The Wilmington Race Riots November 12, 1898—A military-style column of European American men went into the African American part of town, destroying the.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
African Americans in the Progressive Era
Advertisements

Reconstruction.
Objectives Assess how whites created a segregated society in the South and how African Americans responded. Analyze efforts to limit immigration and the.
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Segregation and Discrimination.
THE PROMISE OF RECONSTRUCTION AND THE NADIR, United States History.
SSCG8 Review.
Reconstruction Collapses The Main Idea A variety of events and forces led to the end of Reconstruction, which left a mixed legacy for the nation. Reading.
Reconstruction to Civil Rights. Freedmen’s Bureau Sharecropping and Tenant Farming Reconstruction Plans 13 th, 14 th, 15 th Amendments to the Constitution.
Chapter 18 Review The Industrial Revolution in North Carolina
 Tobacco and cotton plantations were common in the South.  Southerners used slaves to work the land  Africans were kidnapped or sold into slavery and.
Lesson 2: Social and Political Change
Who am I? Directions: Write the name of the person the description correctly describes to earn points. The students with 18 points or more at the end will.
Reconstruction The South after the Civil War Towns and cities destroyed Farms and crops destroyed Their biggest way of making money (cotton)
Unit 10-Reconstruction Lesson 59-Life in the South During Reconstruction.
A Free sample background from Slide 1 North Carolina History II NCST 2000 “Introduction to North Carolina Studies” Tom Shields.
Chapter 20, Sections 2 and 3. Progressive Movement  As Texans moved to cities, they found new problems and became more aware of existing ones.  The.
Race Relations in the Gilded Age
The Gilded Age.
Chapter 15 Political and Social Change in the New South Georgia Studies Wilson.
Segregation in the South Race Relations in Post- Reconstruction America.
Unit 12 Reconstruction.
The End of Slavery Chapter 2 Lesson 4. A New President Lincoln died in the early morning of April 15, John Wilkes Booth, a 26-year old actor who.
JDHkdhfj fjdkjfksl. The South After the War and Reconstruction.
Chapter 6 Section 5. Sharecroppers After Reconstruction, many African Americans were very poor and lived under great hardship. Most were sharecroppers,
Resistance and Repression Click the mouse button to display the information. After Reconstruction, most African Americans were sharecroppers, or landless.
The New South, Social Changes (Social Segregation)
The Rise of Segregation
1 African American Voting Rights : The 15th Amendment Reconstruction Era
Pump-Up What were laws that prevented African Americans from gaining rights? What were traditions that prevented African Americans from gaining rights?
Tulsa Race Riots, Historical Context WWI Ends 1919 – Economic downturn – White veterans competing with migrant AA for industrial jobs – AA veterans.
Are We That Far From Jim Crow? Kirby Kragenbring.
EXPANSION OF POLITICAL RIGHTS  Voting rights far from universal in the colonial and early national periods  Franchise typically restricted to white,
Segregation and Discrimination Mr. White’s US History 1.
SWBAT: Explain that despite calls for a “New South”, a society based on discrimination continued into the Gilded Age.
UNITED STATES HISTORY AND THE CONSTITUTION South Carolina Standard USHC-3.4.
Please sit in your assigned seats and quietly follow the directions below: Which group was created in late 1865 to resist Reconstruction efforts in the.
V- Life in the South A) Many whites in the South tried to maintain the old economic and social standards that existed before the war.
EXPANSION OF POLITICAL RIGHTS  Voting rights far from universal in the colonial and early national periods  Franchise typically restricted to white,
The Populist Movement. Agriculture and Depression in South Carolina roots of the Populist movement were established as a result of these worsening economic.
Segregation & Discrimination Gina Dominico Portia Davidson November 20, rd Period Pages:
Effect on DemocracyEffect on Democracy  Reconstruction expanded democracy while the federal government protected the rights of African Americans  When.
The American Dark Ages Focus on 1880s-early 1900.
24.3 Women and the Progressive Movement
African Americans and the New Deal
The Rise of Segregation
The New South SS8H7.
The End of Reconstruction
Get your Folder…. Sit in your assigned seat
Segregation and Discrimination
Lesson 2: Social and Political Change
Get your notebook…. Sit in your assigned seat.
Political and Social Change in the New South! TEST REVIEW
Objectives By the end of this lesson, I will be able to…
GREAT! We won… NOW WHAT? RECONSTRUCTION: 1865 – 1877.
Warm Up What does the reform movement mean, and what is one of the reform movements?
Immigration and Migration & South Carolina
* 07/16/96 History Education *.
Unit 5: Life in Post-Slavery America (1875 – 1928)
Plessy v. Ferguson, Jim Crow Laws,the KKK and Lynching
The Rise of Segregation
New South Era
FUSION In 1894, the Republicans and Populists negotiated an agreement in which, instead of running competing candidates for statewide offices, they.
The Rise of Segregation
SS8H7 Review SS8H7 The student will evaluate key political, social, and economic changes that occurred in Georgia between 1877 and a. Evaluate the.
US history and Constitution
Get your notebook…. Sit in your assigned seat.
Chapter 7 Issues of the Gilded Age
Reconstruction Collapses
Turn of the 20th Century Climate in America
Presentation transcript:

The Wilmington Race Riots November 12, 1898—A military-style column of European American men went into the African American part of town, destroying the African American newspaper office, then burning and killing their way through the rest of that part of town.

