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Meridian race riot of 1871

The Meridian race riot of 1871 was a race riot in Meridian, Mississippi in March 1871. It followed the arrest of freedmen accused of inciting riot in a downtown fire, and blacks' organizing for self-defense. Although the local Ku Klux Klan (KKK) chapter had attacked freedmen since the end of the Civil War, generally without punishment, the first local arrest under the 1870 act to suppress the Klan was of a freedman. This angered the black community. During the trial of black leaders, the presiding judge was shot in the courtroom, and a gunfight erupted that killed several people. In the ensuing mob violence, whites killed as many as 30 blacks over the next few days. Democrats drove the Republican mayor from office, and no person was charged or tried in the freedmen's deaths.

Meridian race riot of 1871
Part of the Reconstruction Era
A postcard of the Lauderdale County Courthouse, where Moore arranged a meeting encouraging freedmen in self-defense
DateMarch 1871
Location
Caused byRacial polarizing trial
MethodsShootings, Lynchings
Resulted inVarious killings
Location of Meridian in Lauderdale County

The Meridian riot was related to widespread postwar violence by whites to drive Reconstruction Republicans from office and restore white supremacy. Although the Enforcement Acts helped suppress the Klan at this time, the Meridian riot marked a turning point in Mississippi violence. By 1875 other white paramilitary groups arose; the Red Shirts suppressed black voting by intimidation, and their efforts led to a Democratic Party victory in state elections. Within two years a national political compromise was reached, and the federal government withdrew its military forces from the South in 1877.

Background

Ku Klux Klan

After the American Civil War ended in 1865, the country underwent a period of Reconstruction. During this period, under the Reconstruction Acts the United States Army directly controlled the states that were formerly part of the Confederacy.[1] This takeover was resented by white Democrats in the South, most of whom were temporarily disfranchised by service for the Confederacy. Their resentment increased with the passage of constitutional amendments making freedmen full citizens and the Voting Rights Act of 1867, which enabled freedmen to vote, serve on juries, and hold official positions in government.[2]

The Ku Klux Klan (KKK) arose as independent chapters, part of the postwar insurgency related to the struggle for power in the South. In 1866, Mississippi Governor William L. Sharkey reported that disorder, lack of control and lawlessness were widespread. The Klan used public violence against blacks as intimidation. They burned houses, and attacked and killed blacks, leaving their bodies on the roads.[3]

Meridian, the county seat of Lauderdale County, had a Republican mayor appointed by the governor. Sturgis was from Connecticut so opponents called him a carpetbagger. Southern Republicans were called scalawags. The KKK tried to intimidate a black school teacher named Daniel Price, who had migrated from Livingston, Alabama, county seat of the Alabama county just to the east of Lauderdale.[4] In Livingston, Price had been the leader of the local Loyal League, an organization established to help former slaves transition to freedom.[5] Because of threats against him by local whites who opposed his activism, Price left the city for Mississippi and brought several freedmen with him. They hoped to find jobs in Meridian, a larger town. Numerous other African Americans had been migrating from Alabama to Mississippi since they had been freed and Alabama farmers were running short on labor. To try to force freedmen to return to Alabama and possibly stop the migration of others, Adam Kennard, deputy sheriff of Livingston (also described as a bounty hunter), was sent to arrest the men who went with Price to Meridian. He took some KKK men with him.[6]

The Republican city officials refused to cooperate with Kennard and his group; they thought he was outside his legal jurisdiction. Freedmen were angered by the Klan's presence, yet neither they nor the Republican city government had enough power to deter them.[7] One night when Kennard was sleeping, Price and a band of about six freedmen in disguise took him from the house, carried him outside the city limits, and beat him. Kennard managed to get away and pressed charges against Price the next day.[8] Price was prosecuted under a statute of the Civil Rights Act of 1866, intended to stop the KKK's widespread violence. It classified committing an act of violence in disguise as a federal crime (related to the KKK practice of wearing masks and costumes to hide individual identities).[7]

The root of the riots, were attributed to the ceaseless raids of KKK, in essence forcing the freedmen to leave the Sumter County farms, taking refuge in the nearby Meridian area (located just 40 miles (64 km) southwest of the Livingston). According to Michael Newton, Adam Kennard was not a white sheriff, rather a former slave, who was deputized and dispatched to by the farmers, along with some KKK members to retrieve the departed farm hands. Daniel Price, was a white Republican teacher of an all black school.[9][10] Referencing the trial's cross examination, the Weekly Clarion, reports that Kennard was a "colored man who was Ku Klux Klaned by the Radicals…"[11][12]The Daily Dispatch of Richmond, wrote:

The riots of last year were the result of bad teachings by bad men of both parties, who wanted strife. At present such feelings were very slight. As a character of the outrages, the witness instanced where a white Republican school teacher named Price, assisted by several colored Republicans, nearly whipped to death Adam Kennard, a colored deputy sheriff, who was also a Republican.[13]

Price's trial

In the week before Price's trial, whites in Meridian began to threaten him. Freedmen were outraged that he had been arrested at all, as no one had been arrested or convicted for the many previous attacks on black people. Price was the first to be arrested under what was considered the federal anti-KKK law. Freedmen were angered that the law intended to protect them was being used against them. Before his trial, Price stated that he would not pay his bond and would not go to jail. He claimed that if he were convicted, his supporters "would begin shooting."[14] When an armed party of about 50 white men came from Livingston to witness the trial, city officials became uneasy.[7][15] They postponed the trial for a week. During the Alabamians' visit to Meridian, the men arrested several freedmen who had migrated with Price to the city. They claimed the men had forfeited labor contracts and, in some cases, stolen money.[16]

