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Palmer Raids

The Palmer Raids were a series of raids conducted in November 1919 and January 1920 by the United States Department of Justice under the administration of President Woodrow Wilson to capture and arrest suspected socialists, especially anarchists and communists, and deport them from the United States. The raids particularly targeted Italian immigrants and Eastern European Jewish immigrants with alleged leftist ties, with particular focus on Italian anarchists and immigrant leftist labor activists. The raids and arrests occurred under the leadership of Attorney General A. Mitchell Palmer, with 6,000 people arrested across 36 cities. Though 556 foreign citizens were deported, including a number of prominent leftist leaders, Palmer's efforts were largely frustrated by officials at the U.S. Department of Labor, which had authority for deportations and objected to Palmer's methods.

A. Mitchell Palmer

The Palmer Raids occurred in the larger context of the First Red Scare, a period of fear of and reaction against communists in the U.S. in the years immediately following World War I and the Russian Revolution.[1] There were strikes that garnered national attention, and prompted race riots in more than 30 cities, as well as two sets of bombings in April and June 1919, including one bomb mailed to Palmer's home.

Background edit

During the First World War there was a nationwide campaign in the United States against the real and imagined divided political loyalties of immigrants and ethnic groups, who were feared to have too much loyalty for their nations of origin. In 1915, President Wilson warned against hyphenated Americans who, he charged, had "poured the poison of disloyalty into the very arteries of our national life." "Such creatures of passion, disloyalty and anarchy", Wilson continued, "must be crushed out".[2] The Russian Revolutions of 1917 added special force to fear of labor agitators and partisans of ideologies like anarchism and communism. The general strike in Seattle in February 1919 represented a new development in labor unrest.[3]

The fears of Wilson and other government officials were confirmed when Galleanists—Italian immigrant followers of the anarchist Luigi Galleani—carried out a series of bombings in April and June 1919.[4] At the end of April, some 30 Galleanist letter bombs had been mailed to a host of individuals, mostly prominent government officials and businessmen, but also law enforcement officials.[4] Only a few reached their targets, and not all exploded when opened. Some people suffered injuries, including a housekeeper in Senator Thomas W. Hardwick's residence, who had her hands blown off.[4] On June 2, 1919, the second wave of bombings occurred, when several much larger package bombs were detonated by Galleanists in eight American cities, including one that damaged the home of Attorney General A. Mitchell Palmer in Washington, D.C.[4] At least one person was killed in this second attack, night watchman William Boehner, and fears were raised because it occurred in the capital.[4][5][6] Flyers declaring war on capitalists in the name of anarchist principles accompanied each bomb.[4]

Preparations edit

In June 1919, Attorney General Palmer told the House Appropriations Committee that all evidence promised that radicals would "on a certain day...rise up and destroy the government at one fell swoop." He requested an increase in his budget to $2,000,000 from $1,500,000 to support his investigations of radicals, but Congress limited the increase to $100,000.[7]

An initial raid in July 1919 against an anarchist group in Buffalo, New York, achieved little when a federal judge tossed out Palmer's case. He found in the case that the three arrested radicals, charged under a law dating from the Civil War, had proposed transforming the government by using their free speech rights and not by violence.[8] That taught Palmer that he needed to exploit the more powerful immigration statutes that authorized the deportation of alien anarchists, violent or not. To do that, he needed to enlist the cooperation of officials at the Department of Labor. Only the Secretary of Labor could issue warrants for the arrest of alien violators of the Immigration Acts, and only he could sign deportation orders following a hearing by an immigration inspector.[9]

On August 1, 1919, Palmer named 24-year-old J. Edgar Hoover to head a new division of the Justice Department's Bureau of Investigation, the General Intelligence Division (GID), with responsibility for investigating the programs of radical groups and identifying their members.[10] The Boston Police Strike in early September raised concerns about possible threats to political and social stability. On October 17, the Senate passed a unanimous resolution demanding Palmer explain what actions he had or had not taken against radical aliens and why.[11]

At 9 pm on November 7, 1919, a date chosen because it was the second anniversary of the Bolshevik revolution, agents of the Bureau of Investigation, together with local police, executed a series of well-publicized and violent raids against the Union of Russian Workers in 12 cities. Newspaper accounts reported some were "badly beaten" during the arrests. Many later swore they were threatened and beaten during questioning. Government agents cast a wide net, bringing in some American citizens, passers-by who admitted being Russian, some not members of the Russian Workers. Others were teachers conducting night school classes in space shared with the targeted radical group. Arrests far exceeded the number of warrants. Of 650 arrested in New York City, the government managed to deport just 43.[12]