Questions to Consider: * Why did this riot take place? * How was it justified? * What was its long term impact? * How did it usher in Jim Crow in North Carolina?

Who? Predominantly New South leaders, not Civil War veterans Three state Democratic Party leaders instigated the riots without participating in them Josephus Daniels—publisher of several newspapers, including the Kinston Free Press and the Raleigh News and Observer Charles Aycock—governor of North Carolina, Furnifold M. Simmons—U.S. Representative , U.S. Senator

Riot Leaders? Colonel Alfred M. Waddell—a colorful character but not seen as a real leader in Wilmington, yet made into the mayor following the riots until 1904 Hugh McCrea—a local Wilmington native with an MIT education and owner of a textile plant

The Riot in Pictures THE REVOLUTION AT WILMINGTON, NORTH CAROLINA (From top left, clockwise) 1. Ex- Congressman Alfred M. Waddell, Revolutionary Mayor of Wilmington. 2. "Manhattan Park," where Shooting Affray took place. 3. Fourth and Harnet, where first Negroes fell. 4. E.G. Parmalee, new Chief of Police. 5. The wrecked "Record" Building and a Group of Vigilantes

What was the context for the riots? During the 1880s, the United States suffered the largest agricultural depression in history, felt particularly strongly in the South Politically, there was no place for Southern poor and lower middle-class European Americans to go. Democrats were the party of the politically powerful. Republicans were the “Negro” party. The Populist Party gave poor and lower middle-class European Americans a political home

The Fusionists In 1894, North Carolina Republicans and Populists struck a deal for political convenience, becoming the Fusionists: Members of either party did not lose their party affiliation, but the two parties worked as a coalition 1894—Fusionists win the North Carolina General Assembly 1896—Fusionists gain control of virtually all other state offices

Fusionist Reforms The first act of the Fusionists was to put in place political reforms –No land ownership requirements for voting, use of secret ballots, use of poll watchers, etc. –Democrats feared they would never be able to win back the government

In 1898 Democrats use violence to undermine Fusionist power. –Rhetorical Battle Feed stories of African American men raping European American women, especially to newspapers. Played up fears of a non-segregated society in political speeches

The Facts About Lynching The accusations against persons lynched, according to the Tuskegee Institute records for the years 1882 to 1951, were: 41 per cent for felonious assault 19.2 per cent for rape 6.1 per cent for attempted rape 4.9 per cent for robbery and theft 1.8 per cent for insult to white persons 22.7 per cent for miscellaneous offenses or no offense at all. In the last category are all sorts of trivial “offenses” such as “disputing with a white man,” attempting to register to vote, “unpopularity”, self-defense, testifying against a white man, “asking a white woman in marriage”, and “peeping in a window.”

The Facts about Rape Homicides and felonious assault, not rape, were most frequently cited in explanation of mob action. Next in importance, from the viewpoint of number of cases, is rape and attempted rape—25.3 per cent of the victims. Concerning this figure, Myrdal states: “There is much reason to believe that this figure has been inflated by the fact that a mob which makes the accusation of rape is secure from any further investigation; by the broad Southern definition of rape to include all sexual relations between Negro men and white women; and by the psychopathic fears of white women in their contacts with Negro men.” Another fact which refutes the fallacy of rape as being the primary cause of Negro lynchings is that between 1882 and 1927, 92 women were victims of lynch mobs: 76 Negro and 16 white.8 Certainly they could not have been rapists.

- Economic Battle Credit (for such things as fertilizer, seed, etc.) given only to store owners who were registered Democrats Enforced boycotts against Fusionist store owners (Democrat employers would fire a worker for buying a hat from a Fusionist store owner, etc.) - Physical Battle By election day (November 10, 1898), systematic violence had been instigated throughout the state. A typical example was Elizabeth City, where the African American newspaper had been burned down, guards were posted on every corner, and after the election, every leading Fusionist was forced out of town.

Wilmington Riot in 1898 The riots occurred in Wilmington after the election (November 12, 1898) and became much more violent because its government was controlled by Fusionists and not all were up for reelection in The Democrats forced the European American Fusionists out of town and told African Americans they would not be allowed to hold certain jobs, such as being doctors, lawyers, etc.

Headlines from New York Herald (Nov. 11, 1898)

Headlines from The News and Observer (Nov. 11, 1898)

Headlines from The Morning Star (Nov. 1, 1898)

Assessing the Riot: * The Wilmington riot demonstrated the unwillingness of the national Republican administration to act against even the most flagrant lawlessness, and the basis was laid for new state legislation effectively denying voting rights to blacks. Black Protest was a central cause of riot: Alex Manly, editor of the Wilmington Daily Record, charged that, "poor white men are careless in the matter of protecting their women," and that, "our experience among poor white people in the country teaches us that women of that race are not any more particular in the matter of clandestine meetings with colored men than the white men with the colored women." The revolt had the support of many of the most powerful men in the city, among them William Rand Kenan and Hugh McRae. George Roundtree, an attorney and advisor to the coup leaders, in 1899 served as chairman of the state legislative committee on constitutional reform that drafted and sponsored the so- called "Grandfather Clause," providing that the male citizens could vote if they could read and write or if their grandfather voted, thereby denying most African Americans the right to vote.