#ida b wells
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afriblaq · 10 days ago
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odinsblog · 1 year ago
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Few videos have ever so clearly illustrated the two worlds that exist in America. The fact that in one of these Jeopardy recaps, none of the white contestants could even identify Ketanji Brown-Jackson���the first Black woman Supreme Court Justice, seated in 2022—was as galling as it was informative.
These are supposedly some of the brightest people in the country, but they don’t even know some of the most cursory details of Black history—conversely, Black Americans are all but required to be aware of and know even thee most obscure details of white “culture” and European history if we want gainful employment and don’t want to be ridiculed or ostracized.
Generally speaking, white people already know precious little about the contributions and the importance of Black History and other non-European cultures, which is why when I see Ron DeSantis and other Republicans mandating laws that whitewash and erase Black history, it makes me realize just how extraordinarily EASY it is to do, because white America is already starting from a severe and intentionally maintained knowledge deficit.
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readyforevolution · 6 months ago
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unfortunatetheorist · 1 year ago
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Is Klaus' legal logic of The Bad Beginning sensible?
* Joint Theory: @unfortunatetheorist with @snicketstrange *
Klaus's speech to the audience during the events of The Bad Beginning had a carefully thought-out structure, anchored in deeply rooted legal, but more so ethical, principles. In defence of his sister, who was forced into a marriage, Klaus appears to have adopted a multifaceted approach to challenge the marriage's validity.
Firstly, John Locke.
John Locke was one of the first people to suggest that humans have natural rights. He also wrote a book about this called the 'Two Treatises of Government'.
Klaus likely invoked John Locke's arguments on natural rights to contend that the marriage was not consensual and, therefore, violated his sister's fundamental rights to life and liberty. The idea that the bride must sign "with her own hand" is interpreted here not literally, but as an indicator of action "of her own free will," supported by Locke's principles.
Secondly, Thurgood Marshall.
Thurgood Marshall was the first black Supreme Court Justice of the USA, who fought for the rights of black citizens against Jim Crow's extremely racist ideologies.
His defence of the 14th Amendment may have been used by Klaus to argue that, in cases of ambiguity or doubt, the judge's decision should lean towards protecting the more vulnerable party. This point strengthens the point that, if there is doubt about the how valid Violet's consent is, the legal and ethical obligation is to invalidate the marriage. The 14th Amendment to the United States Constitution is crucial for establishing constitutional rights and consists of various clauses. The most relevant for Klaus's case is probably the Equal Protection Clause, which states that no state may "deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws." Klaus may have leaned especially on this clause to argue that, in situations of uncertainty, i.e. his sister's forced marriage, the interpretation/application of the law should be done in a manner that protects (in this case) Violet. This would align with the principles of the 14th Amendment, using it for equal protection under the law to invalidate the marriage and protect his sister's rights.
Third, Ida B. Wells.
Ida B. Wells was, similar to Thurgood Marshall, an early civil rights campaigner, who campaigned for anti-lynching (a word which here means, opposing the brutally violent act known as lynching).
Klaus likely drew inspiration from Ida B. Wells to assert that everyone has the right to be heard and protected by authorities, regardless of their age or origin. This argument would serve to legitimize his own standing as his sister's defender in court, neutralizing any potential prejudice against him for being a child or, perhaps, belonging to a minority (he and his sisters are Jewish).
Moreover, the presence of a judge at the ceremony should not be viewed as merely a formality, but a control mechanism to ensure mutual consent, something that resonates strongly with Locke and Marshall's ideals about the role of government and law. Thus, if either of the spouses gave any evidence to the judge that the marriage was conducted under duress, the judge would be obligated to invalidate the marriage. Violet's chosen signal was to sign the document with her left hand instead of her right hand. As the judge explained, the marriage could be invalidated due to this discreet yet appropriate signal.
Lastly, the word "apocryphal" that Lemony uses to describe Klaus's argument suggests a non-conventional but insightful interpretation of the law, something that seems to echo Marshall's "doubtful insights" and Wells' "moral conviction." Instead of resorting to literalism ('literally' - with her own hand, i.e. Violet's dominant hand), Klaus's argument was much deeper and grounded, touching on the very essence of what legislation and the role of judges are. That's why Justice Strauss was so fascinated by the young boy's speech.
In summary, the historical references evidence that Klaus wove these diverse elements into a cohesive and compelling argument, utilising the legacy of these thinkers to question and, ideally, invalidate his sister Violet's forced marriage.
¬ Th3r3534rch1ngr4ph & @snicketstrange,
Unfortunate Theorists/Snicketologists
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doumekiss · 2 months ago
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Step Aside, Pops : A Hark! Vagrant Collection (Kate Beaton)
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ausetkmt · 3 months ago
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A Real Django Unchained: The Ballad Of Robert Charles & The New Orleans Race Riot Of 1900
MOB RULE IN NEW ORLEANS:
ROBERT CHARLES AND HIS FIGHT TO DEATH, THE STORY OF HIS LIFE, BURNING HUMAN BEINGS ALIVE, OTHER LYNCHING STATISTICS
BY
IDA B. WELLS-BARNETT
1900
[Transcriber's Note: This pamphlet was first published in 1900 but was subsequently reprinted. It's not apparent if the curiosities in spelling date back to the original or were introduced later; they have been retained as found, and the reader is left to decide. Please verify with another source before quoting this material. Of special note are the names Cantrell/Cantrelle, Porteous/Porteus, and Ziegel/Zeigel.]
INTRODUCTION
Immediately after the awful barbarism which disgraced the State of Georgia in April of last year, during which time more than a dozen colored people were put to death with unspeakable barbarity, I published a full report showing that Sam Hose, who was burned to death during that time, never committed a criminal assault, and that he killed his employer in self-defense.
Since that time I have been engaged on a work not yet finished, which I interrupt now to tell the story of the mob in New Orleans, which, despising all law, roamed the streets day and night, searching for colored men and women, whom they beat, shot and killed at will.
In the account of the New Orleans mob I have used freely the graphic reports of the New Orleans Times-Democrat and the New Orleans Picayune. Both papers gave the most minute details of the week's disorder. In their editorial comment they were at all times most urgent in their defense of law and in the strongest terms they condemned the infamous work of the mob.
It is no doubt owing to the determined stand for law and order taken by these great dailies and the courageous action taken by the best citizens of New Orleans, who rallied to the support of the civic authorities, that prevented a massacre of colored people awful to contemplate.
For the accounts and illustrations taken from the above-named journals, sincere thanks are hereby expressed.
The publisher hereof does not attempt to moralize over the deplorable condition of affairs shown in this publication, but simply presents the facts in a plain, unvarnished, connected way, so that he who runs may read. We do not believe that the American people who have encouraged such scenes by their indifference will read unmoved these accounts of brutality, injustice and oppression. We do not believe that the moral conscience of the nation—that which is highest and best among us—will always remain silent in face of such outrages, for God is not dead, and His Spirit is not entirely driven from men's hearts.
When this conscience wakes and speaks out in thunder tones, as it must, it will need facts to use as a weapon against injustice, barbarism and wrong. It is for this reason that I carefully compile, print and send forth these facts. If the reader can do no more, he can pass this pamphlet on to another, or send to the bureau addresses of those to whom he can order copies mailed.
Besides the New Orleans case, a history of burnings in this country is given, together with a table of lynchings for the past eighteen years. Those who would like to assist in the work of disseminating these facts, can do so by ordering copies, which are furnished at greatly reduced rates for gratuitous distribution. The bureau has no funds and is entirely dependent upon contributions from friends and members in carrying on the work.
Ida B. Wells-Barnett Chicago, Sept. 1, 1900
MOB RULE IN NEW ORLEANS
SHOT AN OFFICER
The bloodiest week which New Orleans has known since the massacre of the Italians in 1892 was ushered in Monday, July 24, by the inexcusable and unprovoked assault upon two colored men by police officers of New Orleans. Fortified by the assurance born of long experience in the New Orleans service, three policemen, Sergeant Aucoin, Officer Mora and Officer Cantrelle, observing two colored men sitting on doorsteps on Dryades street, between Washington Avenue and 6th Streets, determined, without a shadow of authority, to arrest them. One of the colored men was named Robert Charles, the other was a lad of nineteen named Leonard Pierce. The colored men had left their homes, a few blocks distant, about an hour prior, and had been sitting upon the doorsteps for a short time talking together. They had not broken the peace in any way whatever, no warrant was in the policemen's hands justifying their arrest, and no crime had been committed of which they were the suspects. The policemen, however, secure in the firm belief that they could do anything to a Negro that they wished, approached the two men, and in less than three minutes from the time they accosted them attempted to put both colored men under arrest. The younger of the two men, Pierce, submitted to arrest, for the officer, Cantrelle, who accosted him, put his gun in the young man's face ready to blow his brains out if he moved. The other colored man, Charles, was made the victim of a savage attack by Officer Mora, who used a billet and then drew a gun and tried to kill Charles. Charles drew his gun nearly as quickly as the policeman, and began a duel in the street, in which both participants were shot. The policeman got the worst of the duel, and fell helpless to the sidewalk. Charles made his escape. Cantrelle took Pierce, his captive, to the police station, to which place Mora, the wounded officer, was also taken, and a man hunt at once instituted for Charles, the wounded fugitive.
In any law-abiding community Charles would have been justified in delivering himself up immediately to the properly constituted authorities and asking a trial by a jury of his peers. He could have been certain that in resisting an unwarranted arrest he had a right to defend his life, even to the point of taking one in that defense, but Charles knew that his arrest in New Orleans, even for defending his life, meant nothing short of a long term in the penitentiary, and still more probable death by lynching at the hands of a cowardly mob. He very bravely determined to protect his life as long as he had breath in his body and strength to draw a hair trigger on his would-be murderers. How well he was justified in that belief is well shown by the newspaper accounts which were given of this transaction. Without a single line of evidence to justify the assertion, the New Orleans daily papers at once declared that both Pierce and Charles were desperadoes, that they were contemplating a burglary and that they began the assault upon the policemen. It is interesting to note how the two leading papers of New Orleans, the Picayune and the Times-Democrat, exert themselves to justify the policemen in the absolutely unprovoked attack upon the two colored men. As these two papers did all in their power to give an excuse for the action of the policemen, it is interesting to note their versions. The Times-Democrat of Tuesday morning, the twenty-fifth, says:
Two blacks, who are desperate men, and no doubt will be proven burglars,  made it interesting and dangerous for three bluecoats on Dryades street,  between Washington Avenue and Sixth Street, the Negroes using pistols  first and dropping Patrolman Mora. But the desperate darkies did not go  free, for the taller of the two, Robinson, is badly wounded and under  cover, while Leonard Pierce is in jail.
