Postwar Race Riots
Written by: Glenda Gilmore, Yale University
By the end of this section, you will:
- Explain the causes and effects of developments in popular culture in the United States over time
Suggested Sequencing
Use this Narrative with the Mitchell Palmer, “The Case against the Reds,” 1920 Primary Source and the Ellison DuRant Smith, “Shut the Door,” 1924 Primary Source to have students discuss the increased anxiety about radicalism and immigrants during the Red Scare.
Like many southern African Americans, John W. Williams did not go far when he moved the first time, from South Carolina to Georgia. But after the birth of his son Eugene in 1902, Williams followed other black southerners north and moved to Chicago with his family.
In 1914, World War I drastically cut immigration to the United States, and U.S. industries geared up to produce machinery and supplies for the war. Between 1910 and 1920, Chicago’s black population more than doubled, from 44,103 to 109,594 people. Some 50,000 of those migrants arrived between 1916 and 1920, looking for opportunity, limited as it was. Black workers found jobs, usually grueling work at the bottom of the industrial hierarchy or domestic work in homes, but they constantly struggled to find housing.
Before the wartime industrial mobilization, African Americans had lived in one five-mile-long, predominantly black neighborhood in south Chicago known as the “Black Belt” or “Bronzeville.” Wartime arrivals had to seek housing in nearby neighborhoods, despite violent white resistance. By 1919, whites had bombed the homes of 24 black families who lived outside Bronzeville. The Williams family settled in Bronzeville’s heart, at 3921 South Prairie Avenue.
During World War I, race riots in Houston, Texas, and East St. Louis, Illinois, reflected racial tensions. Black troops in Houston rebelled when police beat a black woman. In East St. Louis, in the summer of 1917, as many as 1,000 black migrants arrived every day, and companies hired them as strike breakers. After the strictly segregated white workers’ union had settled the strike, it turned its wrath on the now-unemployed migrants: “The immigration of the southern Negro for the past eight months has reached a point where some drastic action must be taken.” Whites rampaged, killing 39 and injuring hundreds more. They drove more than 5,000 African Americans from the city.
Two years later, the summer of 1919 proved even bloodier. Some 26 cities witnessed full-fledged racial massacres as whites attacked African Americans. Chicago, San Francisco, and Wilmington, Delaware, saw violence, but most riots were in the South. In Elaine, Arkansas, white landowners tortured and massacred hundreds of black sharecroppers who tried to join a union.
When production slowed that summer, Chicago factories began to lay off workers, increasing tension. The stockyards, where animals were killed, butchered, and shipped, had hired hundreds of rural black southerners in 1916 and 1917. It may have been there that John W. Williams went to work when he arrived in Chicago. The black stockyard workers had to go through a white neighborhood to get to work.
On Sunday, July 27, 1919, John’s son Eugene, now 17 years old, had the day off from his job as a porter in a grocery store. That afternoon, he went with friends to Twenty-seventh Street to swim in Lake Michigan, about two miles from his home. Unofficial but vigorously enforced segregation meant that he could swim there, but not at another beach reserved for whites two blocks away on Twenty-ninth Street. But Eugene actually could not swim. He and his friends clung to a railroad tie as it drifted in the water toward Twenty-ninth Street, into the unmarked white swimming space. His friends abandoned the tie and swam back, but Eugene could not. A white man on the beach began throwing rocks at him. Then, as a white boy swam toward him, Eugene let go of the tie and drowned.
African Americans identified George Stauber, a white man, as the main culprit, but police officer Daniel Callahan, who was also white, refused to arrest him. As both blacks and whites dived for Eugene’s body, the police arrested a black male protestor. A crowd of African Americans gathered, and when one fired at the police who surrounded them, the police shot and killed him. By 9:00 that night, white gangs were roaming the black neighborhood, beating, stabbing, and terrorizing African Americans.