When Palmer replied to the Senate's questions of October 17, he reported that his department had amassed 60,000 names with great effort. Required by the statutes to work through the Department of Labor, they had arrested 250 dangerous radicals in the November 7 raids. He proposed a new Anti-Sedition Law to enhance his authority to prosecute anarchists.[13]

Raids and arrests in January 1920 edit

 
Men arrested in raids awaiting deportation hearings on Ellis Island, January 13, 1920
 
Cartoon by Archibald B. Chapin on the South Bend News-Times – November 8, 1919

As Attorney General Palmer struggled with exhaustion and devoted all his energies to the United Mine Workers coal strike in November and December 1919,[14] Hoover organized the next raids. He successfully persuaded the Department of Labor to ease its insistence on promptly alerting those arrested of their right to an attorney. Instead, Labor issued instructions that its representatives could wait until after the case against the defendant was established, "in order to protect government interests."[15] Less openly, Hoover decided to interpret Labor's agreement to act against the Communist Party to include a different organization, the Communist Labor Party. Finally, despite the fact that Secretary of Labor William B. Wilson insisted that more than membership in an organization was required for a warrant, Hoover worked with more compliant Labor officials and overwhelmed Labor staff to get the warrants he wanted. Justice Department officials, including Palmer and Hoover, later claimed ignorance of such details.[16]

The Justice Department launched a series of raids on January 2, 1920, with follow up operations over the next few days. Smaller raids extended over the next 6 weeks. At least 3000 were arrested, and many others were held for various lengths of time. The entire enterprise replicated the November action on a larger scale, including arrests and seizures without search warrants, as well as detention in overcrowded and unsanitary holding facilities. Hoover later admitted "clear cases of brutality."[17] The raids covered more than 30 cities and towns in 23 states, but those west of the Mississippi and south of the Ohio were "publicity gestures" designed to make the effort appear nationwide in scope.[18] Because the raids targeted entire organizations, agents arrested everyone found in organization meeting halls, not only arresting non-radical organization members but also visitors who did not belong to a target organization, and sometimes American citizens not eligible for arrest and deportation.[19]

The Department of Justice at one point claimed to have taken possession of several bombs, but after a few iron balls were displayed to the press they were never mentioned again. All the raids netted a total of just four ordinary pistols.[20]

While most press coverage continued to be positive, with criticism only from leftist publications like The Nation and The New Republic, one attorney raised the first noteworthy protest. Francis Fisher Kane, the U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, resigned in protest. In his letter of resignation to the President and the Attorney General he wrote: "It seems to me that the policy of raids against large numbers of individuals is generally unwise and very apt to result in injustice. People not really guilty are likely to be arrested and railroaded through their hearings...We appear to be attempting to repress a political party...By such methods, we drive underground and make dangerous what was not dangerous before." Palmer replied that he could not use individual arrests to treat an "epidemic" and asserted his own fidelity to constitutional principles. He added: "The Government should encourage free political thinking and political action, but it certainly has the right for its own preservation to discourage and prevent the use of force and violence to accomplish that which ought to be accomplished, if at all, by parliamentary or political methods."[21] The Washington Post endorsed Palmer's claim for urgency over legal process: "There is no time to waste on hairsplitting over infringement of liberty."[22]

Aftermath edit

In a few weeks, after changes in personnel at the Department of Labor, Palmer faced a new and very independent-minded Acting Secretary of Labor in Assistant Secretary of Labor Louis Freeland Post, who canceled more than 2,000 warrants as being illegal.[23] Of the 10,000 arrested, 3,500 were held by authorities in detention; 556 resident aliens were eventually deported under the Immigration Act of 1918.[24]

At a Cabinet meeting in April 1920, Palmer called on Secretary of Labor William B. Wilson to fire Post, but Wilson defended him. The President listened to his feuding department heads and offered no comment about Post, but he ended the meeting by telling Palmer that he should "not let this country see red." Secretary of the Navy Josephus Daniels, who made notes of the conversation, thought the Attorney General had merited the President's "admonition", because Palmer "was seeing red behind every bush and every demand for an increase in wages."[25]