At the second date for Price's trial, one of the state witnesses for Kennard was ill, so the court postponed the trial for another week. During this time, several prominent city employees told Mayor Sturgis of their concern that if Price were tried, there was a risk of mass unrest. They suggested avoiding the trial but forcing Price to leave the city. Sturgis and other officials made a deal with the prosecutors, and they freed Price on the condition that he leave the city.[17]

Given Price's absence at his third trial date, the prosecutor dropped the charges against him, but the black community of Meridian was still furious.[18] They learned that Kennard had arrested several Alabama freedmen and forced them to return to Livingston.[7] The white community organized against Mayor Sturgis and petitioned to have him removed from office. Blacks countered with their own petition, which was sent to the Republican governor Adelbert Ames, who had appointed Sturgis.[15][19] Sturgis was not removed; opposed by prominent whites, he became increasingly worried about the hostility between the races.[20]

Courthouse meeting

Shortly after Price's scheduled trial and departure, the 1870 gubernatorial election was held. The Republican James L. Alcorn won, carrying Lauderdale County by a large majority on the basis of voting by freedmen. Given the unrest in Meridian, Mayor Sturgis requested federal troops, since no local officials were willing to prosecute the Alabamians or other whites in the city. The troops arrived, but stayed only a few days. With no major violence, they were withdrawn as the state's resources were limited. Sturgis began his own legal proceedings against some of the whites in the city, leading to greater opposition and renewed effort to have him removed. Sturgis sent several black advisers to the governor's office in Jackson to plead his case.[21]

When Sturgis's advisers returned to the city on Friday, March 3, 1871, they brought Aaron Moore, a Republican member of the Mississippi Legislature from Lauderdale County. He called for a meeting the next day, March 4, at the county courthouse to make the case for keeping Sturgis in office. About 200 people showed up for the meeting but they included only a few whites. Speeches reportedly criticized militant whites and encouraged freedmen in self-defense. The meeting adjourned at sundown, after which several of the black people in the meeting organized a military company with William Clopton, one of Sturgis's advisers, leading the way. Some were armed with swords while others carried guns; many freedmen avoided the demonstration.[22]

Downtown fire

Even before the meeting at the courthouse, trouble was brewing. Whites shared rumors of seeing crowds of armed African Americans traveling to the city, which raised their fears. A local store owner overheard a conversation predicting that crowds of people – both black and white – would be out on the streets that night.[23] When the whites heard about the courthouse meeting, they decided that Sturgis, Clopton, and Warren Tyler, another of Sturgis's advisors and a speechmaker, should be forced to leave the city. They organized an armed search team to find them.[15]

About an hour after the meeting adjourned, a fire broke out in the business section of the city.[24] The fire started on the second floor of a store owned by Theodore Sturgis, the mayor's brother.[25] Although the cause of the fire is unknown,[26] many people at the time thought the mayor was behind it.[25] The fire was eventually put out, but not before two-thirds of the business district had been engulfed.[15] The block had recently been rebuilt after being destroyed during General William Tecumseh Sherman's 1864 raid.[7]

As the fire burned, Clopton was hit in the head with a shotgun barrel. Some witnesses thought he was killed but he was only wounded. Hearing of the attack, freedmen became enraged and began passing out guns. At the same time, groups of whites patrolled the streets as militias for the rest of the night.[27] Over the next few days under mob rule, the sheriff arrested Clopton, Tyler and Moore, and charged them with inciting riot. Whites appointed a committee to remove Mayor Sturgis from office.[26]

Rumors spread as wildly as the fire had; whites said the blacks would burn the entire city down.[26] The sheriff told Moore at his church on Sunday that all black people in the city would be required to disarm.[15] On Monday the committee started an investigation of the fire and concluded that Mayor Sturgis had set it.[28]

The riot

After being arrested, Clopton, Tyler, and Moore were brought to trial on Monday, March 6.[7] That morning, the whites held a meeting of their own and passed a resolution condemning the violent acts of Daniel Price, and those of Mayor Sturgis and other people – blacks and whites alike – on Saturday night, the night of the downtown fire.[29] When William Tyler was arrested, Sheriff Moseley checked him for any firearms, of which he had none, and then allowed him to go to the barbershop for a haircut. The barber Jack Williams later claimed he had seen Tyler wearing a pistol on his side. Tyler went to the courtroom after leaving the barbershop.[30]

Judge E. L. Bramlette was presiding over the trial.[26] Numerous Republicans and as many as two hundred Democrats were present in the courtroom.[31] In general, the white people in the room were situated toward the front, and the black people were in the back.[32] Before the examination of witnesses began, Mayor Sturgis was seen conversing with Tyler and handed him a written note. After the trial began, Tyler and Moore were taken into another room, and some reports say that Sturgis went in with them. Sturgis never returned to the courtroom, but when Tyler and Moore returned, several witnesses reported that Tyler had a pistol on his side they had not seen before.[33]

The second witness to testify was James Brantley.[15] Tyler asked Brantley to stay on the stand and reportedly said, "I want to introduce two or three witnesses to impeach your veracity."[31] Outraged, Brantley took a cane of Marshal William S. Patton and lunged toward Tyler. Patton grabbed Brantley and told him to stop, and Tyler moved toward the courtroom door.[34] Some witnesses claimed to have seen Tyler reach into his pocket for a gun.[31][34] At this moment, the first shot was fired, although the person responsible is debated. Marshal Patton said he did not see Tyler shoot, but he thought the shot came from that direction. When the first shot was fired, Tyler was in little to no danger as he was 10 feet (3.0 m) to 12 feet (3.7 m) from Brantley. Several of the people in the courtroom at the time claimed that Tyler fired first.[35]