The next morning, white men killed two black workers on their way to the stockyards. For days, the streets “in the white neighborhoods throated with a sea of humans – everywhere – some armed with guns, bricks, clubs, and an oath. The presence of a black face in their vicinity was the signal for a carnival of death.” As blacks made their way home from work in the stockyards, white mobs attacked “scores of workers – women and men alike”. Meanwhile, the coroner’s report declared that Eugene had “drowned because fear of stone-throwing kept him from shore.”
The riots continued for 10 days, and John Williams could not bury Eugene until August 5. Whites pulled black passengers from trolleys and beat them up, chased them on the streets, and broke into and burned their homes. Many black residents were trapped for days with no food, and churches and social service organizations set up relief stations for them. Chicago police seemed helpless, and the state militia arrived on July 31. In the hardest-hit areas, police evacuated black residents. As two veterans of World War I, Lieutenants Washington and Browning, walked across town, they heard whites yelling, “Everybody, let’s get the niggers.” The mob shot Browning and beat Washington, who fended off the attackers with a knife. Some armed black residents fought back to protect their homes.
In the end, 23 blacks and 15 whites had died, and 537 people were injured. One black Chicago minister lamented, “The Negro has longings to better his condition. . . . He asks the right to work and earn a living without molestation. He asks the equal protection of the laws and that no indignity be put upon him because of his color.” John W. Williams, so full of hope when he brought his family to Chicago, had learned the bitter lesson that, despite the North’s economic and political advantages, racism could still destroy his family. Migrating North brought economic and political advantages, but it did not bring safety or the “equal protection of the laws”.
Many historians argue that the civil rights movement had its origins in the post-World War I era. Black leaders explored what it meant to be African American. Some blacks debated whether full citizenship was even possible for them in the United States.
An immigrant from Jamaica, Marcus Mosiah Garvey, argued that equality was not possible until African-descended people gained an African homeland. African Americans could emigrate there, and even if they chose not to, an African homeland would increase their stature and protection across the globe. Arriving in New York in 1916, Garvey founded the United Negro Improvement Association and African Communities (Imperial) League (UNIA.) Themes of Black Nationalism and emigration to Africa in black political thought were a century old, but after the outrages of the war years, Garveyism galvanized its followers. By the early 1920s, 700 UNIA branches had spread across 38 states, and 200,000 people read the organization’s newspaper. A Harlem UNIA march brought out 20,000 supporters who wanted an end to European colonization: “Africa for the Africans at home and abroad.”
By 1919, W. E. B. Du Bois, a black New Englander who earned a Harvard doctorate and had helped found the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) in 1909, believed Garveyism to be a diversion from securing civil rights in America. After the postwar racial violence, he wrote a call to arms in the NAACP magazine, The Crisis:
We return.
We return from fighting.
We return fighting.
Make way for Democracy! We saved it in France, and by the Great Jehovah, we will save it in the United States of America, or know the reason why.
Du Bois’s editorial appeared in May 1919. Lieutenants Browning and Washington, shot and beaten by the white Chicagoans, had fought back physically and saved their own lives. The hundreds of thousands of southern African Americans who went North in the 1920s, about 150,000 of them to Chicago, resisted as well. They built a vibrant cultural and political community. Just 10 years after the Chicago riot, they elected black council member Oscar De Priest to the U.S. House of Representatives.
Review Questions
1. Marcus Garvey was best known as an activist who supported
- economic equal rights
- a black homeland
- a racially integrated society
- reparation payments to former slaves
2. W. E. B. Du Bois was best known was an activist who supported
- immediate civil rights for all African Americans
- a black homeland
- reparation payments for all African Americans
- distribution of land to descendants of former slaves
3. All the following were reasons for race riots in the post-World War I years except
- African Americans being used a strike breakers
- mass numbers of African Americans migrating to northern cities
- violations of African Americans’ civil rights
- African Americans’ drive for suffrage rights in the north
4. During the post-World War I era, the most notorious race riots took place in
- Houston, Texas
- Chicago, Illinois
- San Francisco, California
- Wilmington, Delaware
5. The major objective of the United Negro Improvement Association was
- African American suffrage
- new constitutional amendments to support civil rights
- job training programs for former sharecroppers
- a black homeland
Free Response Questions
- Analyze the causes of the Chicago Race Riots in 1919.