Palmer's supporters in Congress responded with an attempt to impeach Louis Post or, failing that, to censure him. The drive against Post began to lose energy when Attorney General Palmer's forecast of an attempted radical uprising on May Day 1920 failed to occur. Then, in testimony before the House Rules Committee on May 7–8, Post proved "a convincing speaker with a caustic tongue"[23] and defended himself so successfully that Congressman Edward W. Pou, a Democrat presumed to be an enthusiastic supporter of Palmer, congratulated him: "I feel that you have followed your sense of duty absolutely."[26]

On May 28, 1920, the nascent American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), which was founded in response to the raids,[27] published its Report Upon the Illegal Practices of the United States Department of Justice,[28] which carefully documented unlawful activities in arresting suspected radicals, illegal entrapment by agents provocateur, and unlawful incommunicado detention. Such prominent lawyers and law professors as Felix Frankfurter, Roscoe Pound and Ernst Freund signed it. Harvard Professor Zechariah Chafee criticized the raids and attempts at deportations and the lack of legal process in his 1920 volume Freedom of Speech. He wrote: "That a Quaker should employ prison and exile to counteract evil-thinking is one of the saddest ironies of our time."[29] The Rules Committee gave Palmer a hearing in June, where he attacked Post and other critics whose "tender solicitude for social revolution and perverted sympathy for the criminal anarchists...set at large among the people the very public enemies whom it was the desire and intention of the Congress to be rid of." The press saw the dispute as evidence of the Wilson administration's ineffectiveness and division as it approached its final months.[30]

In June 1920, a decision by Massachusetts District Court Judge George W. Anderson ordered the discharge of 17 arrested aliens and denounced the Department of Justice's actions. He wrote that "a mob is a mob, whether made up of Government officials acting under instructions from the Department of Justice, or of criminals and loafers and the vicious classes." His decision effectively prevented any renewal of the raids.[31]