 For a long time that particular neighborhood has been troubled with bad  Negroes, and the neighbors were complaining to the Sixth Precinct police  about them. But of late Pierce and Robinson had been camping on a door  step on the street, and the people regarded their actions as suspicious.  It got to such a point that some of the residents were afraid to go to  bed, and last night this was told Sergeant Aucoin, who was rounding up  his men. He had just picked up Officers Mora and Cantrell, on Washington  Avenue and Dryades Street, and catching a glimpse of the blacks on the  steps, he said he would go over and warn the men to get away from the  street. So the patrolmen followed, and Sergeant Aucoin asked the smaller  fellow, Pierce, if he lived there. The answer was short and impertinent,  the black saying he did not, and with that both Pierce and Robinson drew  up to their full height.
 For the moment the sergeant did not think that the Negroes meant fight,  and he was on the point of ordering them away when Robinson slipped his  pistol from his pocket. Pierce had his revolver out, too, and he fired  twice, point blank at the sergeant, and just then Robinson began  shooting at the patrolmen. In a second or so the policemen and blacks  were fighting with their revolvers, the sergeant having a duel with  Pierce, while Cantrell and Mora drew their line of fire on Robinson, who  was working his revolver for all he was worth. One of his shots took  Mora in the right hip, another caught his index finger on the right  hand, and a third struck the small finger of the left hand. Poor Mora  was done for; he could not fight any more, but Cantrell kept up his  fire, being answered by the big black. Pierce's revolver broke down, the  cartridges snapping, and he threw up his hands, begging for quarter.
 The sergeant lowered his pistol and some citizens ran over to where the  shooting was going on. One of the bullets that went at Robinson caught  him in the breast and he began running, turning out Sixth Street, with  Cantrell behind him, shooting every few steps. He was loading his  revolver again, but did not use it after the start he took, and in a  little while Officer Cantrell lost the man in the darkness.
 Pierce was made a prisoner and hurried to the Sixth Precinct police  station, where he was charged with shooting and wounding. The sergeant  sent for an ambulance, and Mora was taken to the hospital, the wound in  the hip being serious.
 A search was made for Robinson, but he could not be found, and even at 2  o'clock this morning Captain Day, with Sergeant Aucoin and Corporals  Perrier and Trenchard, with a good squad of men, were beating the weeds  for the black.
The New Orleans Picayune of the same date described the occurrence, and from its account one would think it was an entirely different affair. Both of the two accounts cannot be true, and the unquestioned fact is that neither of them sets out the facts as they occurred. Both accounts attempt to fix the beginning of hostilities upon the colored men, but both were compelled to admit that the colored men were sitting on the doorsteps quietly conversing with one another when the three policemen went up and accosted them. The Times-Democrat unguardedly states that one of the two colored men tried to run away; that Mora seized him and then drew his billy and struck him on the head; that Charles broke away from him and started to run, after which the shooting began. The Picayune, however, declares that Pierce began the firing and that his two shots point blank at Aucoin were the first shots of the fight. As a matter of fact, Pierce never fired a single shot before he was covered by Aucoin's revolver. Charles and the officers did all the shooting. The Picayune's account is as follows:
Patrolman Mora was shot in the right hip and dangerously wounded last  night at 11:30 o'clock in Dryades Street, between Washington and Sixth,  by two Negroes, who were sitting on a door step in the neighborhood.
 The shooting of Patrolman Mora brings to memory the fact that he was one  of the partners of Patrolman Trimp, who was shot by a Negro soldier of  the United States government during the progress of the Spanish-American  war. The shooting of Mora by the Negro last night is a very simple  story. At the hour mentioned, three Negro women noticed two suspicious  men sitting on a door step in the above locality. The women saw the two  men making an apparent inspection of the building. As they told the  story, they saw the men look over the fence and examine the window  blinds, and they paid particular attention to the make-up of the  building, which was a two-story affair. About that time Sergeant J.C.  Aucoin and Officers Mora and J.D. Cantrell hove in sight. The women  hailed them and described to them the suspicious actions of the two  Negroes, who were still sitting on the step. The trio of bluecoats, on  hearing the facts, at once crossed the street and accosted the men. The  latter answered that they were waiting for a friend whom they were  expecting. Not satisfied with this answer, the sergeant asked them where  they lived, and they replied "down town," but could not designate the  locality. To other questions put by the officers the larger of the two  Negroes replied that they had been in town just three days.
 As this reply was made, the larger man sprang to his feet, and Patrolman  Mora, seeing that he was about to run away, seized him. The Negro took a  firm hold on the officer, and a scuffle ensued. Mora, noting that he was  not being assisted by his brother officers, drew his billy and struck  the Negro on the head. The blow had but little effect upon the man, for  he broke away and started down the street. When about ten feet away, the  Negro drew his revolver and opened fire on the officer, firing three or  four shots. The third shot struck Mora in the right hip, and was  subsequently found to have taken an upward course. Although badly  wounded, Mora drew his pistol and returned the fire. At his third shot  the Negro was noticed to stagger, but he did not fall. He continued his  flight. At this moment Sergeant Aucoin seized the other Negro, who  proved to be a youth, Leon Pierce. As soon as Officer Mora was shot he  sank to the sidewalk, and the other officer ran to the nearest  telephone, and sent in a call for the ambulance. Upon its arrival the  wounded officer was placed in it and conveyed to the hospital. An  examination by the house surgeon revealed the fact that the bullet had  taken an upward course. In the opinion of the surgeon the wound was a  dangerous one.
But the best proof of the fact that the officers accosted the two colored men and without any warrant or other justification attempted to arrest them, and did actually seize and begin to club one of them, is shown by Officer Mora's own statement. The officer was wounded and had every reason in the world to make his side of the story as good as possible. His statement was made to a Picayune reporter and the same was published on the twenty-fifth inst., and is as follows:
I was in the neighborhood of Dryades and Washington Streets, with  Sergeant Aucoin and Officer Cantrell, when three Negro women came up and  told us that there were two suspicious-looking Negroes sitting on a step  on Dryades Street, between Washington and Sixth. We went to the place  indicated and found two Negroes. We interrogated them as to who they  were, what they were doing and how long they had been here. They replied  that they were working for some one and had been in town three days. At  about this stage the larger of the two Negroes got up and I grabbed him.  The Negro pulled, but I held fast, and he finally pulled me into the  street. Here I began using my billet, and the Negro jerked from my grasp  and ran. He then pulled a gun and fired. I pulled my gun and returned  the fire, each of us firing about three shots. I saw the Negro stumble  several times, and I thought I had shot him, but he ran away and I don't  know whether any of my shots took effect. Sergeant Aucoin in the  meantime held the other man fast. The man was about ten feet from me  when he fired, and the three Negresses who told us about the men stood  away about twenty-five feet from the shooting.
Thus far in the proceeding the Monday night episode results in Officer Mora lying in the station wounded in the hip; Leonard Pierce, one of the colored men, locked up in the station, and Robert Charles, the other colored man, a fugitive, wounded in the leg and sought for by the entire police force of New Orleans. Not sought for, however, to be placed under arrest and given a fair trial and punished if found guilty according to the law of the land, but sought for by a host of enraged, vindictive and fearless officers, who were coolly ordered to kill him on sight. This order is shown by the Picayune of the twenty-sixth inst., in which the following statement appears:
In talking to the sergeant about the case, the captain asked about the  Negro's fighting ability, and the sergeant answered that Charles, though  he called him Robinson then, was a desperate man, and it would be best  to shoot him before he was given a chance to draw his pistol upon any of  the officers.
This instruction was given before anybody had been killed, and the only evidence that Charles was a desperate man lay in the fact that he had refused to be beaten over the head by Officer Mora for sitting on a step quietly conversing with a friend. Charles resisted an absolutely unlawful attack, and a gun fight followed. Both Mora and Charles were shot, but because Mora was white and Charles was black, Charles was at once declared to be a desperado, made an outlaw, and subsequently a price put upon his head and the mob authorized to shoot him like a dog, on sight.
The New Orleans Picayune of Wednesday morning said:
But he has gone, perhaps to the swamps, and the disappointment of the  bluecoats in not getting the murderer is expressed in their curses, each  man swearing that the signal to halt that will be offered Charles will  be a shot.
In that same column of the Picayune it was said:
Hundreds of policemen were about; each corner was guarded by a squad,  commanded either by a sergeant or a corporal, and every man had the word  to shoot the Negro as soon as he was sighted. He was a desperate black  and would be given no chance to take more life.
Legal sanction was given to the mob or any man of the mob to kill Charles at sight by the Mayor of New Orleans, who publicly proclaimed a reward of two hundred and fifty dollars, not for the arrest of Charles, not at all, but the reward was offered for Charles's body, "dead or alive." The advertisement was as follows:
$250 REWARD
 Under the authority vested in me by law, I hereby offer, in the name of  the city of New Orleans, $250 reward for the capture and delivery, dead  or alive, to the authorities of the city, the body of the Negro  murderer,
 ROBERT CHARLES,
 who, on Tuesday morning, July 24, shot and killed
 Police Captain John T. Day and Patrolman Peter J. Lamb, and wounded
 Patrolman August T. Mora.
 PAUL CAPDEVIELLE, Mayor
This authority, given by the sergeant to kill Charles on sight, would have been no news to Charles, nor to any colored man in New Orleans, who, for any purpose whatever, even to save his life, raised his hand against a white man. It is now, even as it was in the days of slavery, an unpardonable sin for a Negro to resist a white man, no matter how unjust or unprovoked the white man's attack may be. Charles knew this, and knowing to be captured meant to be killed, he resolved to sell his life as dearly as possible.