Firearms were quickly drawn across the courtroom, and general shooting broke out.[7] The shootout lasted somewhere between one and five minutes, and in the process, Judge Bramlette was killed, and Clopton was injured.[36] Tyler sprinted to a second-floor veranda, hopped the railing, and jumped to the ground.[31] The barber Jack Williams reported seeing him throw away what looked like a pistol as he jumped. Tyler limped towards Williams asking him for help, and then ran through the barber shop with several whites in pursuit. Dr. L. D. Belk, acting deputy sheriff, chased Tyler and asked men to gather arms and help in the pursuit.[37] Tyler was found wounded in a ditch between the courthouse and Sam Parker's shop by a black laborer Joe Sharp. Sharp and two other men helped Tyler get to a store two doors down from Parker's shop.[38] A white party later found Tyler and shot him many times, but there were so many in the crowd, that no one knew who had hit him.[39]

After the courtroom shootout, Clopton was badly injured and placed under the protection of guards.[40] Reportedly the two men grew tired and threw Clopton from the second story window, saying they "could not waste their time on a wounded Negro murderer."[41] Clopton was carried back into the courthouse, where sometime during the night he died after his throat was cut.[42]

Moore had fallen by Judge Bramlette and pretended to be dead.[39] After the courthouse was cleared, he ran to the woods to follow the railroad line to Jackson. A mob chased him for 40 miles (64 km) or 50 miles (80 km), but they never caught up. He eventually made it to Jackson without harm, and was never arrested or brought to trial again.[43] The white mob burned down Moore's house along with a Baptist church nearby, which had been donated by the United States government to serve as a school for blacks.[40] Daniel Price had been a teacher there.[7]

In the chaos after the courtroom shootout, whites killed many other blacks. When they could not find Tyler and Moore, they attacked other freedmen they came across.[7] For three days, local Klansmen murdered "all the leading colored men of the town with one or two exceptions."[44] Several black people were killed in the courtroom, and others died in the fires at Moore's house and the Baptist church.[40] During the night of the shootings, three other blacks were arrested and taken to the courthouse. The next morning, they were found dead.[39] By the time federal troops arrived several days later, about thirty black people had been killed.[7][26][31][40] Many of the fatalities from the riot were buried in McLemore Cemetery.[45]

Aftermath

During the riot, Mayor Sturgis hid in the attic of a boarding house (owned by his brother Theodore.[39]) He did not emerge until reaching agreement that he could resign and leave town.[31] The day after the riot, men approached and ordered him to return to the North. He agreed to leave that night on a northbound train at midnight; he was escorted safely to the train by a group of about 300 white men.[46] Upon reaching New York City, he wrote an account of the events in a letter to the New York Daily Tribune:

They were all armed with double-barreled shot guns, and, as I was told, 200 in number, Many good citizens of Meridian plead for me, as well as many in the Ku-Klux columns who were in them not from choice, but from necessity. They appointed committee after committee to wait upon me and to inform me that I must leave by 10 o'clock the next day. Their principle commanders visited me. I wanted to know the whys and wherefores, but they said they came not to argue any question of right – the verdict had been rendered. They treated me respectfully, but said that their ultimatum was that I must take a Northern-bound train. I yielded. At about 12 o'clock at night, perhaps 300 came and escorted me to the cars. Some difficulties and dangers presented themselves, but I got here in safety.

[...]

I am much a sufferer in pain and feeling, but I believe that the State of Mississippi is able to indemnify me. Let me urge the necessity of having martial law proclaimed through every Southern State. The soldiery to be sent there should be quartered on the Rebels. Leniency will not do. Gratitude, they have none. Reciprocation of favors they never dream of.

— William Sturgis, New York Daily Tribune, March 16, 1871[47]

The letter was reprinted widely in the North, and fueled the debate over toughening the restrictions in the Ku Klux Klan Law under consideration.[31] News of the riot angered the Radical Republicans in Congress, and hastened the passage of the law, known as the Enforcement Act. Mississippi Democrats attacked the Radical Republicans for using the riot as a partisan point.[48]

Gradually the situation in Meridian quieted down, but debate continued there and in Washington.[49] On March 21, the state began an investigation of the riot, calling a total of 116 witnesses.[48] The state indicted six men under charges of unlawful assembly and assault with intent to kill. Many black witnesses had credible information as to who shot whom, but most were too afraid to testify, as they feared losing their jobs, rights, or their lives. None of the men responsible for the riot was charged or brought to trial.[50] Two months later, a Congressional investigation re-examined the case but failed to identify the first shooter in the courthouse. The only person convicted of actions related to the riot was an Alabama KKK man charged with raping a black woman.[48]

Effects

The Meridian riot highlighted the fact that blacks in the South were poorly armed, economically dependent on whites for jobs, and new to freedom; they had difficulty resisting violent attacks without federal help.[44] By the mid-1870s, as war memories faded, Northern whites became tired of supporting the expensive programs to try to suppress the violence in the South and more inclined to let the states handle their own problems. Most Northerners viewed slavery as a moral wrong but did not necessarily believe in racial equality.[7] They were discouraged by the continuing insurgency in much of the South.[44] Whites resorted to force to suppress the opposition. With waning federal help, blacks had difficulty resisting white violence.[51] The riot marked the decline of Republican power and the waning of Reconstruction in this part of Mississippi.[44]

By 1875 in Mississippi, paramilitary insurgent groups, such as the Red Shirts and rifle leagues, described as "the military arm of the Democratic Party"[52] had arisen in the Klan's place. They worked openly to intimidate Republican voters, especially freedmen, and run officials out of office. The insurgents suppressed voting to achieve Democratic landslide victories in the 1875 state elections.[7] By the late 1870s, the Democrats had completed their takeover in Mississippi and other former Confederate states.

