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The
riots that broke out in Atlanta, Georgia between 1898
and 1906 were part of a pattern of anti-black violence
that included several hundred lynchings each year.
The
so-called "Atlanta Race Riot" took place September
22-24, 1906.
During
the summer of 1906, white fears of African Americans’
increasing economic and social power, sensationalized
rhetoric from white politicians, and unsubstantiated news
stories about a black crime wave created a powder keg
of racial tension in Atlanta. The powder keg exploded
on the night of September 22nd in what became known as
the Atlanta Race Riot.
Over
five days at least ten black people were killed while
Atlanta’s police did nothing to protect black citizens,
going so far as to confiscate guns from black Atlantans
while allowing whites to remain armed. White mobs killed
dozens of blacks, wounded scores of others, and inflicted
considerable property damage.
On
the afternoon of Saturday, September 22, Atlanta newspapers
reported four alleged assaults upon local white women,
none of which were ever substantiated.
These
newspaper reports were the catalyst for the riot.
The
New
Georgia Encyclopedia summarizes additional causes
of the riots as follows:
By
the 1880s Atlanta had become the hub of the regional
economy, and the city's overall population soared from
89,000 in 1900 to 150,000 in 1910; the black population
was approximately 9,000 in 1880 and 35,000 by 1900.
Such growth put pressure on municipal services, increased
job competition among black and white workers, heightened
class distinctions, and led the city's white leadership
to respond with restrictions intended to control the
daily behavior of the growing working class, with mixed
success. Such conditions caused concern among elite
whites, who feared the social intermingling of the races,
and led to an expansion of Jim Crow segregation, particularly
in the separation of white and black neighborhoods and
separate seating areas for public transportation.
The
emergence during this time of a black elite in Atlanta
also contributed to racial tensions in the city. During
Reconstruction (1867-76), black men were given the right
to vote, and as blacks became more involved in the political
realm, they began to establish businesses, create social
networks, and build communities. As this black elite
acquired wealth, education, and prestige, its members
attempted to distance themselves from an affiliation
with the black working class, and especially from the
unemployed black men who frequented the saloons on Atlanta's
Decatur Street. Many whites, while uncomfortable with
the advances of the black elite, also disapproved of
these saloons, which were said to be decorated with
depictions of nude women. Concern over such establishments
fueled prohibition advocates in the city, and many whites
began to blame black saloon-goers for rising crime rates
in the growing city, and particularly for threats of
black sexual violence against white women.
Additionally,
the candidates for the 1906 governor's race played to
white fears of a black upper class. They inflamed racial
tensions in Atlanta by insisting that black disfranchisement
was necessary to ensure that blacks were kept "in
their place"; that is, in a position inferior to
that of whites. By disfranchising blacks, whites could
maintain the social order.
Walter
White, the future head of the NAACP grew up in Atlanta
and was 13 years old during the 1906 riots. What follows
are excerpts from
his memoirs of how he and his father defended their home
from white rioters.
The
unseasonably oppressive heat of an Indian summer day
hung like a steaming blanket over Atlanta. My sisters
and I had casually commented upon the unusual quietness.
It seemed to stay Mother’s volubility and reduced Father,
who was more taciturn, to monosyllables. But, as I remember
it, no other sense of impending trouble impinged upon
our consciousness.
I
had read the inflammatory headlines in the Atlanta News
and the more restrained ones in the Atlanta Constitution
which reported alleged rapes and other crimes committed
by Negroes. But these were so standard and familiar
that they made—as I look back on it now—little impression.
The stories were more frequent, however, and consisted
of eight-column streamers instead of the usual two or
four-column ones.
Fuel
was added to the fire by a dramatization of Thomas Dixon’s
novel The Clansman in Atlanta. (This was later made
by David Wark Griffith into The Birth of a Nation, and
did more than anything else to make successful the revival
of the Ku Klux Klan.) The late Ray Stannard Baker, telling
the story of the Atlanta riot in Along the Color Line,
characterized Dixon’s fiction and its effect on Atlanta
and the South as “incendiary and cruel.” No more apt
or accurate description could have been chosen.
During
the afternoon preceding the riot little bands of sullen,
evil-looking men talked excitedly on street corners
all over downtown Atlanta. Around seven o’clock my father
and I were driving toward a mail box at the corner of
Peachtree and Houston Streets when there came from near-by
Pryor Street a roar the like of which I had never heard
before, but which sent a sensation of mingled fear and
excitement coursing through my body. I asked permission
of Father to go and see what the trouble was. He bluntly
ordered me to stay in the cart. A little later we drove
down Atlanta’s main business thoroughfare, Peachtree
Street. Again we heard the terrifying cries, this time
near at hand and coming toward us. We saw a lame Negro
bootblack from Herndon’s barbershop pathetically trying
to outrun a mob of whites. Less than a hundred yards
from us the chase ended. We saw clubs and fists descending
to the accompaniment of savage shouting and cursing.
Suddenly a voice cried, “There goes another nigger!”
Its work done, the mob went after new prey. The body
with the withered foot lay dead in a pool of blood on
the street.
Father’s
apprehension and mine steadily increased during the
evening, although the fact that our skins were white
kept us from attack. Another circumstance favored us—the
mob had not yet grown violent enough to attack United
States government property. But I could see Father’s
relief when he punched the time clock at eleven P.M.
and got into the cart to go home. He wanted to go the
back way down Forsyth Street, but I begged him, in my
childish excitement and ignorance, to drive down Marietta
to Five Points, the heart of Atlanta’s business district,
where the crowds were densest and the yells loudest.
No sooner had we turned into Marietta Street, however,
than we saw careening toward us an undertaker’s barouche.