Palmer, once seen as a likely presidential candidate, lost his bid to win the Democratic nomination for president later in the year.[32] The anarchist bombing campaign continued intermittently for another twelve years.[33]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Palmer Raids".
  2. ^ Kennedy, 24
  3. ^ Shepley, Nick (2015). The Palmer Raids and the Red Scare: 1918–1920: Justice and Liberty for All. Andrews UK Limited. pp. 18–19. ISBN 978-1-84989-944-4.
  4. ^ a b c d e f Avrich, Paul, Sacco and Vanzetti: The Anarchist Background, Princeton University Press, ISBN 0-691-02604-1 (1991), pp. 140–143, 147, 149–156
  5. ^ "Plotter Here Hid Trail Skillfully; His victim Was a Night Watchman; Police Study Anarchistic Handbills Adroitly Placed by the Conspirator-Expert Declares Bomb Held Twenty-fivePounds of Dynamite. Thinks Bomb Contained Dynamite. Windows All About Shattered. PLOTTER HERE HID TRAIL SKILFULLY Handbills Studied by Police. Hylan Consults Enright". The New York Times. 4 June 1919.
  6. ^ "WRECK JUDGE NOTT'S HOME; Man and Woman Killed May Have Been Bomb Setters. MRS. NOTT IN THE HOUSE She and Caretaker's Family Escape, Though Front of Building Was Shattered. JUDGE NOTT IN THE COUNTRY Police Rush Guards to Homes of Officials and Judges Throughout the City. Child's Amazing Escape. Stairways Fall. Other Houses Shattered. WRECK JUDGE NOTT'S HOME. All Police Agencies Active. Crowds Hamper Police. Judge Nott's Public Career". The New York Times. 3 June 1919.
  7. ^ Hagedorn, 229–30; Coben, 211
  8. ^ Pietruszka, 146–7
  9. ^ Coben 217–8
  10. ^ Coben, 207–9
  11. ^ Coben, 214–5
  12. ^ Coben, 219–21; Post, 28–35. Post says 11 cities.
  13. ^ "PALMER FOR STRINGENT LAW; Attorney General Asks Senate for Sedition Act to Fit Reds. NEW PUNISHMENT PLAN He Would Send All Aliens from Country and Denaturalize Convicted Citizens. TELLS OF REDS' ACTIVITIES Work of Union of Russians Revealed--472 PublicationsPreaching Anarchy. The Attorney General's Letter. PALMER FOR STRINGENT LAW Penal Code Test Case. Where the Laws Are Weak. Difficulties of Deportation. Many "Red" Publications. Radical Papers Increase. Proposed Anti-Sedition Law. ASKS FOR IRON-CLAD LAWS. Mayor of Portland Appeals to Senate for Immediate Legislation". The New York Times. 16 November 1919.
  14. ^ "Miners Finally Agree" (PDF). The New York Times. December 11, 1919. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2022-10-09. Retrieved June 11, 2014.
  15. ^ Coben, 222–3
  16. ^ Murray, 223–7
  17. ^ Murray, 227–9
  18. ^ States (cities where available): California (Los Angeles, San Francisco), Colorado (Denver), Connecticut (Ansonia, Bridgeport, Hartford, Meriden, New Haven, New London, South Manchester, Waterbury), Florida, Illinois (Chicago, Rockford, East St. Louis), Indiana, Iowa (Des Moines), Kansas (Kansas City), Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts (Boston, Chelsea, Brockton, Bridgewater, Norwood, Worcester, Springfield, Chicopee Falls, Holyoke, Gardner, Fitchburg, Lowell, Lawrence, Haverhill), Michigan (Detroit), Minnesota (St. Paul), Nebraska (Omaha), New Hampshire (Claremont, Derry, Lincoln, Manchester, Nashua, Portsmouth), New Jersey (Camden), New York (Buffalo and "nearby towns", New York City), Ohio (Cleveland, Toledo, Youngstown), Oregon (Portland), Pennsylvania (Chester, Pittsburgh), Washington (Spokane), Wisconsin (Milwaukee, Racine). Others were arrested in West Virginia by agents working from Pittsburgh. Post, 91–2, 96, 104–5, 108, 110, 115–6, 120–1, 124, 126, 131
  19. ^ Post, 96–147, passim
  20. ^ Post, 91–5, 96–147
  21. ^ Coben, 230; The New York Times: "Palmer Upholds Red Repression," January 24, 1920, accessed January 15, 2010,
  22. ^ The Washington Post, "The Red Assassins," January 4, 1920
  23. ^ a b Coben, 232
  24. ^ Avakov, Aleksandr Vladimirovich, Plato's Dreams Realized: Surveillance and Citizen Rights from KGB to FBI, Algora Publishing, ISBN 0-87586-495-3, ISBN 978-0-87586-495-2 (2007), p. 36
  25. ^ Daniels, 545–6
  26. ^ Post, 273
  27. ^ "ACLU History".
  28. ^ Report Upon the Illegal Practices of the United States Department of Justice. National Popular Government League. 1920.
  29. ^ Chafee, 197, ch. 5 "Deportations"
  30. ^ Murray, 255–6
  31. ^ Murray, 250–1; Post, 97
  32. ^ Pietrusza, 257
  33. ^ Avrich, 214

General bibliography edit

  • Avrich, Paul, Sacco and Vanzetti: The Anarchist Background (Princeton University Press, 1991)
  • Chafee, Zechariah, Freedom of Speech (New York: Harcourt, Brace, and Howe, 1920)
  • Coben, Stanley, A. Mitchell Palmer: Politician (New York: Columbia University Press, 1963)
  • Daniels, Josephus, The Wilson Era: Years of War and After, 1917–1923 (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1946)
  • Dunn, Robert W. The Palmer Raids. New York: International Publishers. 1948.
  • Finan, Christopher M. (2007). From the Palmer Raids to the Patriot Act: A History of the Fight for Free Speech in America. Beacon Press. ISBN 978-0-8070-4428-5.
  • Hagedorn, Ann, Savage Peace: Hope and Fear in America, 1919 (New York: Simon & Schuster, 2007)
  • Kennedy, David M., Over Here: The First World War and American Society (New York: Oxford University Press, 1980)
  • Murray, Robert K., Red Scare: A Study in National Hysteria, 1919–1920 (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1955)
  • Pietrusza, David, 1920: The Year of Six presidents (New York: Carroll & Graf, 2007)
  • Post, Louis F., The Deportations Delirium of Nineteen-twenty: A Personal Narrative of a Historic Official Experience (New York, 1923), reissued: ISBN 0-306-71882-0, ISBN 1-4102-0553-3
  • Shepley, Nick (2015). The Palmer Raids and the Red Scare: 1918-1920: Justice and Liberty for All. Andrews UK Limited. ISBN 978-1-84989-945-1.

