Monday, November 2, 2015

Chicago Race Riot

The “Red Summer” of 1919 marked the culmination of steadily growing tensions surrounding the great migration of African Americans from the rural South to the cities of the North that took place during World War I. When the war ended in late 1918, thousands of servicemen returned home from fighting in Europe to find that their jobs in factories, warehouses and mills had been filled by newly arrived Southern blacks or immigrants. Amid financial insecurity, racial and ethnic prejudices ran rampant. Meanwhile, African-American veterans who had risked their lives fighting for the causes of freedom and democracy found themselves denied basic rights such as adequate housing and equality under the law, leading them to become increasingly militant.

Did You Know?
In the summer of 1919, Richard J. Daley, who served as Chicago's powerful mayor from 1955 until his death in 1976, was a 17-year-old member of an Irish-American organization called the Hamburg Athletic Club. Though an investigation later identified the club among the instigators of the rioting, Daley and his supporters never admitted that he participated in the violence.

In this fraught atmosphere, the white supremacist Ku Klux Klan organization revived its violent activities in the South, including 64 lynchings in 1918 and 83 in 1919. In the summer of 1919, race riots would break out in Washington, D.C.; Knoxville, Tennessee; Longview, Texas; Phillips County, Arkansas; Omaha, Nebraska and–most dramatically–Chicago. The city’s African-American population had increased from 44,000 in 1909 to more than 100,000 as of 1919. Competition for jobs in the city’s stockyards was particularly intense, pitting African Americans against whites (both native-born and immigrants). Tensions ran highest on the city’s South Side, where the great majority of black residents lived, many of them in old, dilapidated housing and without adequate services.

A DROWNING IN LAKE MICHIGAN
On July 27, 1919, a 17-year-old African-American boy named Eugene Williams was swimming with friends in Lake Michigan when he crossed the unofficial barrier (located at 29th Street) between the city’s “white” and “black” beaches. A group of white men threw stones at Williams, hitting him, and he drowned. When police officers arrived on the scene, they refused to arrest the white man whom black eyewitnesses pointed to as the responsible party. Angry crowds began to gather on the beach, and reports of the incident–many distorted or exaggerated–spread quickly.

Violence soon broke out between gangs and mobs of black and white, concentrated in the South Side neighborhood surrounding the stockyards. After police were unable to quell the riots, the state militia was called in on the fourth day, but the fighting continued until August 3. Shootings, beatings and arson attacks eventually left 15 whites and 23 blacks dead, and more than 500 more people (around 60 percent black) injured. An additional 1,000 black families were left homeless after rioters torched their residences.

Watch this video on the Chicago Race Riots of 1919.

LASTING IMPACT
In the aftermath of the rioting, some suggested implementing zoning laws to formally segregate housing in Chicago, or restrictions preventing blacks from working alongside whites in the stockyards and other industries. Such measures were rejected by African-American and liberal white voters, however. City officials instead organized the Chicago Commission on Race Relations to look into the root causes of the riots and find ways to combat them. The commission, which included six white men and six black, suggested several key issues —including competition for jobs, inadequate housing options for blacks, inconsistent law enforcement and pervasive racial discrimination—but improvement in these areas would be slow in the years to come.

President Woodrow Wilson publicly blamed whites for being the instigators of race-related riots in both Chicago and Washington, D.C., and introduced efforts to foster racial harmony, including voluntary organizations and congressional legislation. In addition to drawing attention to the growing tensions in America’s urban centers, the riots in Chicago and other cities in the summer of 1919 marked the beginning of a growing willingness among African Americans to fight for their rights in the face of oppression and injustice.

Comment on the blog: 
What started the Riot?  How do you feel about the behavior of white people when they saw the boy in the raft?  What was the response of the police?  Tell us what you felt as you heard this story. 

18 comments:

  1. the person who started the riot was ugean willioms. people also started to throw rocks. The behavior of the white people was unacceptable.... there was no response from the police if there was it wasn't for the black people. when I heard that he was drowning it was like i wanted to jump through the cumputer screen and sve him.....

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  2. the person who started the riot was ugean willioms. people also started to throw rocks. The behavior of the white people was unacceptable.... there was no response from the police if there was it wasn't for the black people. when I heard that he was drowning it was like i wanted to jump through the cumputer screen and sve him.....

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    1. I totally agree. How could anyone watch someone drown and do nothing about it? I swear a lot of white people sounded heartless.

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  3. what started the riot was the whole thing about the boy and him drowning, i thought that was extremely sad when i heard about it because that's just so... unfair and wrong. How the white people reacted when they saw the boy on the raft just made me super mad, it really opens you're eyes to see how huge of an issue that kind of stuff was back then, and still today - ts horrifying but at least today the police might do something,

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    1. Oh... Sorry I kind of copied what you said about racial views back then and today... I was writing and didn't see your comment...