With control reestablished at the state government level, conservative Democrats passed electoral laws and constitutional amendments to restrict voting by freedmen and poor whites, resulting in their disfranchisement for decades. Mississippi was the first to pass such an amendment in 1890. Its surviving a United States Supreme Court review encouraged other Southern states to pass similar amendments, known as the "Mississippi Plan". State legislatures also passed Jim Crow laws, which established racial segregation in public facilities.[53] The next few decades after the Meridian Riot saw a rise in lynchings and violence against blacks across the South, which accompanied their loss of civil rights and the fight for white supremacy. Mississippi would lead the region in racial violence and public support of it.[44] While the rate of lynchings declined into the 20th century, blacks had little legal standing for recourse against abuses until their successes of the Civil Rights Movement and enforcement of their right to vote.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Gabriel J. Chin (September 14, 2004). The 'Voting Rights Act of 1867': The Constitutionality of Federal Regulation of Suffrage During Reconstruction. Vol. 82. North Carolina Law Review. SSRN 589301.
  2. ^ McGehee, p. 1
  3. ^ W.E.B. Du Bois (1935). Black Reconstruction in America: 1860–1880. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 671–675. ISBN 9780684856575.
  4. ^ McGehee, p. 4
  5. ^ Bill Marcy (2009). Don't Let Me Confuse You With The Truth. Bill Marcy. p. 69. ISBN 978-1-4495-1238-5.
  6. ^ McGehee, pp. 4–5
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Seth Cagin; Philip Dray (2006). We Are Not Afraid: The Story of Goodman, Schwerner, and Chaney and the Civil Rights Campaign for Mississippi. Nation Books. pp. 199–201. ISBN 978-1-56025-864-3.
  8. ^ McGehee, p. 6
  9. ^ Newton, Michael (2010). The Ku Klux Klan in Mississippi: A History. McFarland. pp. 32–33. ISBN 978-0786446537.
  10. ^ Book reference in Google
  11. ^ "Cross-Examined" (PDF). The Weekly Clarion - Jackson Mississippi. First Column: 4. February 29, 1872 – via Library of Congress.
  12. ^ Horn, Stanley Fitzgerald (1972). Invisible Empire: The Story of the Ku Klux Klan 1886-1871. Gordon Press. pp. 156–160. ISBN 978-0879680138.
  13. ^ "The Mississippi Ku Klux Question" (PDF). The Daily Dispatch. 4th Column: 3. June 30, 1871 – via Library of Congress.
  14. ^ McGehee, p. 8
  15. ^ a b c d e f Rowland, p. 222
  16. ^ McGehee, pp. 9–10
  17. ^ McGehee, pp. 10–11
  18. ^ McGehee, pp. 11–12
  19. ^ McGehee, p. 13
  20. ^ McGehee, pp. 14–18
  21. ^ McGehee, pp. 17–19
  22. ^ McGehee, pp. 19–25
  23. ^ McGehee, p. 27
  24. ^ McGehee, p. 26
  25. ^ a b McGehee, p. 28
  26. ^ a b c d e "The Riot of 1871". The Meridian Star. July 22, 2006. Retrieved 2010-07-29.
  27. ^ McGehee, pp. 35–36
  28. ^ McGehee, p. 38
  29. ^ McGehee, pp. 39–40
  30. ^ McGehee, pp. 40–41
  31. ^ a b c d e f g Philip Dray (2008). Capitol men: the epic story of Reconstruction through the lives of the first Black congressmen. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. pp. 180–182. ISBN 978-0-618-56370-8.
  32. ^ McGehee, p. 43
  33. ^ McGehee, p. 42
  34. ^ a b McGehee, p. 44
  35. ^ McGehee, pp. 45–46
  36. ^ McGehee, p. 47
  37. ^ McGehee, pp. 47–48
  38. ^ McGehee, pp. 48–49
  39. ^ a b c d Jack Shank (1985). "Chapter 11: The Riot – and the End of Reconstruction". Meridian: The Queen with a Past. Vol. 1. Meridian, Mississippi: Brown Printing Company. pp. 51–57. ISBN 0-9616123-1-2.
  40. ^ a b c d Rowland, p. 223
  41. ^ McGehee, p. 53
  42. ^ McGehee, p. 54
  43. ^ McGehee, p. 61
  44. ^ a b c d e David M. Oshinsky (1996). "Worse Than Slavery". Retrieved 2010-12-16.
  45. ^ "1878 Meridian Yellow Fever Epidemic". The Meridian Star. July 22, 2006. Archived from the original on January 3, 2013. Retrieved July 15, 2009.
  46. ^ McGehee, p. 64
  47. ^ McGehee, p. 64 (first half); p. 72 (second half)
  48. ^ a b c Michael Newton (2010). The Ku Klux Klan in Mississippi: A History. McFarland. pp. 32–33. ISBN 978-0-7864-4653-7.
  49. ^ McGehee, p. 76
  50. ^ McGehee, pp. 69–70
  51. ^ McGehee, pp. 76–77
  52. ^ George C. Rable, But There Was No Peace: The Role of Violence in the Politics of Reconstruction, Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1984, p. 132
  53. ^ McGehee, p. 77

References

  • McGehee, Katharine Louise (June 1966), The Meridian race riot of 1871 (Honors undergraduate thesis), Tallahassee, Florida: Florida State University, pp. ii+79, retrieved 4 July 2011
  • Rowland, Dunbar (1907). Encyclopedia of Mississippi history: Comprising sketches of counties, towns, events, institutions and persons. Vol. 2. S. A. Brant. pp. 221–223.