Further reading edit

  • Pusey, Allen (2015). "Palmer Raids Target Immigrants". ABA Journal. 101: 100.
  • Popkova, Anna (2 January 2022). "Imagining the Russian Community: Novoye Russkoe Slovo , the First Red Scare, and the Palmer Raids, 1919-1920". Journalism History. 48 (1): 41–60. doi:10.1080/00947679.2022.2027140. S2CID 246293091.
  • Cohen, Harlan Grant (2003). "The (Un)favorable Judgment of History: Deportation Hearings, the Palmer Raids, and the Meaning of History" (PDF). New York University Law Review. 78: 1431.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Palmer Raids at Wikimedia Commons

palmer, raids, were, series, raids, conducted, november, 1919, january, 1920, united, states, department, justice, under, administration, president, woodrow, wilson, capture, arrest, suspected, socialists, especially, anarchists, communists, deport, them, from. The Palmer Raids were a series of raids conducted in November 1919 and January 1920 by the United States Department of Justice under the administration of President Woodrow Wilson to capture and arrest suspected socialists especially anarchists and communists and deport them from the United States The raids particularly targeted Italian immigrants and Eastern European Jewish immigrants with alleged leftist ties with particular focus on Italian anarchists and immigrant leftist labor activists The raids and arrests occurred under the leadership of Attorney General A Mitchell Palmer with 6 000 people arrested across 36 cities Though 556 foreign citizens were deported including a number of prominent leftist leaders Palmer s efforts were largely frustrated by officials at the U S Department of Labor which had authority for deportations and objected to Palmer s methods A Mitchell Palmer The Palmer Raids occurred in the larger context of the First Red Scare a period of fear of and reaction against communists in the U S in the years immediately following World War I and the Russian Revolution 1 There were strikes that garnered national attention and prompted race riots in more than 30 cities as well as two sets of bombings in April and June 1919 including one bomb mailed to Palmer s home Contents 1 Background 2 Preparations 3 Raids and arrests in January 1920 4 Aftermath 5 See also 6 References 7 General bibliography 8 Further reading 9 External linksBackground editDuring the First World War there was a nationwide campaign in the United States against the real and imagined divided political loyalties of immigrants and ethnic groups who were feared to have too much loyalty for their nations of origin In 1915 President Wilson warned against hyphenated Americans who he charged had poured the poison of disloyalty into the very arteries of our national life Such creatures of passion disloyalty and anarchy Wilson continued must be crushed out 2 The Russian Revolutions of 1917 added special force to fear of labor agitators and partisans of ideologies like anarchism and communism The general strike in Seattle in February 1919 represented a new development in labor unrest 3 The fears of Wilson and other government officials were confirmed when Galleanists Italian immigrant followers of the anarchist Luigi Galleani carried out a series of bombings in April and June 1919 4 At the end of April some 30 Galleanist letter bombs had been mailed to a host of individuals mostly prominent government officials and businessmen but also law enforcement officials 4 Only a few reached their targets and not all exploded when opened Some people suffered injuries including a housekeeper in Senator Thomas W Hardwick s residence who had her hands blown off 4 On June 2 1919 the second wave of bombings occurred when several much larger package bombs were detonated by Galleanists in eight American cities including one that damaged the home of Attorney General A Mitchell Palmer in Washington D C 4 At least one person was killed in this second attack night watchman William Boehner and fears were raised because it occurred in the capital 4 5 6 Flyers declaring war on capitalists in the name of anarchist principles accompanied each bomb 4 Preparations editIn June 1919 Attorney General Palmer told the House Appropriations Committee that all evidence promised that radicals would on a certain day rise up and destroy the government at one fell swoop He requested an increase in his budget to 2 000 000 from 1 500 000 to support his investigations of radicals but Congress limited the increase to 100 000 7 An initial raid in July 1919 against an anarchist group in Buffalo New York achieved little when a federal judge tossed out Palmer s case He found in the case that the three arrested radicals charged under a law dating from the Civil War had proposed transforming the government by using their free speech rights and not by violence 8 That taught Palmer that he needed to exploit the more powerful immigration statutes that authorized the