The next step in the terrible tragedy occurred between 2:30 and 5 o'clock Tuesday morning, about four hours after the affair on Dryades Street. The man hunt, which had been inaugurated soon after Officer Mora had been carried to the station, succeeded in running down Robert Charles, the wounded fugitive, and located him at 2023 4th Street. It was nearly 2 o'clock in the morning when a large detail of police surrounded the block with the intent to kill Charles on sight. Capt. Day had charge of the squad of police. Charles, the wounded man, was in his house when the police arrived, fully prepared, as results afterward showed, to die in his own home. Capt. Day started for Charles's room. As soon as Charles got sight of him there was a flash, a report, and Day fell dead in his tracks. In another instant Charles was standing in the door, and seeing Patrolman Peter J. Lamb, he drew his gun, and Lamb fell dead. Two other officers, Sergeant Aucoin and Officer Trenchard, who were in the squad, seeing their comrades, Day and Lamb, fall dead, concluded to raise the siege, and both disappeared into an adjoining house, where they blew out their lights so that their cowardly carcasses could be safe from Charles's deadly aim. The calibre of their courage is well shown by the fact that they concluded to save themselves from any harm by remaining prisoners in that dark room until daybreak, out of reach of Charles's deadly rifle. Sergeant Aucoin, who had been so brave a few hours before when seeing the two colored men sitting on the steps, talking together on Dryades Street, and supposing that neither was armed, now showed his true calibre. Now he knew that Charles had a gun and was brave enough to use it, so he hid himself in a room two hours while Charles deliberately walked out of his room and into the street after killing both Lamb and Day. It is also shown, as further evidence of the bravery of some of New Orleans' "finest," that one of them, seeing Capt. Day fall, ran seven blocks before he stopped, afterwards giving the excuse that he was hunting for a patrol box.
At daybreak the officers felt safe to renew the attack upon Charles, so they broke into his room, only to find that—what they probably very well knew—he had gone. It appears that he made his escape by crawling through a hole in the ceiling to a little attic in his house. Here he found that he could not escape except by a window which led into an alley, which had no opening on 4th Street. He scaled the fence and was soon out of reach.
It was now 5 o'clock Tuesday morning, and a general alarm was given. Sergeant Aucoin and Corporal Trenchard, having received a new supply of courage by returning daylight, renewed their effort to capture the man that they had allowed to escape in the darkness. Citizens were called upon to participate in the man hunt and New Orleans was soon the scene of terrible excitement. Officers were present everywhere, and colored men were arrested on all sides upon the pretext that they were impertinent and "game niggers." An instance is mentioned in the Times-Democrat of the twenty-fifth and shows the treatment which unoffending colored men received at the hands of some of the officers. This instance shows Corporal Trenchard, who displayed such remarkable bravery on Monday night in dodging Charles's revolver, in his true light. It shows how brave a white man is when he has a gun attacking a Negro who is a helpless prisoner. The account is as follows:
The police made some arrests in the neighborhood of the killing of the  two officers. Mobs of young darkies gathered everywhere. These Negroes  talked and joked about the affair, and many of them were for starting a  race war on the spot. It was not until several of these little gangs  amalgamated and started demonstrations that the police commenced to  act. Nearly a dozen arrests were made within an hour, and everybody in  the vicinity was in a tremor of excitement.
 It was about 1 o'clock that the Negroes on Fourth Street became very  noisy, and George Meyers, who lives on Sixth Street, near Rampart,  appeared to be one of the prime movers in a little riot that was rapidly  developing. Policeman Exnicios and Sheridan placed him under arrest, and  owing to the fact that the patrol wagon had just left with a number of  prisoners, they walked him toward St. Charles Avenue in order to get a  conveyance to take him to the Sixth Precinct station.
 A huge crowd of Negroes followed the officers and their prisoners.  Between Dryades and Baronne, on Sixth, Corporal Trenchard met the trio.  He had his pistol in his hand and he came on them running. The Negroes  in the wake of the officers, and prisoner took to flight immediately.  Some disappeared through gates and some over fences and into yards, for  Trenchard, visibly excited, was waving his revolver in the air and was  threatening to shoot. He joined the officers in their walk toward St.  Charles Street, and the way he acted led the white people who were  witnessing the affair to believe that his prisoner was the wanted Negro.  At every step he would punch him or hit him with the barrel of his  pistol, and the onlookers cried, "Lynch him!" "Kill him!" and other  expressions until the spectators were thoroughly wrought up. At St.  Charles Street Trenchard desisted, and, calling an empty ice wagon,  threw the Negro into the body of the vehicle and ordered Officer  Exnicios to take him to the Sixth Precinct station.
 The ride to the station was a wild one. Exnicios had all he could do to  watch his prisoner. A gang climbed into the wagon and administered a  terrible thrashing to the black en route. It took a half hour to reach  the police station, for the mule that was drawing the wagon was not  overly fast. When the station was reached a mob of nearly 200 howling  white youths was awaiting it. The noise they made was something  terrible. Meyers was howling for mercy before he reached the ground. The  mob dragged him from the wagon, the officer with him. Then began a  torrent of abuse for the unfortunate prisoner.
 The station door was but thirty feet away, but it took Exnicios nearly  five minutes to fight his way through the mob to the door. There were no  other officers present, and the station seemed to be deserted. Neither  the doorman nor the clerk paid any attention to the noise on the  outside. As the result, the maddened crowd wrought their vengeance on  the Negro. He was punched, kicked, bruised and torn. The clothes were  ripped from his back, while his face after that few minutes was  unrecognizable.
This was the treatment accorded and permitted to a helpless prisoner because he was black. All day Wednesday the man hunt continued. The excitement caused by the deaths of Day and Lamb became intense. The officers of the law knew they were trailing a man whose aim was deadly and whose courage they had never seen surpassed. Commenting upon the marksmanship of the man which the paper styled a fiend, the Times-Democrat of Wednesday said:
One of the extraordinary features of the tragedy was the marksmanship  displayed by the Negro desperado. His aim was deadly and his coolness  must have been something phenomenal. The two shots that killed Captain  Day and Patrolman Lamb struck their victims in the head, a circumstance  remarkable enough in itself, considering the suddenness and fury of the  onslaught and the darkness that reigned in the alley way.
 Later on Charles fired at Corporal Perrier, who was standing at least  seventy-five yards away. The murderer appeared at the gate, took  lightning aim along the side of the house, and sent a bullet whizzing  past the officer's ear. It was a close shave, and a few inches'  deflection would no doubt have added a fourth victim to the list.
 At the time of the affray there is good reason to believe that Charles  was seriously wounded, and at any event he had lost quantities of blood.  His situation was as critical as it is possible to imagine, yet he shot  like an expert in a target range. The circumstance shows the desperate  character of the fiend, and his terrible dexterity with weapons makes  him one of the most formidable monsters that has ever been loose upon  the community.
Wednesday New Orleans was in the hands of a mob. Charles, still sought for and still defending himself, had killed four policemen, and everybody knew that he intended to die fighting. Unable to vent its vindictiveness and bloodthirsty vengeance upon Charles, the mob turned its attention to other colored men who happened to get in the path of its fury. Even colored women, as has happened many times before, were assaulted and beaten and killed by the brutal hoodlums who thronged the streets. The reign of absolute lawlessness began about 8 o'clock Wednesday night. The mob gathered near the Lee statue and was soon making its way to the place where the officers had been shot by Charles. Describing the mob, the Times-Democrat of Thursday morning says:
The gathering in the square, which numbered about 700, eventually became  in a measure quiet, and a large, lean individual, in poor attire and  with unshaven face, leaped upon a box that had been brought for the  purpose, and in a voice that under no circumstances could be heard at a  very great distance, shouted: "Gentlemen, I am the Mayor of Kenner." He  did not get a chance for some minutes to further declare himself, for  the voice of the rabble swung over his like a huge wave over a sinking  craft. He stood there, however, wildly waving his arms and demanded a  hearing, which was given him when the uneasiness of the mob was quieted  for a moment or so.
 "I am from Kenner, gentlemen, and I have come down to New Orleans  tonight to assist you in teaching the blacks a lesson. I have killed a  Negro before, and in revenge of the wrong wrought upon you and yours, I  am willing to kill again. The only way that you can teach these Niggers  a lesson and put them in their place is to go out and lynch a few of  them as an object lesson. String up a few of them, and the others will  trouble you no more. That is the only thing to do—kill them, string  them up, lynch them! I will lead you, if you will but follow. On to the  Parish Prison and lynch Pierce!"
 They bore down on the Parish Prison like an avalanche, but the avalanche  split harmlessly on the blank walls of the jail, and Remy Klock sent out  a brief message: "You can't have Pierce, and you can't get in." Up to  that time the mob had had no opposition, but Klock's answer chilled them  considerably. There was no deep-seated desperation in the crowd after  all, only, that wild lawlessness which leads to deeds of cruelty, but  not to stubborn battle. Around the corner from the prison is a row of  pawn and second-hand shops, and to these the mob took like the ducks to  the proverbial mill-pond, and the devastation they wrought upon Mr.  Fink's establishment was beautiful in its line.
 Everything from breast pins to horse pistols went into the pockets of  the crowd, and in the melee a man was shot down, while just around the  corner somebody planted a long knife in the body of a little newsboy for  no reason as yet shown. Every now and then a Negro would be flushed  somewhere in the outskirts of the crowd and left beaten to a pulp. Just  how many were roughly handled will never be known, but the unlucky  thirteen had been severely beaten and maltreated up to a late hour, a  number of those being in the Charity Hospital under the bandages and  courtplaster of the doctors.
The first colored man to meet death at the hands of the mob was a passenger on a street car. The mob had broken itself into fragments after its disappointment at the jail, each fragment looking for a Negro to kill. The bloodthirsty cruelty of one crowd is thus described by the Times-Democrat:
"We will get a Nigger down here, you bet!" was the yelling boast that  went up from a thousand throats, and for the first time the march of the  mob was directed toward the downtown sections. The words of the rioters  were prophetic, for just as Canal Street was reached a car on the  Villere line came along.
 "Stop that car!" cried half a hundred men. The advance guard, heeding  the injunction, rushed up to the slowly moving car, and several, seizing  the trolley, jerked it down.
 "Here's a Nigro!" said half a dozen men who sprang upon the car.
 The car was full of passengers at the time, among them several women.  When the trolley was pulled down and the car thrown in total darkness,  the latter began to scream, and for a moment or so it looked as if the  life of every person in the car was in peril, for some of the crowd with  demoniacal yells of "There he goes!" began to fire their weapons  indiscriminately. The passengers in the car hastily jumped to the ground  and joined the crowd, as it was evidently the safest place to be.
 "Where's that Nigger?" was the query passed along the line, and with  that the search began in earnest. The Negro, after jumping off the car,  lost himself for a few moments in the crowd, but after a brief search he  was again located. The slight delay seemed, if possible, only to whet  the desire of the bloodthirsty crowd, for the reappearance of the Negro  was the signal for a chorus of screams and pistol shots directed at the  fugitive. With the speed of a deer, the man ran straight from the corner  of Canal and Villere to Customhouse Street. The pursuers, closely  following, kept up a running fire, but notwithstanding the fact that  they were right at the Negro's heels their aim was poor and their  bullets went wide of the mark.