Further reading

  • Hewitt Clarke, Thunder at Meridian, Lone Star Press, 1995
  • Laura Nan Fairley and James T. Dawon, Paths to the Past: An Overview History of Lauderdale County, Mississippi, Lauderdale County Department of Archives and History, Inc., 1988

External links

  • "Jim Crow History" at the Library of Congress Web Archives (archived 2002-10-13), Official Website.
  • United States. Congress Joint Select Committee on the Condition of Affairs in the Late Insurrectionary States, Government Printing Office, 1872 (Includes transcript of testimony in the investigation of the Meridian Race Riot of 1871 and state investigation)

meridian, race, riot, 1871, race, riot, meridian, mississippi, march, 1871, followed, arrest, freedmen, accused, inciting, riot, downtown, fire, blacks, organizing, self, defense, although, local, klux, klan, chapter, attacked, freedmen, since, civil, generall. The Meridian race riot of 1871 was a race riot in Meridian Mississippi in March 1871 It followed the arrest of freedmen accused of inciting riot in a downtown fire and blacks organizing for self defense Although the local Ku Klux Klan KKK chapter had attacked freedmen since the end of the Civil War generally without punishment the first local arrest under the 1870 act to suppress the Klan was of a freedman This angered the black community During the trial of black leaders the presiding judge was shot in the courtroom and a gunfight erupted that killed several people In the ensuing mob violence whites killed as many as 30 blacks over the next few days Democrats drove the Republican mayor from office and no person was charged or tried in the freedmen s deaths Meridian race riot of 1871Part of the Reconstruction EraA postcard of the Lauderdale County Courthouse where Moore arranged a meeting encouraging freedmen in self defenseDateMarch 1871LocationMeridian MississippiCaused byRacial polarizing trialMethodsShootings LynchingsResulted inVarious killings Location of Meridian in Lauderdale County The Meridian riot was related to widespread postwar violence by whites to drive Reconstruction Republicans from office and restore white supremacy Although the Enforcement Acts helped suppress the Klan at this time the Meridian riot marked a turning point in Mississippi violence By 1875 other white paramilitary groups arose the Red Shirts suppressed black voting by intimidation and their efforts led to a Democratic Party victory in state elections Within two years a national political compromise was reached and the federal government withdrew its military forces from the South in 1877 Contents 1 Background 1 1 Ku Klux Klan 1 2 Price s trial 1 3 Courthouse meeting 1 4 Downtown fire 2 The riot 3 Aftermath 3 1 Effects 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksBackground EditKu Klux Klan Edit After the American Civil War ended in 1865 the country underwent a period of Reconstruction During this period under the Reconstruction Acts the United States Army directly controlled the states that were formerly part of the Confederacy 1 This takeover was resented by white Democrats in the South most of whom were temporarily disfranchised by service for the Confederacy Their resentment increased with the passage of constitutional amendments making freedmen full citizens and the Voting Rights Act of 1867 which enabled freedmen to vote serve on juries and hold official positions in government 2 The Ku Klux Klan KKK arose as independent chapters part of the postwar insurgency related to the struggle for power in the South In 1866 Mississippi Governor William L Sharkey reported that disorder lack of control and lawlessness were widespread The Klan used public violence against blacks as intimidation They burned houses and attacked and killed blacks leaving their bodies on the roads 3 Meridian the county seat of Lauderdale County had a Republican mayor appointed by the governor Sturgis was from Connecticut so opponents called him a carpetbagger Southern Republicans were called scalawags The KKK tried to intimidate a black school teacher named Daniel Price who had migrated from Livingston Alabama county seat of the Alabama county just to the east of Lauderdale 4 In Livingston Price had been the leader of the local Loyal League an organization established to help former slaves transition to freedom 5 Because of threats against him by local whites who opposed his activism Price left the city for Mississippi and brought several freedmen with him They hoped to find jobs in Meridian a larger town Numerous other African Americans had been migrating from Alabama to Mississippi since they had been freed and Alabama farmers were running short on labor To try to force freedmen to return to Alabama and possibly stop the migration of others Adam Kennard deputy sheriff of Livingston also described as a bounty hunter was sent to arrest the men who went with Price to Meridian He took some KKK men with him 6 The Republican city officials refused to cooperate with Kennard and his group they thought he was outside his legal jurisdiction Freedmen were angered by the Klan s presence yet neither they nor the Republican city government had enough power to deter them 7 One night when Kennard was sleeping Price and a band of about six freedmen in disguise took him from the house carried him outside the city limits and beat him Kennard managed to get away and pressed charges against Price the next day 8 Price was prosecuted under a statute of the Civil Rights Act of 1866 intended to stop the KKK s widespread violence It classified committing an act of violence in disguise as a federal crime related to the KKK practice of wearing masks and costumes to hide individual identities 7 The root of the riots were attributed to the ceaseless raids of KKK in essence forcing the freedmen to leave the Sumter County farms taking refuge in the nearby Meridian area located just 40 miles 64 km southwest of the Livingston According to Michael Newton Adam Kennard was not a white sheriff rather a former slave who was deputized and dispatched to by the farmers along with some KKK members to retrieve the departed farm hands Daniel Price was a white Republican teacher of an all black school 9 10 Referencing the trial s cross examination the Weekly Clarion reports that Kennard was a colored man who was Ku Klux Klaned by the Radicals 11 12 The Daily Dispatch of Richmond wrote The riots of last year were the result of bad