deportation of alien anarchists violent or not To do that he needed to enlist the cooperation of officials at the Department of Labor Only the Secretary of Labor could issue warrants for the arrest of alien violators of the Immigration Acts and only he could sign deportation orders following a hearing by an immigration inspector 9 On August 1 1919 Palmer named 24 year old J Edgar Hoover to head a new division of the Justice Department s Bureau of Investigation the General Intelligence Division GID with responsibility for investigating the programs of radical groups and identifying their members 10 The Boston Police Strike in early September raised concerns about possible threats to political and social stability On October 17 the Senate passed a unanimous resolution demanding Palmer explain what actions he had or had not taken against radical aliens and why 11 At 9 pm on November 7 1919 a date chosen because it was the second anniversary of the Bolshevik revolution agents of the Bureau of Investigation together with local police executed a series of well publicized and violent raids against the Union of Russian Workers in 12 cities Newspaper accounts reported some were badly beaten during the arrests Many later swore they were threatened and beaten during questioning Government agents cast a wide net bringing in some American citizens passers by who admitted being Russian some not members of the Russian Workers Others were teachers conducting night school classes in space shared with the targeted radical group Arrests far exceeded the number of warrants Of 650 arrested in New York City the government managed to deport just 43 12 When Palmer replied to the Senate s questions of October 17 he reported that his department had amassed 60 000 names with great effort Required by the statutes to work through the Department of Labor they had arrested 250 dangerous radicals in the November 7 raids He proposed a new Anti Sedition Law to enhance his authority to prosecute anarchists 13 Raids and arrests in January 1920 edit nbsp Men arrested in raids awaiting deportation hearings on Ellis Island January 13 1920 nbsp Cartoon by Archibald B Chapin on the South Bend News Times November 8 1919 As Attorney General Palmer struggled with exhaustion and devoted all his energies to the United Mine Workers coal strike in November and December 1919 14 Hoover organized the next raids He successfully persuaded the Department of Labor to ease its insistence on promptly alerting those arrested of their right to an attorney Instead Labor issued instructions that its representatives could wait until after the case against the defendant was established in order to protect government interests 15 Less openly Hoover decided to interpret Labor s agreement to act against the Communist Party to include a different organization the Communist Labor Party Finally despite the fact that Secretary of Labor William B Wilson insisted that more than membership in an organization was required for a warrant Hoover worked with more compliant Labor officials and overwhelmed Labor staff to get the warrants he wanted Justice Department officials including Palmer and Hoover later claimed ignorance of such details 16 The Justice Department launched a series of raids on January 2 1920 with follow up operations over the next few days Smaller raids extended over the next 6 weeks At least 3000 were arrested and many others were held for various lengths of time The entire enterprise replicated the November action on a larger scale including arrests and seizures without search warrants as well as detention in overcrowded and unsanitary holding facilities Hoover later admitted clear cases of brutality 17 The raids covered more than 30 cities and towns in 23 states but those west of the Mississippi and south of the Ohio were publicity gestures designed to make the effort appear nationwide in scope 18 Because the raids targeted entire organizations agents arrested everyone found in organization meeting halls not only arresting non radical organization members but also visitors who did not belong to a target organization and sometimes American citizens not eligible for arrest and deportation 19 The Department of Justice at one point claimed to have taken possession of several bombs but after a few iron balls were displayed to the press they were never mentioned again All the raids netted a total of just four ordinary pistols 20 While most press coverage continued to be positive with criticism only from leftist publications like The Nation and The New Republic one attorney raised the first noteworthy protest Francis Fisher Kane the U S Attorney for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania resigned in protest In his letter of resignation to the President and the Attorney General he wrote It seems to me that the policy of raids against large numbers of individuals is generally unwise and very