Crouched in the rear of the vehicle were three Negroes
clinging to the sides of the carriage as it lunged and
swerved. On the driver’s seat crouched a white man,
the reins held taut in his left hand. A huge whip was
gripped in his right. Alternately he lashed the horses
and, without looking backward, swung the whip in savage
swoops in the faces of members of the mob as they lunged
at the carriage determined to seize the three Negroes.
There
was no time for us to get out of its path, so sudden
and swift was the appearance of the vehicle. The hubcap
of the right rear wheel of the barouche hit the right
side of our much lighter wagon. Father and I instinctively
threw our weight and kept the cart from turning completely
over. Our mare was a Texas mustang which, frightened
by the sudden blow, lunged in the air as Father clung
to the reins. Good fortune was with us. The cart settled
back on its four wheels as Father said in a voice which
brooked no dissent, “We are going home the back way
and not down Marietta.”
But
again on Pryor Street we heard the cry of the mob. Close
to us and in our direction ran a stout and elderly woman
who cooked at a downtown white hotel. Fifty yards behind,
a mob which filled the street from curb to curb was
closing in. Father handed the reins to me and, though
he was of slight stature, reached down and lifted the
woman into the cart. I did not need to be told to lash
the mare to the fastest speed she could muster.
The
church bells tolled the next morning for Sunday service.
But no one in Atlanta believed for a moment that the hatred
and lust for blood had been appeased. Like skulls on a
cannibal’s hut the hats and caps of victims of the mob
of the night before had been hung on the iron hooks of
telegraph poles. None could tell whether each hat represented
a dead Negro. But we knew that some of those who had worn
the hats would never again wear any.
Late
in the afternoon friends of my father’s came to warn
of more trouble that night. They told us that plans
had been perfected for a mob to form on Peachtree Street
just after nightfall to march down Houston Street to
what the white people called “Darktown,” three blocks
or so below our house, to “clean out the niggers.” There
had never been a firearm in our house before that day.
Father was reluctant even in those circumstances to
violate the law, but he at last gave in at Mother’s
insistence.
We
turned out the lights early, as did all our neighbors.
No one removed his clothes or thought of sleep. Apprehension
was tangible. We could almost touch its cold and clammy
surface. Toward midnight the unnatural quiet was broken
by a roar that grew steadily in volume. Even today I
grow tense in remembering it.
Father
told Mother to take my sisters, the youngest of them
only six, to the rear of the house, which offered more
protection from stones and bullets. My brother George
was away, so Father and I, the only males in the house,
took our places at the front windows of the parlor.
The windows opened on a porch along the front side of
the house, which in turn gave onto a narrow lawn that
sloped down to the street and a picket fence. There
was a crash as Negroes smashed the street lamp at the
corner of Houston and Piedmont Avenue down the street.
In a very few minutes the vanguard of the mob, some
of them bearing torches, appeared. A voice which we
recognized as that of the son of the grocer with whom
we had traded for many years yelled, “That’s where that
nigger mail carrier lives! Let’s burn it down! It’s
too nice for a nigger to live in!” In the eerie light
Father turned his drawn face toward me. In a voice as
quiet as though he were asking me to pass him the sugar
at the breakfast table, he said, “Son, don’t shoot until
the first man puts his foot on the lawn and then—don’t
you miss!”
The
mob moved toward the lawn. I tried to aim my gun, wondering
what it would feel like to kill a man. Suddenly there
was a volley of shots. The mob hesitated, stopped. Some
friends of my father’s had barricaded themselves in
a two-story brick building just below our house. It
was they who had fired. Some of the mobsmen, still bloodthirsty,
shouted, “Let’s go get the nigger.” Others, afraid now
for their safety, held back. Our friends, noting the
hesitation, fired another volley. The mob broke and
retreated up Houston Street.
In
the quiet that followed I put my gun aside and tried
to relax. But a tension different from anything I had
ever known possessed me. I was gripped by the knowledge
of my identity, and in the depths of my soul I was vaguely
aware that I was glad of it. I was sick with loathing
for the hatred which had flared before me that night
and come so close to making me a killer; but I was glad
I was not one of those who hated; I was glad I was not
one of those made sick and murderous by pride.
The
Coalition to Remember the 1906 Atlanta Race Riot believes
that:
over
the years, the collective public memory of this act
of terrorism has faded, but fears that arose from that
violence have continued and have fed the racial attitudes
that segregate our city. Coalition sponsored activities
meant to restore the memory and move toward reconciliation
include: an exhibit at the MLK Historic Site gallery,
curriculum material about the riot in area schools,
artistic expressions and a community-centered symposium
sponsored by local colleges and universities.
Suggested
Reading
Mark
Bauerlein, Negrophobia:
A Race Riot in Atlanta, 1906
(San Francisco: Encounter Books, 2001).
Charles
Crowe, "Racial Massacre in Atlanta, September 22,
1906," Journal of Negro History 54 (April
1969).
Allison
Dorsey, To
Build Our Lives Together: Community Formation in Black
Atlanta, 1875-1906
(Athens: University of Georgia Press, 2004).
David
F. Godshalk, Veiled
Visions: The 1906 Atlanta Race Riot and the Reshaping
of American Race Relations
(Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press,
2005).
Gregory
Mixon, The
Atlanta Riot: Race, Class, and Violence in a New South
City (Southern Dissent)
(Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 2005).
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Feb 23, 2012 - Issue 460 |
is
published every Thursday |
Est. April 5, 2002 |
Executive Editor:
David A. Love, JD |
Managing Editor:
Nancy Littlefield, MBA |
Publisher:
Peter Gamble |
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