 The Negro, on reaching Customhouse Street, darted from the sidewalk out  into the middle of the street. This was the worst maneuver that he could  have made, as it brought him directly under the light from an arc lamp,  located on a nearby corner. When the Negro came plainly in view of the  foremost of the closely following mob they directed a volley at him.  Half a dozen pistols flashed simultaneously, and one of the bullets  evidently found its mark, for the Negro stopped short, threw up his  hands, wavered for a moment, and then started to run again. This stop,  slight as it was, proved fatal to the Negro's chances, for he had not  gotten twenty steps farther when several of the men in advance of the  others reached his side. A burly fellow, grabbing him with one hand,  dealt him a terrible blow on the head with the other. The wounded man  sank to the ground. The crowd pressed around him and began to beat him  and stamp him. The men in the rear pressed forward and those beating the  man were shoved forward. The half-dead Negro, when he was freed from his  assailants, crawled over to the gutter. The men behind, however, stopped  pushing when those in front yelled, "We've got him," and then it was  that the attack on the bleeding Negro was resumed. A vicious kick  directed at the Negro's head sent him into the gutter, and for a moment  the body sank from view beneath the muddy, slimy water. "Pull him out;  don't let him drown," was the cry, and instantly several of the men  around the half-drowned Negro bent down and drew the body out. Twisting  the body around they drew the head and shoulders up on the street, while  from the waist down the Negro's body remained under the water. As soon  as the crowd saw that the Negro was still alive they again began to beat  and kick him. Every few moments they would stop and striking matches  look into the man's face to see if he still lived. To better see if he  was dead they would stick lighted matches to his eyes. Finally,  believing he was dead they left him and started out to look for other  Negroes. Just about this time some one yelled, "He ain't dead," and the  men came back and renewed the attack. While the men were beating and  pounding the prostrate form with stones and sticks a man in the crowd  ran up, and crying, "I'll fix the d—- Negro," poked the muzzle of a  pistol almost against the body and fired. This shot must have ended the  man's life, for he lay like a stone, and realizing that they were  wasting energy in further attacks, the men left their victim lying in  the street.
The same paper, on the same day, July 26, describes the brutal butchery of an aged colored man early in the morning:
Baptiste Philo, a Negro, seventy-five years of age, was a victim of mob  violence at Kerlerec and North Peters Streets about 2:30 o'clock this  morning. The old man is employed about the French Market, and was on his  way there when he was met by a crowd and desperately shot. The old man  found his way to the Third Precinct police station, where it was found  that he had received a ghastly wound in the abdomen. The ambulance was  summoned and he was conveyed to the Charity Hospital. The students  pronounced the wound fatal after a superficial examination.
Mob rule continued Thursday, its violence increasing every hour, until 2 p.m., when the climax seemed to be reached. The fact that colored men and women had been made the victims of brutal mobs, chased through the streets, killed upon the highways and butchered in their homes, did not call the best element in New Orleans to active exertion in behalf of law and order. The killing of a few Negroes more or less by irresponsible mobs does not cut much figure in Louisiana. But when the reign of mob law exerts a depressing influence upon the stock market and city securities begin to show unsteady standing in money centers, then the strong arm of the good white people of the South asserts itself and order is quickly brought out of chaos.
It was so with New Orleans on that Thursday. The better element of the white citizens began to realize that New Orleans in the hands of a mob would not prove a promising investment for Eastern capital, so the better element began to stir itself, not for the purpose of punishing the brutality against the Negroes who had been beaten, or bringing to justice the murderers of those who had been killed, but for the purpose of saving the city's credit. The Times-Democrat, upon this phase of the situation on Friday morning says:
When it became known later in the day that State bonds had depreciated  from a point to a point and a half on the New York market a new phase of  seriousness was manifest to the business community. Thinking men  realized that a continuance of unchecked disorder would strike a body  blow to the credit of the city and in all probability would complicate  the negotiation of the forthcoming improvement bonds. The bare thought  that such a disaster might be brought about by a few irresponsible boys,  tramps and ruffians, inflamed popular indignation to fever pitch. It was  all that was needed to bring to the aid of the authorities the active  personal cooperation of the entire better element.
With the financial credit of the city at stake, the good citizens rushed to the rescue, and soon the Mayor was able to mobilize a posse of 1,000 willing men to assist the police in maintaining order, but rioting still continued in different sections of the city. Colored men and women were beaten, chased and shot whenever they made their appearance upon the street. Late in the night a most despicable piece of villainy occurred on Rousseau Street, where an aged colored woman was killed by the mob. The Times-Democrat thus describes, the murder:
Hannah Mabry, an old Negress, was shot and desperately wounded shortly  after midnight this morning while sleeping in her home at No. 1929  Rousseau Street. It was the work of a mob, and was evidently well  planned so far as escape was concerned, for the place was reached by  police officers, and a squad of the volunteer police within a very short  time after the reports of the shots, but not a prisoner was secured. The  square was surrounded, but the mob had scattered in several directions,  and, the darkness of the neighborhood aiding them, not one was taken.
 At the time the mob made the attack on the little house there were also  in it David Mabry, the sixty-two-year-old husband of the wounded woman;  her son, Harry Mabry; his wife, Fannie, and an infant child. The young  couple with their babe could not be found after the whole affair was  over, and they either escaped or were hustled off by the mob. A careful  search of the whole neighborhood was made, but no trace of them could be  found.
 The little place occupied by the Mabry family is an old cottage on the  swamp side of Rousseau Street. It is furnished with slat shutters to  both doors and windows. These shutters had been pulled off by the mob  and the volleys fired through the glass doors. The younger Mabrys,  father, mother and child, were asleep in the first room at the time.  Hannah Mabry and her old husband were sleeping in the next room. The old  couple occupied the same bed, and it is miraculous that the old man did  not share the fate of his spouse.
 Officer Bitterwolf, who was one of the first on the scene, said that he  was about a block and a half away with Officers Fordyce and Sweeney.  There were about twenty shots fired, and the trio raced to the cottage.  They saw twenty or thirty men running down Rousseau Street. Chase was  given and the crowd turned toward the river and scattered into several  vacant lots in the neighborhood.
 The volunteer police stationed at the Sixth Precinct had about five  blocks to run before they arrived. They also moved on the reports of the  firing, and in a remarkably short time the square was surrounded, but no  one could be taken. As they ran to the scene they were assailed on every  hand with vile epithets and the accusation of "Nigger lovers."
 Rousseau Street, where the cottage is situated, is a particularly dark  spot, and no doubt the members of the mob were well acquainted with the  neighborhood, for the officers said that they seemed to sink into the  earth, so completely and quickly did they disappear after they had  completed their work, which was complete with the firing of the volley.
 Hannah Mabry was taken to the Charity Hospital in the ambulance, where  it was found on examination that she had been shot through the right  lung, and that the wound was a particularly serious one.
 Her old husband was found in the little wrecked home well nigh  distracted with fear and grief. It was he who informed the police that  at the time of the assault the younger Mabrys occupied the front room.  As he ran about the little home as well as his feeble condition would  permit he severely lacerated his feet on the glass broken from the  windows and door. He was escorted to the Sixth Precinct station, where  he was properly cared for. He could not realize why his little family  had been so murderously attacked, and was inconsolable when his wife was  driven off in the ambulance piteously moaning in her pain.
 The search for the perpetrators of the outrage was thorough, but both  police and armed force of citizens had only their own efforts to rely  on. The residents of the neighborhood were aroused by the firing, but  they would give no help in the search and did not appear in the least  concerned over the affair. Groups were on almost every doorstep, and  some of them even jeered in a quiet way at the men who were voluntarily  attempting to capture the members of the mob. Absolutely no information  could be had from any of them, and the whole affair had the appearance  of being the work of roughs who either lived in the vicinity, or their  friends.
DEATH OF CHARLES
Friday witnessed the final act in the bloody drama begun by the three police officers, Aucoin, Mora and Cantrelle. Betrayed into the hands of the police, Charles, who had already sent two of his would-be murderers to their death, made a last stand in a small building, 1210 Saratoga Street, and, still defying his pursuers, fought a mob of twenty thousand people, single-handed and alone, killing three more men, mortally wounding two more and seriously wounding nine others. Unable to get to him in his stronghold, the besiegers set fire to his house of refuge. While the building was burning Charles was shooting, and every crack of his death-dealing rifle added another victim to the price which he had placed upon his own life. Finally, when fire and smoke became too much for flesh and blood to stand, the long sought for fugitive appeared in the door, rifle in hand, to charge the countless guns that were drawn upon him. With a courage which was indescribable, he raised his gun to fire again, but this time it failed, for a hundred shots riddled his body, and he fell dead face fronting to the mob. This last scene in the terrible drama is thus described in the Times-Democrat of July 26:
Early yesterday afternoon, at 3 o'clock or thereabouts, Police Sergeant  Gabriel Porteus was instructed by Chief Gaster to go to a house at No.  1210 Saratoga Street, and search it for the fugitive murderer, Robert  Charles. A private "tip" had been received at the headquarters that the  fiend was hiding somewhere on the premises.
 Sergeant Porteus took with him Corporal John R. Lally and Officers  Zeigel and Essey. The house to which they were directed is a small,  double frame cottage, standing flush with Saratoga Street, near the  corner of Clio. It has two street entrances and two rooms on each side,  one in front and one in the rear. It belongs to the type of cheap little  dwellings commonly tenanted by Negroes.
 Sergeant Porteus left Ziegel and Essey to guard the outside and went  with Corporal Lally to the rear house, where he found Jackson and his  wife in the large room on the left. What immediately ensued is only  known by the Negroes. They say the sergeant began to question them about  their lodgers and finally asked them whether they knew anything about  Robert Charles. They strenuously denied all knowledge of his  whereabouts.
 The Negroes lied. At that very moment the hunted and desperate murderer  lay concealed not a dozen feet away. Near the rear, left-hand corner of  the room is a closet or pantry, about three feet deep, and perhaps eight  feet long. The door was open and Charles was crouching, Winchester in  hand, in the dark further end.
 Near the closet door was a bucket of water, and Jackson says that  Sergeant Porteous walked toward it to get a drink. At the next moment a  shot rang out and the brave officer fell dead. Lally was shot directly  afterward. Exactly how and where will never be known, but the  probabilities are that the black fiend sent a bullet into him before he  recovered from his surprise at the sudden onslaught. Then the murderer  dashed out of the back door and disappeared.