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  4. What started the riot was when Eugene Williams was stoned on July 27, 1919. The white people behaved out of impulse and should have restrained themselves, despite their feelings towards African-Americans. America just got out of a war, we shouldn’t be fighting another one with ourselves. Like Lincoln famously quoted from Mark 3:25, “A house divided against itself cannot stand.” The police, to put it bluntly, didn’t care at all. It wasn’t a priority to them to help the blacks. I’m always surprised at the racial worldview back then and even today. Take the Michael Brown shooting on August 9, 2014, the exact day of my nephew’s birthdate. Brown was an 18-year old black male who was shot by a late-20s white police officer. The officer fired 12 shots at Brown, the last one killing him. Brown was unarmed and some reports said he had his hands up in surrender when he was shot. I just wish our world was color-blind.

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  5. The riot initially started by Eugene Williams, as Jacob said, after being stoned. The behavior of the white people as they saw the African American boy was terrible. It was uncalled for and disgusting, not to mention the police. They "refused" to arrest the white man that was the one who started throwing rocks. Whether the color, police are meant to protect. To base their actions off of true right and wrong. My emotions throughout reading this blog was very sad, shocked, and disgusted. We all bleed red..

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  6. Eugene Williams was the person who started the riot. The behavior of the white men was unacceptable and should not have happened. The response from the police was that they refused to arrest the man who was the first one to throw the first rock. I was really disappointed in the polices actions towards the African American boy. Their actions could have been way different. Like Jacob said, the police didn't seem to care at all about the African American boy and did not have any feelings towards him. That really disappoints me. The police should have done better things back then and not have acted like cowards.

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  7. The riot started because of rascal tensions, the death of Eugene Williams was the braking point for both sides. I felt that the people that killed the boy were reckless and arrogant of them. After the death of the boy, the police were no help, having a bias to the African- Americans. It is sad that so many died for an event that could have been avoidable.

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  8. The riot was started because Eugene Williams was unfairly killed and the police were unwilling to do anything to bring justice. This was just the "breaking point"; there was already so much tension built up. I was angry at the white people who threw the rocks. Eugene was not even bothering them. I felt frustrated while reading this story.

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  9. What started the riots was the boy in the raft who entered the white beach waters. The behavior of the people who saw him was absolutely rediculous! They honestly had to reason to throw rocks at him. Besides it was probably and accident that he was even there. This video was hard for me to watch. It made me so frustrated with Americas old laws. At least they are fixed now!!

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  10. And the police's reaction made it even worse. It was like they didn't care at all that Eugene even died. They just ignored it and didn't give the white men any punishment. I would like to see how their reaction would differ if a white man was killed in the beach for African Americans.

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  11. Eugene Williams' death started the Riot. My feelings about the behavior of white people when they saw the boy in the raft were that it was so wrong! It's just so hard for me to understand why you would want to KILL someone just over the color of their skin! It's just so sad. :(
    The police's response was to do virtually nothing. This story brings sorrow to my heart, knowing all the deaths that occurred for no good reason. It is so depressing.

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  12. The riot was started when Eugene Williams died. I hated that the whites threw trocks at the boy just because he accidentally sawm onto there side. It was even worse when the poicle did nothing to help the blacks and the riot started! I've heard this story before, but it makes me super sad every time I hear it. I think racial discrimination is a terrible thing! I fully agree with Kara about the skin thing! Who would do that?? Obviously these people. I was also surprised to hear that people are still racist today It's just sick! We are all wonderful lile God made us.

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  13. The riot started when the teen black boy E. Williams drowned due to being hit in the head by a rock thrown by a white person. The people throwing the rocks really overdid their segregation habits. But what I'm wondering is how far off the black boy was to shore, I mean, how did the people throw rocks far enough, if the black boy was way out in the water?
    The police didn't arrest anyone, and didn't listen to the black people who pointed out the party responsible. But I don't think that means the police were completely favoring the white, some could have been pressured not to show their views in police affairs, not wanted to be called names, or be misunderstood to like blacks, or something! Some police could not dislike blacks as much as others, but not want to publicize that.
    I thought the story was quite interesting, especially how they had different streets that lead to two beaches for blacks and whites.

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  14. The thing that started the riot was Eugene Williams an African-American rafting towards the white beach. He got drowned and the police did barely anything to the people who killed him. Its horrible how they acted and how they thought it was okay to do that. How would things have went down if it was a white rafting towards the black beach? A whole lot different I can promise you.

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  15. The riot was caused by Eugene Williams, the way the white people acted was very unnecessary, and the way the police responded was no better.

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