teachings by bad men of both parties who wanted strife At present such feelings were very slight As a character of the outrages the witness instanced where a white Republican school teacher named Price assisted by several colored Republicans nearly whipped to death Adam Kennard a colored deputy sheriff who was also a Republican 13 Price s trial Edit In the week before Price s trial whites in Meridian began to threaten him Freedmen were outraged that he had been arrested at all as no one had been arrested or convicted for the many previous attacks on black people Price was the first to be arrested under what was considered the federal anti KKK law Freedmen were angered that the law intended to protect them was being used against them Before his trial Price stated that he would not pay his bond and would not go to jail He claimed that if he were convicted his supporters would begin shooting 14 When an armed party of about 50 white men came from Livingston to witness the trial city officials became uneasy 7 15 They postponed the trial for a week During the Alabamians visit to Meridian the men arrested several freedmen who had migrated with Price to the city They claimed the men had forfeited labor contracts and in some cases stolen money 16 At the second date for Price s trial one of the state witnesses for Kennard was ill so the court postponed the trial for another week During this time several prominent city employees told Mayor Sturgis of their concern that if Price were tried there was a risk of mass unrest They suggested avoiding the trial but forcing Price to leave the city Sturgis and other officials made a deal with the prosecutors and they freed Price on the condition that he leave the city 17 Given Price s absence at his third trial date the prosecutor dropped the charges against him but the black community of Meridian was still furious 18 They learned that Kennard had arrested several Alabama freedmen and forced them to return to Livingston 7 The white community organized against Mayor Sturgis and petitioned to have him removed from office Blacks countered with their own petition which was sent to the Republican governor Adelbert Ames who had appointed Sturgis 15 19 Sturgis was not removed opposed by prominent whites he became increasingly worried about the hostility between the races 20 Courthouse meeting Edit Shortly after Price s scheduled trial and departure the 1870 gubernatorial election was held The Republican James L Alcorn won carrying Lauderdale County by a large majority on the basis of voting by freedmen Given the unrest in Meridian Mayor Sturgis requested federal troops since no local officials were willing to prosecute the Alabamians or other whites in the city The troops arrived but stayed only a few days With no major violence they were withdrawn as the state s resources were limited Sturgis began his own legal proceedings against some of the whites in the city leading to greater opposition and renewed effort to have him removed Sturgis sent several black advisers to the governor s office in Jackson to plead his case 21 When Sturgis s advisers returned to the city on Friday March 3 1871 they brought Aaron Moore a Republican member of the Mississippi Legislature from Lauderdale County He called for a meeting the next day March 4 at the county courthouse to make the case for keeping Sturgis in office About 200 people showed up for the meeting but they included only a few whites Speeches reportedly criticized militant whites and encouraged freedmen in self defense The meeting adjourned at sundown after which several of the black people in the meeting organized a military company with William Clopton one of Sturgis s advisers leading the way Some were armed with swords while others carried guns many freedmen avoided the demonstration 22 Downtown fire Edit Even before the meeting at the courthouse trouble was brewing Whites shared rumors of seeing crowds of armed African Americans traveling to the city which raised their fears A local store owner overheard a conversation predicting that crowds of people both black and white would be out on the streets that night 23 When the whites heard about the courthouse meeting they decided that Sturgis Clopton and Warren Tyler another of Sturgis s advisors and a speechmaker should be forced to leave the city They organized an armed search team to find them 15 About an hour after the meeting adjourned a fire broke out in the business section of the city 24 The fire started on the second floor of a store owned by Theodore Sturgis the mayor s brother 25 Although the cause of the fire is unknown 26 many people at the time thought the mayor was behind it 25 The fire was eventually put out but not before two thirds of the business district had been engulfed 15 The block had recently been rebuilt after being destroyed during General William Tecumseh Sherman s 1864 raid 7 As the fire burned Clopton was hit in the head with a shotgun barrel Some witnesses thought he was killed but he was only wounded Hearing of the attack freedmen became enraged and began passing out guns At the same time groups of whites patrolled the streets as militias for the rest of the night 27 Over the next few days under mob rule the sheriff arrested Clopton Tyler and Moore and charged them with inciting riot Whites appointed a committee to remove Mayor Sturgis from office 26 Rumors spread as wildly as the fire had whites said the blacks would burn the entire city down 26 The sheriff told Moore at his church on Sunday that all black people in the city would be required to disarm 15 On Monday the committee started an investigation of the fire and concluded that Mayor Sturgis had set it 28 The riot EditAfter being arrested Clopton Tyler and Moore were brought to trial on Monday March 6 7 That morning the whites held a meeting of their own and passed a resolution condemning the violent acts of Daniel Price and those of Mayor Sturgis and other people blacks and whites alike on Saturday night the night of the downtown fire 29 When William Tyler was arrested Sheriff Moseley checked him for any firearms of which he had none and then allowed him to go to the barbershop for a haircut The barber Jack Williams later claimed he had seen Tyler wearing a pistol on his side Tyler went to the courtroom after leaving the barbershop 30 Judge E L Bramlette was presiding over the trial 26 Numerous Republicans and as many as two hundred Democrats