 The neighborhood was already agog with the tragic events of the two  preceding days, and the sound of the shots was a signal for wild and  instant excitement. In a few moments a crowd had gathered and people  were pouring in by the hundred from every point of the compass. Jackson  and his wife had fled and at first nobody knew what had happened, but  the surmise that Charles had recommenced his bloody work was on every  tongue and soon some of the bolder found their way to the house in the  rear. There the bleeding forms of the two policemen told the story.
 Lally was still breathing, and a priest was sent for to administer the  last rites. Father Fitzgerald responded, and while he was bending over  the dying man the outside throng was rushing wildly through the  surrounding yards and passageways searching for the murderer. "Where is  he?" "What has become of him?" were the questions on every lip.
 Suddenly the answer came in a shot from the room directly overhead. It  was fired through a window facing Saratoga Street, and the bullet struck  down a young man named Alfred J. Bloomfield, who was standing in the  narrow passage-way between the two houses. He fell on his knees and a  second bullet stretched him dead.
 When he fled from the closet Charles took refuge in the upper story of  the house. There are four windows on that floor, two facing toward  Saratoga Street and two toward Rampart. The murderer kicked several  breaches in the frail central partition, so he could rush from side to  side, and like a trapped beast, prepared to make his last stand.
 Nobody had dreamed that he was still in the house, and when Bloomfield  was shot there was a headlong stampede. It was some minutes before the  exact situation was understood. Then rifles and pistols began to speak,  and a hail of bullets poured against the blind frontage of the old  house. Every one hunted some coign of vantage, and many climbed to  adjacent roofs. Soon the glass of the four upper windows was shattered  by flying lead. The fusillade sounded like a battle, and the excitement  upon the streets was indescribable.
 Throughout all this hideous uproar Charles seems to have retained a  certain diabolical coolness. He kept himself mostly out of sight, but  now and then he thrust the gleaming barrel of his rifle through one of  the shattered window panes and fired at his besiegers. He worked the  weapon with incredible rapidity, discharging from three to five  cartridges each time before leaping back to a place of safety. These  replies came from all four windows indiscriminately, and showed that he  was keeping a close watch in every direction. His wonderful marksmanship  never failed him for a moment, and when he missed it was always by the  narrowest margin only.
 On the Rampart Street side of the house there are several sheds,  commanding an excellent range of the upper story. Detective Littleton,  Andrew Van Kuren of the Workhouse force and several others climbed upon  one of these and opened fire on the upper windows, shooting whenever  they could catch a glimpse of the assassin. Charles responded with his  rifle, and presently Van Kuren climbed down to find a better position.  He was crossing the end of the shed when he was killed.
 Another of Charles's bullets found its billet in the body of Frank  Evans, an ex-member of the police force. He was on the Rampart Street  side firing whenever he had an opportunity. Officer J.W. Bofill and A.S.  Leclerc were also wounded in the fusillade.
 While the events thus briefly outlined were transpiring time was a-wing,  and the cooler headed in the crowd began to realize that some quick and  desperate expedient must be adopted to insure the capture of the fiend  and to avert what might be a still greater tragedy than any yet enacted.  For nearly two hours the desperate monster had held his besiegers at  bay, darkness would soon be at hand and no one could predict what might  occur if he made a dash for liberty in the dark.
 At this critical juncture it was suggested that the house be fired. The  plan came as an inspiration, and was adopted as the only solution of the  situation. The wretched old rookery counted for nothing against the  possible continued sacrifice of human life, and steps were immediately  taken to apply the torch. The fire department had been summoned to the  scene soon after the shooting began; its officers were warned to be  ready to prevent a spread of the conflagration, and several men rushed  into the lower right-hand room and started a blaze in one corner.
 They first fired an old mattress, and soon smoke was pouring out in  dense volumes. It filled the interior of the ramshackle structure, and  it was evident that the upper story would soon become untenable. An  interval of tense excitement followed, and all eyes were strained for a  glimpse of the murderer when he emerged.
 Then came the thrilling climax. Smoked out of his den, the desperate  fiend descended the stairs and entered the lower room. Some say he  dashed into the yard, glaring around vainly for some avenue of escape;  but, however that may be, he was soon a few moments later moving about  behind the lower windows. A dozen shots were sent through the wall in  the hope of reaching him, but he escaped unscathed. Then suddenly the  door on the right was flung open and he dashed out. With head lowered  and rifle raised ready to fire on the instant, Charles dashed straight  for the rear door of the front cottage. To reach it he had to traverse a  little walk shaded by a vineclad arbor. In the back room, with a cocked  revolver in his hand, was Dr. C.A. Noiret, a young medical student, who  was aiding the citizens' posse. As he sprang through the door Charles  fired a shot, and the bullet whizzed past the doctor's head. Before it  could be repeated Noiret's pistol cracked and the murderer reeled,  turned half around and fell on his back. The doctor sent another ball  into his body as he struck the floor, and half a dozen men, swarming  into the room from the front, riddled the corpse with bullets.
 Private Adolph Anderson of the Connell Rifles was the first man to  announce the death of the wretch. He rushed to the street door, shouted  the news to the crowd, and a moment later the bleeding body was dragged  to the pavement and made the target of a score of pistols. It was shot,  kicked and beaten almost out of semblance to humanity....
 The limp dead body was dropped at the edge of the sidewalk and from  there dragged to the muddy roadway by half a hundred hands. There in the  road more shots were fired into the body. Corporal Trenchard, a  brother-in-law of Porteus, led the shooting into the inanimate clay.  With each shot there was a cheer for the work that had been done and  curses and imprecations on the inanimate mass of riddled flesh that was  once Robert Charles.
 Cries of "Burn him! Burn him!" were heard from Clio Street all the way  to Erato Street, and it was with difficulty that the crowd was  restrained from totally destroying the wretched dead body. Some of those  who agitated burning even secured a large vessel of kerosene, which had  previously been brought to the scene for the purpose of firing Charles's  refuge, and for a time it looked as though this vengeance might be  wreaked on the body. The officers, however, restrained this move,  although they were powerless to prevent the stamping and kicking of the  body by the enraged crowd.
 After the infuriated citizens had vented their spleen on the body of the  dead Negro it was loaded into the patrol wagon. The police raised the  body of the heavy black from the ground and literally chucked it into  the space on the floor of the wagon between the seats. They threw it  with a curse hissed more than uttered and born of the bitterness which  was rankling in their breasts at the thought of Charles having taken so  wantonly the lives of four of the best of their fellow-officers.
 When the murderer's body landed in the wagon it fell in such a position  that the hideously mutilated head, kicked, stamped and crushed, hung  over the end.
 As the wagon moved off, the followers, who were protesting against its  being carried off, declaring that it should be burned, poked and struck  it with sticks, beating it into such a condition that it was utterly  impossible to tell what the man ever looked like.
 As the patrol wagon rushed through the rough street, jerking and  swaying from one side of the thoroughfare to the other, the gory,  mud-smeared head swayed and swung and jerked about in a sickening  manner, the dark blood dripping on the steps and spattering the body of  the wagon and the trousers of the policemen standing on the step.
MOB BRUTALITY
The brutality of the mob was further shown by the unspeakable cruelty with which it beat, shot and stabbed to death an unoffending colored man, name unknown, who happened to be walking on the street with no thought that he would be set upon and killed simply because he was a colored man. The Times-Democrat's description of the outrage is as follows:
While the fight between the Negro desperado and the citizens was in  progress yesterday afternoon at Clio and Saratoga Streets another  tragedy was being enacted downtown in the French quarter, but it was a  very one-sided affair. The object of the white man's wrath was, of  course, a Negro, but, unlike Charles, he showed no fight, but tried to  escape from the furious mob which was pursuing him, and which finally  put an end to his existence in a most cruel manner.
 The Negro, whom no one seemed to know—at any rate no one could be found  in the vicinity of the killing who could tell who he was—was walking  along the levee, as near as could be learned, when he was attacked by a  number of white longshoremen or screwmen. For what reason, if there was  any reason other than the fact that he was a Negro, could not be  learned, and immediately they pounced upon him he broke ground and  started on a desperate run for his life.
 The hunted Negro started off the levee toward the French Vegetable  Market, changed his course out the sidewalk toward Gallatin Street. The  angry, yelling mob was close at his heels, and increasing steadily as  each block was traversed. At Gallatin Street he turned up that  thoroughfare, doubled back into North Peters Street and ran into the  rear of No. 1216 of that street, which is occupied by Chris Reuter as a  commission store and residence.
 He rushed frantically through the place and out on to the gallery on the  Gallatin Street side. From this gallery he jumped to the street and fell  flat on his back on the sidewalk. Springing to his feet as soon as  possible, with a leaden, hail fired by the angry mob whistling about  him, he turned to his merciless pursuers in an appealing way, and,  throwing up one hand, told them not to shoot any more, that they could  take him as he was.
 But the hail of lead continued, and the unfortunate Negro finally  dropped to the sidewalk, mortally wounded. The mob then rushed upon him,  still continuing the fusillade, and upon reaching his body a number of  Italians, who had joined the howling mob, reached down and stabbed him  in the back and buttock with big knives. Others fired shots into his  head until his teeth were shot out, three shots having been fired into  his mouth. There were bullet wounds all over his body.
 Others who witnessed the affair declared that the man was fired at as he  was running up the stairs leading to the living apartments above the  store, and that after jumping to the sidewalk and being knocked down by  a bullet he jumped up and ran across the street, then ran back and tried  to get back into the commission store. The Italians, it is said, were  all drunk, and had been shooting firecrackers. Tiring of this, they  began shooting at Negroes, and when the unfortunate man who was killed  ran by they joined in the chase.
 No one was arrested for the shooting, the neighborhood having been  deserted by the police, who were sent up to the place where Charles was  fighting so desperately. No one could or would give the names of any of  those who had participated in the chase and the killing, nor could any  one be found who knew who the Negro was. The patrol wagon was called and  the terribly mutilated body sent to the morgue and the coroner notified.
 The murdered Negro was copper colored, about 5 feet 11 inches in height,  about 35 years of age, and was dressed in blue overalls and a brown  slouch hat. At 10:30 o'clock the vicinity of the French Market was very  quiet. Squads of special officers were patrolling the neighborhood, and  there did not seem to be any prospects of disorder.