- Compare the main ideas of W. E. B. Du Bois with those of Marcus Garvey in reference to the lives of African Americans.
AP Practice Questions
“We are returning from war! The Crisis and tens of thousands of black men were drafted into a great struggle. For bleeding France and what she means and has meant and will mean to us and humanity and against the threat of German race arrogance, we fought gladly and to the last drop of blood; for America and her highest ideals, we fought in far-off hope; for the dominant southern oligarchy entrenched in Washington, we fought in bitter resignation. For the America that represents and gloats in lynching, disfranchisement, caste, brutality and devilish insult – for this, in the hateful upturning and mixing of things, we were forced by vindictive fate to fight also.”
W. E. B. Du Bois, “Returning Soldiers,” The Crisis, XVIII, May, 1919
Refer to the excerpt provided.1. Which of the following best describes the events that led W. E. B. Du Bois to write the text excerpted here?
- Runaway slaves fought bravely in the Civil War and earned their freedom.
- African Americans who fought in the Spanish-American War deserved civil rights.
- African Americans fought alongside white soldiers in World War I to protect democratic ideals but returned to a “Jim Crow” society.
- All who fought in World War II deserve equal treatment under the law.
2. The ideals of which of the following would most strongly agree with the viewpoints expressed by Du Bois in the provided excerpt?
- William Lloyd Garrison
- John C. Calhoun
- Horace Mann
- Henry Clay
3. Based on the provided excerpt, Du Bois would most likely agree with the sentiments behind all the following except
- the Declaration of Independence
- the Declaration of Sentiments from the Seneca Falls Convention
- the founding of the American Colonization Society
- the Fifteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution
Primary Sources
Chicago Commission on Race Relations. The Negro in Chicago: A Study of Race Relations and a Race Riot. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press, 1923.
Du Bois, W. E. B. “Returning Soldiers.” The Crisis, XVIII, May 1919, p. 13. https://glc.yale.edu/returning-soldiers
Garvey, Marcus. “Declaration of Rights of the Negro Peoples of the World.” Reprinted in Marable, Manning. Let Nobody Turn Us Around: An African American Anthology. Lanham, MD: Roman & Littlefield, 2009.
“Has the Negro Gone Bolshevik?” World Outlook 5:12-13, 1919.
Layson, Hana and Kenneth Warren. ” Chicago and the Great Migration, 1915-1950.” The Newberry. http://dcc.newberry.org/collections/chicago-and-the-great-migration
Manning, Christopher. “African Americans.” Encyclopedia of Chicago. http://www.encyclopedia.chicagohistory.org/pages/27.html
“Pastors Talk on Race Riots.” Chicago Defender. August 9, 1919. p. 1.
“Riot Sweeps Chicago.” Chicago Defender, August 2, 1919. p. 1.
Sandburg, Carl. The Chicago Race Riot. New York: Harcourt, Brace and Howe.
“Sidelights on the Chicago Situation During Last Week.” Chicago Defender. August 9, 1919. p. 1.
U.S. Census Bureau. “The Great Migration, 1910-1970.” U.S. Census Bureau. September 13, 2012.https://www.census.gov/dataviz/visualizations/020/
Suggested Resources
Baldwin, Davarian L. Chicago’s New Negroes: Modernity, the Great Migration, and Black Urban Life. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press, 2007.
Grossman, James. Land of Hope: Chicago, Black Southerners, and the Great Migration. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1991.
Leman, Nicholas. The Promised Land: The Great Black Migration and How It Changed America. New York: Vintage, 2011.
Wilkerson, Isabel. The Warmth of Other Suns: The Epic Story of America’s Great Migration. New York: Random House, 2010.