were present in the courtroom 31 In general the white people in the room were situated toward the front and the black people were in the back 32 Before the examination of witnesses began Mayor Sturgis was seen conversing with Tyler and handed him a written note After the trial began Tyler and Moore were taken into another room and some reports say that Sturgis went in with them Sturgis never returned to the courtroom but when Tyler and Moore returned several witnesses reported that Tyler had a pistol on his side they had not seen before 33 The second witness to testify was James Brantley 15 Tyler asked Brantley to stay on the stand and reportedly said I want to introduce two or three witnesses to impeach your veracity 31 Outraged Brantley took a cane of Marshal William S Patton and lunged toward Tyler Patton grabbed Brantley and told him to stop and Tyler moved toward the courtroom door 34 Some witnesses claimed to have seen Tyler reach into his pocket for a gun 31 34 At this moment the first shot was fired although the person responsible is debated Marshal Patton said he did not see Tyler shoot but he thought the shot came from that direction When the first shot was fired Tyler was in little to no danger as he was 10 feet 3 0 m to 12 feet 3 7 m from Brantley Several of the people in the courtroom at the time claimed that Tyler fired first 35 Firearms were quickly drawn across the courtroom and general shooting broke out 7 The shootout lasted somewhere between one and five minutes and in the process Judge Bramlette was killed and Clopton was injured 36 Tyler sprinted to a second floor veranda hopped the railing and jumped to the ground 31 The barber Jack Williams reported seeing him throw away what looked like a pistol as he jumped Tyler limped towards Williams asking him for help and then ran through the barber shop with several whites in pursuit Dr L D Belk acting deputy sheriff chased Tyler and asked men to gather arms and help in the pursuit 37 Tyler was found wounded in a ditch between the courthouse and Sam Parker s shop by a black laborer Joe Sharp Sharp and two other men helped Tyler get to a store two doors down from Parker s shop 38 A white party later found Tyler and shot him many times but there were so many in the crowd that no one knew who had hit him 39 After the courtroom shootout Clopton was badly injured and placed under the protection of guards 40 Reportedly the two men grew tired and threw Clopton from the second story window saying they could not waste their time on a wounded Negro murderer 41 Clopton was carried back into the courthouse where sometime during the night he died after his throat was cut 42 Moore had fallen by Judge Bramlette and pretended to be dead 39 After the courthouse was cleared he ran to the woods to follow the railroad line to Jackson A mob chased him for 40 miles 64 km or 50 miles 80 km but they never caught up He eventually made it to Jackson without harm and was never arrested or brought to trial again 43 The white mob burned down Moore s house along with a Baptist church nearby which had been donated by the United States government to serve as a school for blacks 40 Daniel Price had been a teacher there 7 In the chaos after the courtroom shootout whites killed many other blacks When they could not find Tyler and Moore they attacked other freedmen they came across 7 For three days local Klansmen murdered all the leading colored men of the town with one or two exceptions 44 Several black people were killed in the courtroom and others died in the fires at Moore s house and the Baptist church 40 During the night of the shootings three other blacks were arrested and taken to the courthouse The next morning they were found dead 39 By the time federal troops arrived several days later about thirty black people had been killed 7 26 31 40 Many of the fatalities from the riot were buried in McLemore Cemetery 45 Aftermath EditDuring the riot Mayor Sturgis hid in the attic of a boarding house owned by his brother Theodore 39 He did not emerge until reaching agreement that he could resign and leave town 31 The day after the riot men approached and ordered him to return to the North He agreed to leave that night on a northbound train at midnight he was escorted safely to the train by a group of about 300 white men 46 Upon reaching New York City he wrote an account of the events in a letter to the New York Daily Tribune They were all armed with double barreled shot guns and as I was told 200 in number Many good citizens of Meridian plead for me as well as many in the Ku Klux columns who were in them not from choice but from necessity They appointed committee after committee to wait upon me and to inform me that I must leave by 10 o clock the next day Their principle commanders visited me I wanted to know the whys and wherefores but they said they came not to argue any question of right the verdict had been rendered They treated me respectfully but said that their ultimatum was that I must take a Northern bound train I yielded At about 12 o clock at night perhaps 300 came and escorted me to the cars Some difficulties and dangers presented themselves but I got here in safety I am much a sufferer in pain and feeling but I believe that the State of Mississippi is able to indemnify me Let me urge the necessity of having martial law proclaimed through every Southern State The soldiery to be sent there should be quartered on the Rebels Leniency will not do Gratitude they have none Reciprocation of favors they never dream of William Sturgis New York Daily Tribune March 16 1871 47 The letter was reprinted widely in the North and fueled the debate over toughening the restrictions in the Ku Klux Klan Law under consideration 31 News of the riot angered the Radical Republicans in Congress and hastened the passage of the law known as the Enforcement Act Mississippi Democrats attacked the Radical Republicans for using the riot as a partisan point 48 Gradually the situation in Meridian quieted down but debate continued there and in Washington 49 On March 21 the state began an investigation of the riot calling a total of 116 witnesses 48 The state indicted six men under charges of unlawful assembly and assault with intent to kill Many black witnesses had credible information as to who shot whom but most were too afraid to testify as they feared losing their jobs rights or their lives None of the men responsible for the riot