During the entire time the mob held the city in its hands and went about holding up street cars and searching them, taking from them colored men to assault, shoot and kill, chasing colored men upon the public square, through alleys and into houses of anybody who would take them in, breaking into the homes of defenseless colored men and women and beating aged and decrepit men and women to death, the police and the legally constituted authorities showed plainly where their sympathies were, for in no case reported through the daily papers does there appear the arrest, trial and conviction of one of the mob for any of the brutalities which occurred. The ringleaders of the mob were at no time disguised. Men were chased, beaten and killed by white brutes, who boasted of their crimes, and the murderers still walk the streets of New Orleans, well known and absolutely exempt from prosecution. Not only were they exempt from prosecution by the police while the town was in the hands of the mob, but even now that law and order is supposed to resume control, these men, well known, are not now, nor ever will be, called to account for the unspeakable brutalities of that terrible week. On the other hand, the colored men who were beaten by the police and dragged into the station for purposes of intimidation, were quickly called up before the courts and fined or sent to jail upon the statement of the police. Instances of Louisiana justice as it is dispensed in New Orleans are here quoted from the Times-Democrat of July 26:
Justice Dealt Out to Folk Who Talked Too Much
 All the Negroes and whites who were arrested in the vicinity of  Tuesday's tragedy had a hard time before Recorder Hughes yesterday. Lee  Jackson was the first prisoner, and the evidence established that he  made his way to the vicinity of the crime and told his Negro friends  that he thought a good many more policemen ought to be killed. Jackson  said he was drunk when he made the remark. He was fined $25 or thirty  days.
 John Kennedy was found wandering about the street Tuesday night with an  open razor in his hand, and he was given $25 or thirty days.
 Edward McCarthy, a white man, who arrived only four days since from New  York, went to the scene of the excitement at the corner of Third and  Rampart Streets, and told the Negroes that they were as good as any  white man. This remark was made by McCarthy, as another white man said  the Negroes should be lynched. McCarthy told the recorder that he  considered a Negro as good as a white in body and soul. He was fined $25  or thirty days.
 James Martin, Simon Montegut, Eddie McCall, Alex Washington and Henry  Turner were up for failing to move on. Martin proved that he was at the  scene to assist the police and was discharged. Montegut, being a  cripple, was also released, but the others were fined $25 or thirty days  each.
 Eddie Williams for refusing to move on was given $25 or thirty days.
 Matilda Gamble was arrested by the police for saying that two officers  were killed and it was a pity more were not shot. She was given $25 or  thirty days.
INSOLENT BLACKS
"Recorder Hughes received Negroes in the first recorder's office yesterday morning in a way that they will remember for a long time, and all of them were before the magistrate for having caused trouble through incendiary remarks concerning the death of Captain Day and Patrolman Lamb."
"Lee Jackson was before the recorder and was fined $25 or thirty days. He was lippy around where the trouble happened Tuesday morning, and some white men punched him good and hard and the police took him. Then the recorder gave him a dose, and now he is in the parish prison."
"John Kennedy was another black who got into trouble. He said that the shooting of the police by Charles was a good thing, and for this he was pounded. Patrolman Lorenzo got him and saved him from being lynched, for the black had an open razor. He was fined $25 or thirty days."
"Edward McCarthy, a white man, mixed up with the crowd, and an expression of sympathy nearly cost him his head, for some whites about started for him, administering licks and blows with fists and umbrellas. The recorder fined him $25 or thirty days. He is from New York."
"Then James Martin, a white man, and Simon Montegut, Eddie Call, Henry Turner and Alex Washington were before the magistrate for having failed to move on when the police ordered them from the square where the bluecoats were Tuesday, waiting in the hope of catching Charles. All save Martin and Montegut were fined."
"Eddie Williams, a little Negro who was extremely fresh with the police, was fined $10 or ten days."
SHOCKING BRUTALITY
The whole city was at the mercy of the mob and the display of brutality was a disgrace to civilization. One instance is described in the Picayune as follows:
A smaller party detached itself from the mob at Washington and Rampart  Streets, and started down the latter thoroughfare. One of the foremost  spied a Negro, and immediately there was a rush for the unfortunate  black man. With the sticks they had torn from fences on the line of  march the young outlaws attacked the black and clubbed him unmercifully,  acting more like demons than human beings. After being severely beaten  over the head, the Negro started to run with the whole gang at his  heels. Several revolvers were brought into play and pumped their lead at  the refugee. The Negro made rapid progress and took refuge behind the  blinds of a little cottage in Rampart Street, but he had been seen, and  the mob hauled him from his hiding place and again commenced beating  him. There were more this time, some twenty or thirty, all armed with  sticks and heavy clubs, and under their incessant blows the Negro could  not last long. He begged for mercy, and his cries were most pitiful, but  a mob has no heart, and his cries were only answered with more blows.
 "For God's sake, boss, I ain't done nothin'. Don't kill me. I swear I  ain't done nothin'."
 The white brutes turned
 A DEAF EAR TO THE PITYING CRIES
 of the black wretch and the drubbing continued. The cries subsided into  moans, and soon the black swooned away into unconsciousness. Still not  content with their heartless work, they pulled the Negro out and kicked  him into the gutter. For the time those who had beaten the black seemed  satisfied and left him groaning in the gutter, but others came up, and,  regretting that they had not had a hand in the affair, they determined  to evidence their bravery to their fellows and beat the man while he was  in the gutter, hurling rocks and stones at his black form. One  thoughtless white brute, worse even than the black slayer of the police  officers, thought to make himself a hero in the eyes of his fellows and  fired his revolver repeatedly into the helpless wretch. It was dark and  the fellow probably aimed carelessly. After firing three or four shots  he also left without knowing what extent of injury he inflicted on the  black wretch who was left lying in the gutter.
MURDER ON THE LEVEE
One part of the crowd made a raid on the tenderloin district, hoping to find there some belated Negro for a sacrifice. They were urged on by the white prostitutes, who applauded their murderous mission. Says an account:
The red light district was all excitement. Women—that is, the white  women—were out on their stoops and peeping over their galleries and  through their windows and doors, shouting to the crowd to go on with  their work, and kill Negroes for them.
 "Our best wishes, boys," they encouraged; and the mob answered with  shouts, and whenever a Negro house was sighted a bombardment was started  on the doors and windows.
No colored men were found on the streets until the mob reached Custom House Place and Villiers Streets. Here a victim was found and brutally put to death. The Picayune description is as follows:
Some stragglers had run a Negro into a car at the corner of Bienville  and Villere Streets. He was seeking refuge in the conveyance, and he  believed that the car would not be stopped and could speed along. But  the mob determined to stop the car, and ordered the motorman to halt. He  put on his brake. Some white men were in the car.
 "Get out, fellows," shouted several of the mob.
 "All whites fall out," was the second cry, and the poor Negro understood  that it was meant that he should stay in the car.
 He wanted to save his life. The poor fellow crawled under the seats. But  some one in the crowd saw him and yelled that he was hiding. Two or  three men climbed through the windows with their pistols; others jumped  over the motorman's board, and dozens tumbled into the rear of the car.  Big, strong hands got the Negro by the shirt. He was dragged out of the  conveyance, and was pushed to the street. Some fellow ran up and struck  him with a club. The blow was heavy, but it did not fell him, and the  Negro ran toward Canal Street, stealing along the wall of the Tulane  Medical Building. Fifty men ran after him, caught the poor fellow and  hurried him back into the crowd. Fists were aimed at him, then clubs  went upon his shoulders, and finally the black plunged into the gutter.
 A gun was fired, and the Negro, who had just gotten to his feet, dropped  again. He tried to get up, but a volley was sent after him, and in a  little while he was dead.
 The crowd looked on at the terrible work. Then the lights in the houses  of ill-fame began to light up again, and women peeped out of the blinds.  The motorman was given the order to go on. The gong clanged and the  conveyance sped out of the way. For half an hour the crowd held their  place at the corner, then the patrol wagon came and the body was picked  up and hurried to the morgue.
 Coroner Richard held an autopsy on the body of the Negro who was forced  out of car 98 of the Villere line and shot down. It was found that he  was wounded four times, the most serious wound being that which struck  him in the right side, passing through the lungs, and causing  hemorrhages, which brought about death.
 Nobody tried to identify the poor fellow and his name is unknown.
A VICTIM IN THE MARKET
Soon after the murder of the man on the street car many of the same mob marched down to the market place. There they found a colored market man named Louis Taylor, who had gone to begin his early morning's work. He was at once set upon by the mob and killed. The Picayune account says:
Between 1 and 2 o'clock this morning a mob of several hundred men and  boys, made up of participants in many of the earlier affairs, marched on  the French Market. Louis Taylor, a Negro vegetable carrier, who is about  thirty years of age, was sitting at the soda water stand. As soon as the  mob saw him fire was opened and the Negro took to his heels. He ran  directly into another section of the mob and any number of shots were  fired at him. He fell, face down, on the floor of the market.
 The police in the neighborhood rallied hurriedly and found the victim of  mob violence seemingly lifeless. Before they arrived the Negro had been  beaten severely about the head and body. The ambulance was summoned and  Taylor was carried to the charity hospital, where it was found that he  had been shot through the abdomen and arm. The examination was a hurried  one, but it sufficed to show that Taylor was mortally wounded.
 After shooting Taylor the members of the mob were pluming themselves on  their exploit. "The Nigger was at the soda water stand and we commenced  shooting him," said one of the rioters. "He put his hands up and ran,  and we shot until he fell. I understand that he is still alive. If he  is, he is a wonder. He was certainly shot enough to be killed."
 The members of the mob readily admitted that they had taken part in the  assaults which marked the earlier part of the evening.
 "We were up on Jackson Avenue and killed a Nigger on Villere Street. We  came down here, saw a nigger and killed him, too." This was the way they  told the story.
 "Boys, we are out of ammunition," said someone.
 "Well, we will keep on like we are, and if we can't get some before  morning, we will take it. We have got to keep this thing up, now we have  started."
 This declaration was greeted by a chorus of applauding yells, and the  crowd started up the levee. Half of the men in the crowd, and they were  all of them young, were drunk.
 Taylor, when seen at the charity hospital, was suffering greatly, and  presented a pitiable spectacle. His clothing was covered with blood, and  his face was beaten almost into a pulp. He said that he had gone to the  market to work and was quietly sitting down when the mob came and began  to fire on him. He was not aware at first that the crowd was after him.  When he saw its purpose he tried to run, but fell. He didn't know any of  the men in the crowd. There is hardly a chance that Taylor will recover.
 The police told the crowd to move on, but no attempt was made to arrest  anyone.
