Hattie Carroll (1911-1963) was a
51-year-old restaurant server who was murdered by a white aristocrat,
the 24-year-old William Devereux Zantzinger (1939-2009) who struck
her with a cane because she took to long to serve him a drink. The
site was the old Emerson Hotel in Baltimore, at an event, The
Spinsters’ Ball. Zantzinger’s crime was minimized, and
he got a scant six months in jail (not prison) for killing a woman,
the mother of at least 9 children, who was more than twice his age,
and with just a fraction of his power.
Bob
Dylan popularized the murder of Hattie Carroll in a folk song, The
Lonesome Death of Hattie Carroll. He didn’t get all the facts
right – Hattie Carroll didn’t have ten children as he
crooned, and Zantzinger was never indicted for first-degree murder.
Still, the haunting croon was a poignant reminder that a rich and
powerful white man with a diamond ring on his finger and a cane in
his hand got away with killing a black woman server. More than that,
Zantzinger was treated with kid gloves, allowed to “take a
break” from his incarceration to make sure his tobacco crop was
planted.
Young
Naomi Wadler, the 11-year-old speaker at the March for Our Lives did
not know about Hattie Carroll. Why would she have? The Alexandria,
Virginia fifth-grader was born in 2007, forty-four years after Hattie
Carroll died in 1963. Her plea to consider the Black women who do
not make headlines might well have been extended to Hattie Carroll,
but Naomi Wadler did not know, and we don’t know enough to
juxtapose white privilege with Black women’s invisibility.
Without
knowing all of the details, Naomi shared that Black women don’t
often make headlines. She knows that her contemporaries could be
targets of guns, of police brutality, and that their (our) plights
are often ignored. Ms. Naomi knows, along with so many of her
colleagues, that Black women are worth more than the shrug of
shoulders that Mr. Zantzinger offered when he was confronted with
Hattie Carroll’s murder.
April 4 was the 50th anniversary of Dr.
King’s assassination. WE remember Dr. King through our
prisms, considering him as a prophet, an evangelist, a social justice
advocate, and activist, an educator, an economist, a leader and a
martyr. We cannot consider him in any silo though, and we must
consider him in the context of the women who supported him, who
empowered him, and who were sometimes martyred along with him.
Dr.
Barbara Reynolds has written about Coretta Scott King and her major
contributions to her husband’s work. The King biographer
Claiborne Carson shared private letters between Martin Luther King,
Jr. and his “boo” Coretta, where they clashed and
reconciled in exciting prose that illustrated their regard for each
other. Did the Kings know that a depraved white man, William
Zantzinger, was sentenced to a mere six months for killing a Hattie
Carroll on the same day that Dr. King delivered the ‘I Have A
Dream” speech?
Thanks
to Naomi Wadler, we will pay more attention to these Black women like
Hattie Carroll, whose stories have been swallowed. Thanks to Dr.
King’s granddaughter, Yolanda Renee King, and her colleagues in
the March For Our Lives, we will consider nonviolence differently.
But mostly thanks to the legacy of Hattie Carroll, we will be forced
to consider the many ways that women’s contributions to the
women’s movement have been too frequently ignored.
Medgar
Evers was gunned down in his driveway in Mississippi. Hattie Carroll
was caned down in Baltimore’s Emerson Hotel for simply doing
her work. Without rank ordering death and pain, it is important to
note how incidental the deaths of Black women too often are. WE
don’t, said young Naomi Wadler, make the headlines. Our
stories are too often untold. Yet if we commemorate the 50th year
after Dr. King’s assassination, we must commemorate the women
who were slaughtered by racists. Hattie Carroll is one of them. Her
tragic story must be woven into our history.
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