecked....entered and white occupants beaten.
Trolley cars operating east and west on 35th street were stopped since they always left the vicinity in a perforated state. Shortly after 8 o'clock all service was discontinued on 43rd, 47th and 51st streets.
Stores Looted; Homes Burned
Tiring of street fights, rioters turned to burning and looting. This was truly a sleepless night, and a resume of the day's happenings nourished an inclination for renewed hostilities from another angle. The homes of blacks isolated in white neighborhoods were burned to the ground and the owners and occupants beaten and thrown unconscious in the smoldering embers. Meanwhile rioters in the "black belt" smashed windows and looted shops of white merchants on State street.
Other rioters, manning high powered cares and armed, flitted up and down the darkened streets, chancing shots at fleeting whites on the street and those riding in street cars.
Toward midnight quiet reigned along State street under the vigilance of 400 policemen and scores of uniformed men of the 8th Regiment.
Rioting Extends Into Loop
Tuesday dawned sorrowing with a deal toll of 20 dead and 300 injured. In early morning at 13-year old lad standing on his porch at 51st and Wabash Avenue was shot to death by a white man who, in an attempt to get away, encountered a mob and his existence became history. A mounted policeman, unknown, fatally wounded a small boy in the 48th block on Dearborn street and was shot to death by some unknown rioter.
Workers thronging the loop district to their work were set upon by mobs of sailors and marines roving the streets and several fatal casualties have been reported. Infuriated white rioters attempted to storm the Palmer house and the postoffice, where there are a large number of employees, but an adequate police forced dispersed them and later the men were spirited away to their homes in closed government mail trucks and other conveyances. White clerks have replaced our clerks in the main post office temporarily and our men have been shifted to outlying post offices. The loop violence came as a surprise to the police. Police and reserves had been scattered over the South Side rioting districts, as no outbreaks had been expected in this quarter. Toward noon stations therein were overwhelmed with calls.
Frederick Smith, 33 years old, who spent three years in the Canadian army overseas and bears three wound chevrons, was attacked by a mob of hoodlums as he was passing Harrison Street on S. State Street. Smith had just stepped from the train, here to visit with relatives, and was wholly ignorant of the disturbance. Monroe Gaddy, 3712 S. State Street, and Halbert L. Bight, 3005 S. State Street, both employees of the custodian’s office in the Federal building, were attacked and severely beaten by a crowd of whites at Jackson Boulevard and S. State Street.
ANOTHER DAY OF RIOTING.
CONTINUATION OF MOB RULE.
A PROCLAMATION FROM THE MAYOR.
A Morning and an Evening Fight—The Streets Raked with Canister.
A Large Number of Rioters Killed.
Several Soldiers Killed and Wounded.
THE EVENING MOB ARMED WITH RIFLES.
They Pick Off the Soldiers from the Housetops.
Citizen Volunteers Killed—Col. Jardine Wounded.
MORE NEGROES HUNG.
The Contagion Spreading—Riotous Demonstrations in Westchester County, Brooklyn, Jersey City, Staten Island and Jamaica. Increased Preparations by the Authorities.
INCIDENTS, CASUALTIES, &o., &o.
The ravages of the mob which commenced its diabolical career on Monday are not yet ended, and it is impossible to say at the hour of going to press this morning whether the worst has yet been seen. All through Tuesday night marauding bands of plunderers in greater or less numbers, continued to commit their depredation in various parts of the City, but at daylight yesterday morning they had generally dispersed, and there was a fair prospect of a speedy restoration of quiet and order. The authorities, both State and military, appeared to concede the riot as substantially subdued, and after a consultation early in the forenoon, between the MAYOR OPKYKE, GOV. SEYMOUR AND GEN. WOOL, at the St. Nicholas Hotel, the following proclamation was issued from the Mayor's office:
DOINGS OF GOV. SEYMOUR
GOV. SEYMOUR has established his Headquarters at the St. Nicholas Hotel, where Gen. WOOL resides, and he spent most of the day yesterday in consultation with the General and with the City authorities as to the speediest mode of restoring the public peace. He feels confident that the mob has no organization, and regards them as roving lads of lawless desperadoes pent on plunder. He is anxious that the people should follow the instructions set forth in his proclamation of Tuesday, and organize themselves into armed squads in their respective neighborhoods to protect their property and the peace of the City. The following letter, written by the governor on Monday, may be of interest:
New York, 13th July, 1863.
My Dear sir: I have received your note about the draft. On Saturday last I sent my Adjunct General to Washington for the purpose of urging a suspension of the draft, for I know that the City of New York can furnish its full quota by volunteering. I have received a dispatch from Gen. S_____ that the Draft is suspended. There is no doubt that the conscription is postponed. I learn this from a number of sources. If I get any information or a change of policy at Washington, I will let you know. Truly yours,
HORATIO SEYMOUR
Hon. Samuel Sloan, President of the Hudson River Railroad Company, New York.
The conjectures of the Governor contained in the above as to the postponement of the draft, were confirmed yesterday by the following note received from Assistant Provost Marshal Nugent:
THE DRAFT
New York, July 15, 1863
The draft has been suspended in New York City and Brooklyn.
ROBERT NUGENT, Colonel and Assistant Provost Marshall General.
THE MURDER OF COLORED PEOPLE IN THOMPSON AND SULLIVAN STREETS
At a late hour on Tuesday night the mob made an attack upon the tenement houses, occupied by colored people, in Sullivan and Thompson-streets. For three hours and up to two o'clock yesterday morning there was what may be truly said to be a "reign of terror" throughout all that portion of the City. Several buildings were fired, and a large number of colored persons were beaten so badly that they lay insensible in the street for hours after. Two colored children at No. 59 Thompson-street were shot and instantly killed. Men, women and children, in large numbers flocked to the Eighth Precinct Station-house for protection. Over one hundred of them were there accommodated with temporary shelter.
THE SACKING OF BUILDINGS IN AVENUES B AND A.
Late in the afternoon of Tuesday the hardware store of AARON HARPER, situated at No. 78 Avenue B, was attacked by the rioters. The front doors were burst open, the windows of the building were all smashed with stones and brickbats, and all the goods and valuables were taken away. The store was completely stripped, nothing of valued being left.
From this place the mob repaired to the lock and gunsmith store of JOHN WAGNER, No. 66 Avenue A. This was also broken open, sacked and robbed of the contents, and afterward the property was distributed among the rioters.
Late on Tuesday night the tailoring establishment of THOMAS EGAN, of Avenue A, was forced open by the mob. The doors and windows were all destroyed, and the place completely stripped of its contents.
An Appeal to the Irish Catholics from Archbishop Hughes.
In the present disturbed condition of the City, I will appeal not only to them, but t all persons who love God and revere the holy Catholic religion which they profess, to respect also the laws of man and the peace of society, to retire to their homes with as little delay as possible, and disconnect themselves from the seemingly deliberate intention to disturb the peace and social rights of the citizens of New York. If they are Catholics, or of such of them as are Catholics, I ask, for God's sake—for the sake of their holy religion—for my sake, if they have any respect for the Episcopal authority—to dissolve their associations with reckless men, who have little regard either of Divine or human laws.
†JOHN, Archbishop of New York