A GRAY-HAIRED VICTIM
The bloodthirsty barbarians, having tasted blood, continued their hunt and soon ran across an old man of seventy-five years. His life had been spent in hard work about the French market, and he was well known as an unoffending, peaceable and industrious old man.
But that made no difference to the mob. He was a Negro, and with a fiendishness that was worse than that of cannibals they beat his life out. The report says:
There was another gang of men parading the streets in the lower part of  the city, looking for any stray Negro who might be on the streets. As  they neared the corner of Dauphine and Kerlerec, a square below  Esplanade Avenue, they came upon Baptiste Thilo, an aged Negro, who  works in the French Market.
 Thilo for years has been employed by the butchers and fish merchants to  carry baskets from the stalls to the wagons, and unload the wagons as  they arrive in the morning. He was on his way to the market, when the  mob came upon him. One of the gang struck the old Negro, and as he fell,  another in the crowd, supposed to be a young fellow, fired a shot. The  bullet entered the body just below the right nipple.
 As the Negro fell the crowd looked into his face and they discovered  then that the victim was very old. The young man who did the shooting  said: "Oh, he is an old Negro. I'm sorry that I shot him."
 This is all the old Negro received in the way of consolation.
 He was left where he fell, but later staggered to his feet and made his  way to the third precinct station. There the police summoned the  ambulance and the students pronounced the wound very dangerous. He was  carried to the hospital as rapidly as possible.
 There was no arrest.
Just before daybreak the mob found another victim. He, too, was on his way to market, driving a meat wagon. But little is told of his treatment, nothing more than the following brief statement:
At nearly 3 o'clock this morning a report was sent to the Third Precinct  station that a Negro was lying on the sidewalk at the corner of Decatur  and St. Philip. The man had been pulled off of a meat wagon and riddled  with bullets.
 When the police arrived he was insensible and apparently dying. The  ambulance students attended the Negro and pronounced the wounds fatal.
 There was nothing found which would lead to the discovery of his  identity.
FUN IN GRETNA
If there are any persons so deluded as to think that human life in the South is valued any more than the life of a brute, he will be speedily undeceived by reading the accounts of unspeakable barbarism committed by the mob in and around New Orleans. In no other civilized country in the world, nay, more, in no land of barbarians would it be possible to duplicate the scenes of brutality that are reported from New Orleans. In the heat of blind fury one might conceive how a mad mob might beat and kill a man taken red-handed in a brutal murder. But it is almost past belief to read that civilized white people, men who boast of their chivalry and blue blood, actually had fun in beating, chasing and shooting men who had no possible connection with any crime.
But this actually happened in Gretna, a few miles from New Orleans. In its description of the scenes of Tuesday night, the Picayune mentions the brutal chase of several colored men whom the mob sought to kill. In the instances mentioned, the paper said:
Gretna had its full share of excitement between 8 and 11 o'clock last  night, in connection with a report that spread through the town that a  Negro resembling the slayer of Police Captain Day, of New Orleans, had  been seen on the outskirts of the place.
 It is true that a suspicious-looking Negro was observed by the residents  of Madison and Amelia Streets lurking about the fences of that  neighborhood just after dark, and shortly before 8 o'clock John Fist, a  young white man, saw the Negro on Fourth Street. He followed the darkey  a short distance, and, coming upon Robert Moore, who is known about town  as the "black detective," Fist pointed the Negro out and Moore at once  made a move toward the stranger. The latter observed Moore making in his  direction, and, without a word, he sped in the direction of the Brooklyn  pasture, Moore following and firing several shots at him. In a few  minutes a half hundred white men, including Chief of Police Miller,  Constable Dannenhauer, Patrolman Keegan and several special officers,  all well-armed, joined in the chase, but in the darkness the Negro  escaped.
 Just as the pursuing party reached town again, two of the residents of  Lafayette Avenue, Peter Leson and Robert Henning, reported that they had  just chased and shot at a Negro, who had been seen in the yard of the  former's house. They were positive the Negro had not escaped from the  square. Their report was enough to set the appetite of the crowd on  edge, and the square was quickly surrounded, while several dozens of  men, armed with lanterns and revolvers, made a search of every yard and  under every house in the square. No Negro was found.
 The crowd of armed men was constantly swelling, and at 10 o'clock it had  reached the proportions of a small army. At 10:30 o'clock an outbound  freight train is due to pass through Gretna on the Texas and Pacific  Road, and the crowd, believing that Captain Day's slayer might be aboard  one of the cars attempting to leave the scene of his crime, resolved to  inspect the train. As the train stopped at the Madison Street crossing  the engineer was requested to pull very slowly through the town, in  order that the trucks of the cars might be examined. There was a string  of armed men on each side of the railroad track and in a few moments a  Negro was espied riding between two cars. A half dozen weapons were  pointed at him and he was ordered to come out. He sprang out with  alacrity and was pounced upon almost before he reached the ground.  Robert Moore grabbed him and pushed an ugly-looking Derringer under his  nose and the Negro threw up both hands. Constable Dannenhauer and  Patrolman Keegan took charge of him and hustled him off to jail, where  he was locked up. The Negro does not at all resemble Robert Charles, but  it was best for his sake that he was placed under lock and key. The  crowd was not in a humor to let any Negro pass muster last night. The  prisoner gave his name as Luke Wallace.
 But now came the real excitement. The train had slowed down almost to a  standstill, in the very heart of town. Somebody shouted: "There he goes,  on top of the train!" And sure enough, somebody was going. It was a  Negro, too, and he was making a bee-line for the front end of the train.  A veritable shower of bullets, shot and rifle balls greeted the flying  form, but on it sped. The locomotive had stopped in the middle of the  square between La voisier and Newton Streets, and the Negro, flying with  the speed of the wind along the top of the cars, reached the first car  of the train and jumped to the tender and then into the cab. As he did  several white men standing at the locomotive made a rush into the cab.  The Negro sprang swiftly out of the other side, on to the sidewalk. But  there were several more men, and as he realized that he was rushing  right into their arms he made a spring to leap over the fence of Mrs.  Linden's home, on the wood side of the track. Before the Negro got to  the top one white man had hold of his legs, while another rushed up,  pistol in hand. The man who was holding the darkey's legs was jostled  out of the way and the man with the pistol, standing directly beneath  the Negro, sent two bullets at him.
 There was a wild scramble, and the vision of a fleeing form in the  Linden yard, but that was the last seen of the black man. The yard was  entered and searched, and neighboring yards were also searched, but not  even the trace of blood was found. It is almost impossible to believe  that the Negro was not wounded, for the man who fired at him held the  pistol almost against the Negro's body.
 The shots brought out almost everybody��white—in town, and though there  was nothing to show for the exciting work, except the arrest of the  Negro, who doesn't answer the description of the man wanted, Gretna's  male population had its little fan and felt amply repaid for all the  trouble it was put to, and all the ammunition it wasted.
BRUTALITY IN NEW ORLEANS
Mob rule reigned supreme Wednesday, and the scenes that were enacted challenge belief. How many colored men and women were abused and injured is not known, for those who escaped were glad to make a place of refuge and took no time to publish their troubles. The mob made no attempt to find Charles; its only purpose was to pursue, beat and kill any colored man or woman who happened to come in sight. Speaking editorially, the Picayune of Thursday, the twenty-sixth of July, said:
ESCAPED WITH THEIR LIVES
At the Charity Hospital Wednesday night more than a score of people were treated for wounds received at the hands of the mob. Some were able to tell of their mistreatment, and their recitals are briefly given in the Picayune as follows:
Alex. Ruffin, who is quite seriously injured, is a Pullman car porter, a  native of Chicago. He reached New Orleans at 9:20 o'clock last night,  and after finishing his work, boarded a Henry Clay Avenue car to go to  Delachaise Street, where he has a sick son.
 "I hadn't ridden any way," said he, "when I saw a lot of white folks.  They were shouting to 'Get the Niggers.' I didn't know they were after  every colored man they saw, and sat still. Two or three men jumped on  the car and started at me. One of them hit me over the head with a  slungshot, and they started to shooting at me. I jumped out of the car  and ran, although I had done nothing. They shot me in the arm and in the  leg. I would certainly have been killed had not some gentleman taken my  part. If I had known New Orleans was so excited I would never have left  my car."
 George Morris is the name of a Negro who was badly injured by a mob  which went through the Poydras Market. Morris is employed as watchman  there. He heard the noise of the passing crowd and looked out to see  what the matter was. As soon as the mob saw him its members started  after him.
 "One man hit me over the head with a club," said George, after his  wounds had been dressed, "and somebody cut me in the back. I didn't  hardly think what was the matter at first, but when I saw they were  after me I ran for my life. I ran to the coffee stand, where I work, for  protection, but they were right after me, and somebody shot me in the  back. At last the police got me away from the crowd. Just before I was  hit a friend of mine, who was in the crowd, said, 'You had better go  home, Nigger; they're after your kind.' I didn't know then what he  meant. I found out pretty quick."
 Morris is at the hospital. He is a perfect wreck, and while he will  probably get well, he will have had a close call.
 Esther Fields is a Negro washerwoman who lives at South Claiborne and  Toledano Streets. She was at home when she heard a big noise and went  out to investigate. She ran into the arms of the mob, and was beaten  into insensibility in less time than it takes to tell it. Esther is  being treated at the charity hospital, and should be able to get about  in a few days. The majority of her bruises are about the head.
 T.P. Sanders fell at the hands of the Jackson Avenue mob. He lives at  1927 Jackson Avenue, and was sitting in front of his home when he saw  the crowd marching out the street. He stayed to see what the excitement  was all about, and was shot in the knee and thorax and horribly beaten  about the head before the mob came to the conclusion that he had been  done for, and passed on. The ambulance was called and he was picked up  and carried to the charity hospital, where his wounds were dressed and  pronounced serious.
 Oswald McMahon is nothing more than a boy. He was shot in the leg and  afterward carried to the hospital. His injuries are very slight.
 Dan White is another charity hospital patient. He is a Negro roustabout  and was sitting in the bar room at Poydras and Franklin Streets when a  mob passed along and espied him. He was shot in the hand, and would have  been roughly dealt with had some policeman not been luckily near and  rescued him.
 In addition to the Negroes who suffered from the violence of the mob  there were several patients treated at the hospital during the night who  had been with the rioters and had been struck by stray bullets or  injured in scuffles. None of this class were hurt to any extent. They  got their wounds dressed and went out again.
WAS CHARLES A DESPERADO?