apt to result in injustice People not really guilty are likely to be arrested and railroaded through their hearings We appear to be attempting to repress a political party By such methods we drive underground and make dangerous what was not dangerous before Palmer replied that he could not use individual arrests to treat an epidemic and asserted his own fidelity to constitutional principles He added The Government should encourage free political thinking and political action but it certainly has the right for its own preservation to discourage and prevent the use of force and violence to accomplish that which ought to be accomplished if at all by parliamentary or political methods 21 The Washington Post endorsed Palmer s claim for urgency over legal process There is no time to waste on hairsplitting over infringement of liberty 22 Aftermath editIn a few weeks after changes in personnel at the Department of Labor Palmer faced a new and very independent minded Acting Secretary of Labor in Assistant Secretary of Labor Louis Freeland Post who canceled more than 2 000 warrants as being illegal 23 Of the 10 000 arrested 3 500 were held by authorities in detention 556 resident aliens were eventually deported under the Immigration Act of 1918 24 At a Cabinet meeting in April 1920 Palmer called on Secretary of Labor William B Wilson to fire Post but Wilson defended him The President listened to his feuding department heads and offered no comment about Post but he ended the meeting by telling Palmer that he should not let this country see red Secretary of the Navy Josephus Daniels who made notes of the conversation thought the Attorney General had merited the President s admonition because Palmer was seeing red behind every bush and every demand for an increase in wages 25 Palmer s supporters in Congress responded with an attempt to impeach Louis Post or failing that to censure him The drive against Post began to lose energy when Attorney General Palmer s forecast of an attempted radical uprising on May Day 1920 failed to occur Then in testimony before the House Rules Committee on May 7 8 Post proved a convincing speaker with a caustic tongue 23 and defended himself so successfully that Congressman Edward W Pou a Democrat presumed to be an enthusiastic supporter of Palmer congratulated him I feel that you have followed your sense of duty absolutely 26 On May 28 1920 the nascent American Civil Liberties Union ACLU which was founded in response to the raids 27 published its Report Upon the Illegal Practices of the United States Department of Justice 28 which carefully documented unlawful activities in arresting suspected radicals illegal entrapment by agents provocateur and unlawful incommunicado detention Such prominent lawyers and law professors as Felix Frankfurter Roscoe Pound and Ernst Freund signed it Harvard Professor Zechariah Chafee criticized the raids and attempts at deportations and the lack of legal process in his 1920 volume Freedom of Speech He wrote That a Quaker should employ prison and exile to counteract evil thinking is one of the saddest ironies of our time 29 The Rules Committee gave Palmer a hearing in June where he attacked Post and other critics whose tender solicitude for social revolution and perverted sympathy for the criminal anarchists set at large among the people the very public enemies whom it was the desire and intention of the Congress to be rid of The press saw the dispute as evidence of the Wilson administration s ineffectiveness and division as it approached its final months 30 In June 1920 a decision by Massachusetts District Court Judge George W Anderson ordered the discharge of 17 arrested aliens and denounced the Department of Justice s actions He wrote that a mob is a mob whether made up of Government officials acting under instructions from the Department of Justice or of criminals and loafers and the vicious classes His decision effectively prevented any renewal of the raids 31 Palmer once seen as a likely presidential candidate lost his bid to win the Democratic nomination for president later in the year 32 The anarchist bombing campaign continued intermittently for another twelve years 33 See also editEspionage Act of 1917 Industrial Workers of the World McCarthyism 1918 1920 New York City rent strikesReferences edit Palmer Raids Kennedy 24 Shepley Nick 2015 The Palmer Raids and the Red Scare 1918 1920 Justice and Liberty for All Andrews UK Limited pp 18 19 ISBN 978 1 84989 944 4 a b c d e f Avrich Paul Sacco and Vanzetti The Anarchist Background Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 02604 1 1991 pp 140 143 147 149 156 Plotter Here Hid Trail Skillfully His victim Was a Night Watchman Police Study Anarchistic Handbills Adroitly Placed by the Conspirator Expert Declares Bomb Held Twenty fivePounds of Dynamite Thinks Bomb Contained Dynamite Windows All About Shattered PLOTTER HERE HID TRAIL SKILFULLY