was charged or brought to trial 50 Two months later a Congressional investigation re examined the case but failed to identify the first shooter in the courthouse The only person convicted of actions related to the riot was an Alabama KKK man charged with raping a black woman 48 Effects Edit The Meridian riot highlighted the fact that blacks in the South were poorly armed economically dependent on whites for jobs and new to freedom they had difficulty resisting violent attacks without federal help 44 By the mid 1870s as war memories faded Northern whites became tired of supporting the expensive programs to try to suppress the violence in the South and more inclined to let the states handle their own problems Most Northerners viewed slavery as a moral wrong but did not necessarily believe in racial equality 7 They were discouraged by the continuing insurgency in much of the South 44 Whites resorted to force to suppress the opposition With waning federal help blacks had difficulty resisting white violence 51 The riot marked the decline of Republican power and the waning of Reconstruction in this part of Mississippi 44 By 1875 in Mississippi paramilitary insurgent groups such as the Red Shirts and rifle leagues described as the military arm of the Democratic Party 52 had arisen in the Klan s place They worked openly to intimidate Republican voters especially freedmen and run officials out of office The insurgents suppressed voting to achieve Democratic landslide victories in the 1875 state elections 7 By the late 1870s the Democrats had completed their takeover in Mississippi and other former Confederate states With control reestablished at the state government level conservative Democrats passed electoral laws and constitutional amendments to restrict voting by freedmen and poor whites resulting in their disfranchisement for decades Mississippi was the first to pass such an amendment in 1890 Its surviving a United States Supreme Court review encouraged other Southern states to pass similar amendments known as the Mississippi Plan State legislatures also passed Jim Crow laws which established racial segregation in public facilities 53 The next few decades after the Meridian Riot saw a rise in lynchings and violence against blacks across the South which accompanied their loss of civil rights and the fight for white supremacy Mississippi would lead the region in racial violence and public support of it 44 While the rate of lynchings declined into the 20th century blacks had little legal standing for recourse against abuses until their successes of the Civil Rights Movement and enforcement of their right to vote See also EditList of incidents of civil unrest in the United StatesNotes Edit Gabriel J Chin September 14 2004 The Voting Rights Act of 1867 The Constitutionality of Federal Regulation of Suffrage During Reconstruction Vol 82 North Carolina Law Review SSRN 589301 McGehee p 1 W E B Du Bois 1935 Black Reconstruction in America 1860 1880 New York Oxford University Press pp 671 675 ISBN 9780684856575 McGehee p 4 Bill Marcy 2009 Don t Let Me Confuse You With The Truth Bill Marcy p 69 ISBN 978 1 4495 1238 5 McGehee pp 4 5 a b c d e f g h i j k l Seth Cagin Philip Dray 2006 We Are Not Afraid The Story of Goodman Schwerner and Chaney and the Civil Rights Campaign for Mississippi Nation Books pp 199 201 ISBN 978 1 56025 864 3 McGehee p 6 Newton Michael 2010 The Ku Klux Klan in Mississippi A History McFarland pp 32 33 ISBN 978 0786446537 Book reference in Google Cross Examined PDF The Weekly Clarion Jackson Mississippi First Column 4 February 29 1872 via Library of Congress Horn Stanley Fitzgerald 1972 Invisible Empire The Story of the Ku Klux Klan 1886 1871 Gordon Press pp 156 160 ISBN 978 0879680138 The Mississippi Ku Klux Question PDF The Daily Dispatch 4th Column 3 June 30 1871 via Library of Congress McGehee p 8 a b c d e f Rowland p 222 McGehee pp 9 10 McGehee pp 10 11 McGehee pp 11 12 McGehee p 13 McGehee pp 14 18 McGehee pp 17 19 McGehee pp 19 25 McGehee p 27 McGehee p 26 a b McGehee p 28 a b c d e The Riot of 1871 The Meridian Star July 22 2006 Retrieved 2010 07 29 McGehee pp 35 36 McGehee p 38 McGehee pp 39 40 McGehee pp 40 41 a b c d e f g Philip Dray 2008 Capitol men the epic story of Reconstruction through the lives of the first Black congressmen Houghton Mifflin Harcourt pp 180 182 ISBN 978 0 618 56370 8 McGehee p 43 McGehee p 42 a b McGehee p 44 McGehee pp 45 46 McGehee p 47 McGehee pp 47 48 McGehee pp 48 49 a b c d Jack Shank 1985 Chapter 11 The Riot and the End of Reconstruction Meridian The Queen with a Past Vol 1 Meridian Mississippi Brown Printing Company pp 51 57 ISBN 0 9616123 1 2 a b c d Rowland p 223 McGehee p 53 McGehee p 54 McGehee p 61 a b c d e David M Oshinsky 1996 Worse Than Slavery Retrieved 2010 12 16 1878 Meridian Yellow Fever Epidemic The Meridian Star July 22 2006 Archived from the original on January 3 2013 Retrieved July 15 2009 McGehee p 64 McGehee p 64 first half p 72 second half a b c Michael Newton 2010 The Ku Klux Klan in Mississippi A History McFarland pp 32 33 ISBN 978 0 7864 4653 7 McGehee p 76 McGehee pp 69 70 McGehee pp 76 77 George C Rable But There Was No Peace The Role of Violence in the Politics of Reconstruction Athens University of Georgia Press 1984 p 132 McGehee p 77References EditMcGehee Katharine Louise June 1966 The Meridian race riot of 1871 Honors undergraduate thesis Tallahassee Florida Florida State University pp ii 79 retrieved 4 July 2011 Rowland Dunbar 1907 Encyclopedia of Mississippi history Comprising sketches of counties towns events institutions and persons Vol 2 S A Brant pp 221 223 Further reading EditHewitt Clarke Thunder at Meridian Lone Star Press 1995 Laura Nan Fairley and James T Dawon Paths to the Past An Overview History of Lauderdale County Mississippi Lauderdale County Department of Archives and History Inc 1988External links Edit Jim Crow History at the Library of Congress Web Archives archived 2002 10 13 Official Website United States Congress Joint Select Committee on the Condition of Affairs in the Late Insurrectionary States Government Printing Office 1872 Includes transcript of testimony in the investigation of the Meridian Race Riot of 1871 and state investigation Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Meridian race riot of 1871 amp oldid 1077230573, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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