Handbills Studied by Police Hylan Consults Enright The New York Times 4 June 1919 WRECK JUDGE NOTT S HOME Man and Woman Killed May Have Been Bomb Setters MRS NOTT IN THE HOUSE She and Caretaker s Family Escape Though Front of Building Was Shattered JUDGE NOTT IN THE COUNTRY Police Rush Guards to Homes of Officials and Judges Throughout the City Child s Amazing Escape Stairways Fall Other Houses Shattered WRECK JUDGE NOTT S HOME All Police Agencies Active Crowds Hamper Police Judge Nott s Public Career The New York Times 3 June 1919 Hagedorn 229 30 Coben 211 Pietruszka 146 7 Coben 217 8 Coben 207 9 Coben 214 5 Coben 219 21 Post 28 35 Post says 11 cities PALMER FOR STRINGENT LAW Attorney General Asks Senate for Sedition Act to Fit Reds NEW PUNISHMENT PLAN He Would Send All Aliens from Country and Denaturalize Convicted Citizens TELLS OF REDS ACTIVITIES Work of Union of Russians Revealed 472 PublicationsPreaching Anarchy The Attorney General s Letter PALMER FOR STRINGENT LAW Penal Code Test Case Where the Laws Are Weak Difficulties of Deportation Many Red Publications Radical Papers Increase Proposed Anti Sedition Law ASKS FOR IRON CLAD LAWS Mayor of Portland Appeals to Senate for Immediate Legislation The New York Times 16 November 1919 Miners Finally Agree PDF The New York Times December 11 1919 Archived PDF from the original on 2022 10 09 Retrieved June 11 2014 Coben 222 3 Murray 223 7 Murray 227 9 States cities where available California Los Angeles San Francisco Colorado Denver Connecticut Ansonia Bridgeport Hartford Meriden New Haven New London South Manchester Waterbury Florida Illinois Chicago Rockford East St Louis Indiana Iowa Des Moines Kansas Kansas City Maine Maryland Massachusetts Boston Chelsea Brockton Bridgewater Norwood Worcester Springfield Chicopee Falls Holyoke Gardner Fitchburg Lowell Lawrence Haverhill Michigan Detroit Minnesota St Paul Nebraska Omaha New Hampshire Claremont Derry Lincoln Manchester Nashua Portsmouth New Jersey Camden New York Buffalo and nearby towns New York City Ohio Cleveland Toledo Youngstown Oregon Portland Pennsylvania Chester Pittsburgh Washington Spokane Wisconsin Milwaukee Racine Others were arrested in West Virginia by agents working from Pittsburgh Post 91 2 96 104 5 108 110 115 6 120 1 124 126 131 Post 96 147 passim Post 91 5 96 147 Coben 230 The New York Times Palmer Upholds Red Repression January 24 1920 accessed January 15 2010 The Washington Post The Red Assassins January 4 1920 a b Coben 232 Avakov Aleksandr Vladimirovich Plato s Dreams Realized Surveillance and Citizen Rights from KGB to FBI Algora Publishing ISBN 0 87586 495 3 ISBN 978 0 87586 495 2 2007 p 36 Daniels 545 6 Post 273 ACLU History Report Upon the Illegal Practices of the United States Department of Justice National Popular Government League 1920 Chafee 197 ch 5 Deportations Murray 255 6 Murray 250 1 Post 97 Pietrusza 257 Avrich 214General bibliography editAvrich Paul Sacco and Vanzetti The Anarchist Background Princeton University Press 1991 Chafee Zechariah Freedom of Speech New York Harcourt Brace and Howe 1920 Coben Stanley A Mitchell Palmer Politician New York Columbia University Press 1963 Daniels Josephus The Wilson Era Years of War and After 1917 1923 Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press 1946 Dunn Robert W The Palmer Raids New York International Publishers 1948 Finan Christopher M 2007 From the Palmer Raids to the Patriot Act A History of the Fight for Free Speech in America Beacon Press ISBN 978 0 8070 4428 5 Hagedorn Ann Savage Peace Hope and Fear in America 1919 New York Simon amp Schuster 2007 Kennedy David M Over Here The First World War and American Society New York Oxford University Press 1980 Murray Robert K Red Scare A Study in National Hysteria 1919 1920 Minneapolis University of Minnesota Press 1955 Pietrusza David 1920 The Year of Six presidents New York Carroll amp Graf 2007 Post Louis F The Deportations Delirium of Nineteen twenty A Personal Narrative of a Historic Official Experience New York 1923 reissued ISBN 0 306 71882 0 ISBN 1 4102 0553 3 Shepley Nick 2015 The Palmer Raids and the Red Scare 1918 1920 Justice and Liberty for All Andrews UK Limited ISBN 978 1 84989 945 1 Further reading editPusey Allen 2015 Palmer Raids Target Immigrants ABA Journal 101 100 Popkova Anna 2 January 2022 Imagining the Russian Community Novoye Russkoe Slovo the First Red Scare and the Palmer Raids 1919 1920 Journalism History 48 1 41 60 doi 10 1080 00947679 2022 2027140 S2CID 246293091 Cohen Harlan Grant 2003 The Un favorable Judgment of History Deportation Hearings the Palmer Raids and the Meaning of History PDF New York University Law Review 78 1431 External links edit nbsp Media related to Palmer Raids at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Palmer Raids amp oldid 1215504444, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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