The press of the country has united in declaring that Robert Charles was a desperado. As usual, when dealing with a negro, he is assumed to be guilty because he is charged. Even the most conservative of journals refuse to ask evidence to prove that the dead man was a criminal, and that his life had been given over to lawbreaking. The minute that the news was flashed across the country that he had shot a white man it was at once declared that he was a fiend incarnate, and that when he was killed the community would be ridden of a black-hearted desperado. The reporters of the New Orleans papers, who were in the best position to trace the record of this man's life, made every possible effort to find evidence to prove that he was a villain unhung. With all the resources at their command, and inspired by intense interest to paint him as black a villain as possible, these reporters signally failed to disclose a single indictment which charged Robert Charles with a crime. Because they failed to find any legal evidence that Charles was a lawbreaker and desperado his accusers gave full license to their imagination and distorted the facts that they had obtained, in every way possible, to prove a course of criminality, which the records absolutely refuse to show.
Charles had his first encounter with the police Monday night, in which he was shot in the street duel which was begun by the police after Officer Mora had beaten Charles three or four times over the head with his billy in an attempt to make an illegal arrest. In defending himself against the combined attack of two officers with a billy and their guns upon him, Charles shot Officer Mora and escaped.
Early Tuesday morning Charles was traced to Dryades Street by officers who were instructed to kill him on sight. There, again defending himself, he shot and killed two officers. This, of course, in the eyes of the American press, made him a desperado. The New Orleans press, in substantiating the charges that he was a desperado, make statements which will be interesting to examine.
In the first place the New Orleans Times-Democrat, of July 25, calls Charles a "ravisher and a daredevil." It says that from all sources that could be searched "the testimony was cumulative that the character of the murderer, Robert Charles, is that of a daredevil and a fiend in human form." Then in the same article it says:
The belongings of Robert Charles which were found in his room were a  complete index to the character of the man. Although the room and its  contents were in a state of chaos on account of the frenzied search for  clews by officers and citizens, an examination of his personal effects  revealed the mental state of the murderer and the rancor in his heart  toward the Caucasian race. Never was the adage, "A little learning is a  dangerous thing," better exemplified than in the case of the negro who  shot to death the two officers.
His room was searched, and the evidence upon which the charge that he was a desperado consisted of pamphlets in support of Negro emigration to Liberia. On his mantel-piece there was found a bullet mold and an outfit for reloading cartridges. There were also two pistol scabbards and a bottle of cocaine. The other evidences that Charles was a desperado the writer described as follows:
In his room were found negro periodicals and other "race" propaganda,  most of which was in the interest of the negro's emigration to Liberia.  There were Police Gazettes strewn about his room and other papers of a  similar character. Well-worn textbooks, bearing his name written in his  own scrawling handwriting, and well-filled copybooks found in his trunk  showed that he had burnt the midnight oil, and was desirous of improving  himself intellectually in order that he might conquer the hated white  race. Much of the literature found among his chattels was of a  superlatively vituperative character, and attacked the white race in  unstinted language and asserted the equal rights of the Negro.
 Charles was evidently the local agent of the Voice of Missions, a  "religious" paper, published at Atlanta, as great bundles of that sheet  were found. It is edited by one Bishop Turner, and seems to be the  official organ of all haters of the white race. Its editorials are  anarchistic in the extreme, and urge upon the negro that the sooner he  realizes that he is as good as the white man the better it will be for  him. The following verses were clipped from the journal; they were  marked "till forbidden," and appeared in several successive numbers:
OUR SENTIMENTS H.M.T. My country, 'tis of thee, Dear land of Africa, Of thee we sing. Land where our fathers died, Land of the Negro's pride, God's truth shall ring. My native country, thee, Land of the black and free, Thy name I love; To see thy rocks and rills, Thy woods and matchless hills, Like that above. When all thy slanderous ghouls, In the bosom of sheol, Forgotten lie, Thy monumental name shall live, And suns thy royal brow shall gild, Upheaved to heaven high, O'ertopping thrones.
There were no valuables in his room, and if he was a professional thief  he had his headquarters for storing his plunder at some other place than  his room on Fourth Street. Nothing was found in his room that could lead  to the belief that he was a thief, except fifty or more small bits of  soap. The inference was that every place he visited he took all of the  soap lying around, as all of the bits were well worn and had seen long  service on the washstand.
 His wearing apparel was little more than rags, and financially he was  evidently not in a flourishing condition. He was in no sense a skilled  workman, and his room showed, in fact, that he was nothing more than a  laborer.
 The "philosopher in the garret" was a dirty wretch, and his room, his  bedding and his clothing were nasty and filthy beyond belief. His object  in life seemed to have been the discomfiture of the white race, and to  this purpose he devoted himself with zeal. He declared himself to be a  "patriot," and wished to be the Moses of his race.
Under the title of "The Making of a Monster," the reporter attempts to give "something of the personality of the archfiend, Charles." Giving his imagination full vent the writer says:
It is only natural that the deepest interest should attach to the  personality of Robert Charles. What manner of man was this fiend  incarnate? What conditions developed him? Who were his preceptors? From  what ancestral strain, if any, did he derive his ferocious hatred of the  whites, his cunning, his brute courage, the apostolic zeal which he  displayed in spreading the propaganda of African equality? These are  questions involving one of the most remarkable psychological problems of  modern times.
In answer to the questions which he propounds, the reporter proceeds to admit that he did not learn anything of a very desperate nature connected with Charles. He says:
Although Charles was a familiar figure to scores of Negroes in New  Orleans, and they had been more or less intimately acquainted with him  for over two years, curiously little can be learned of his habits or  mode of life. Since the perpetration of his terrible series of crimes it  goes without saying that his former friends are inclined to be reticent,  but it is reasonably certain that they have very little to tell. In  regard to himself, Charles was singularly reticent for a Negro. He did  not even indulge in the usual lying about his prowess and his  adventures. This was possibly due to the knowledge that he was wanted  for a couple of murders. The man had sense enough to know that it would  be highly unwise to excite any curiosity about his past.
 When Charles first came to New Orleans he worked here and there as a day  laborer. He was employed at different times in a sawmill, on the street  gangs, as a roustabout on the levee, as a helper at the sugar works and  as a coal shoveler in the engine room of the St. Charles Hotel. At each  of the places where he worked he was known as a quiet, rather surly  fellow, who had little to say to anybody, and generally performed his  tasks in morose silence. He managed to convey the impression, however,  of being a man of more than ordinary intelligence.
 A Negro named William Butts, who drives a team on the levee and lives on  Washington Street, near Baronne, told a Times-Democrat reporter  yesterday that Charles got a job about a year ago as agent for a  Liberian Immigration Society, which has headquarters at Birmingham, and  was much elated at the prospect of making a living without hard labor.
According to the further investigations of this reporter, Charles was also agent for Bishop Turner's Voice of Missions, the colored missionary organ of the African Methodist Church, edited by H.M. Turner, of Atlanta, Georgia. Concerning his service as agent for the Voice of Missions, the reporter says:
He secured a number of subscribers and visited them once a month to  collect the installments. In order to insure regular payments it was  necessary to keep up enthusiasm, which was prone to wane, and Charles  consequently became an active and continual preacher of the propaganda  of hatred. Whatever may have been his private sentiments at the outset,  this constant harping on one string must eventually have had a powerful  effect upon his own mind.
 Exactly how he received his remuneration is uncertain, but he told  several of his friends that he got a "big commission." Incidentally he  solicited subscribers for a Negro paper called the Voice of the  Missions, and when he struck a Negro who did not want to go to Africa  himself, he begged contributions for the "good of the cause."
 In the course of time Charles developed into a fanatic on the subject of  the Negro oppression and neglected business to indulge in wild tirades  whenever he could find a listener. He became more anxious to make  converts than to obtain subscribers, and the more conservative darkies  began to get afraid of him. Meanwhile he got into touch with certain  agitators in the North and made himself a distributing agent for their  literature, a great deal of which he gave away. Making money was a  secondary consideration to "the cause."
 One of the most enthusiastic advocates of the Liberian scheme is the  colored Bishop H.M. Turner, of Atlanta. Turner is a man of unusual  ability, has been over to Africa personally several times, and has made  himself conspicuous by denouncing laws which he claimed discriminated  against the blacks. Charles was one of the bishop's disciples and  evidence has been found that seems to indicate they were in  correspondence.
This was all that the Times-Democrat's reporters could find after the most diligent search to prove that Charles was the fiend incarnate which the press of New Orleans and elsewhere declared him to be.
The reporters of the New Orleans Picayune were no more successful than their brethren of the Times-Democrat. They, too, were compelled to substitute fiction for facts in their attempt to prove Charles a desperado. In the issue of the twenty-sixth of July it was said that Charles was well known in Vicksburg, and was there a consort of thieves. They mentioned that a man named Benson Blake was killed in 1894 or 1895, and that four Negroes were captured, and two escaped. Of the two escaped they claim that Charles was one. The four negroes who were captured were put in jail, and as usual, in the high state of civilization which characterizes Mississippi, the right of the person accused of crime to an indictment by legal process and a legal trial by jury was considered an useless formality if the accused happened to be black. A mob went to the jail that night, the four colored men were delivered to the mob, and all four were hanged in the court-house yard. The reporters evidently assumed that Charles was guilty, if, in fact, he was ever there, because the other four men were lynched. They did not consider it was a fact of any importance that Charles was never indicted. They called him a murderer on general principles.
DIED IN SELF-DEFENSE
The life, character and death of Robert Charles challenges the thoughtful consideration of all fair-minded people. In the frenzy of the moment, when nearly a dozen men lay dead, the victims of his unerring and death-dealing aim, it was natural for a prejudiced press and for citizens in private life to denounce him as a desperado and a murderer. But sea depths are not measured when the ocean rages, nor can absolute justice be determined while public opinion is lashed into fury. There must be calmness to insure correctness of judgment. The fury of the hour must abate before we can deal justly with any man or any cause.
That Charles was not a desperado is amply shown by the discussion in the preceding chapter. The darkest pictures which the reporters could paint of Charles were quoted freely, so that the public might find upon what grounds the press declared him to be a lawbreaker. Unquestionably the grounds are wholly insufficient. Not a line of evidence has been presented to prove that Charles was the fiend which the first reports of the New Orleans charge him to be.
Nothing more should be required to establish his good reputation, for the rule is universal that a reputation must be assumed to be good until it is proved bad. But that rule does not apply to the Negro, for as soon as he is suspected the public judgment immediately determines that he is guilty of whatever crime he stands charged. For this reason, as a matter of duty to the race, and the simple justice to the memory of Charles, an investigation has been made of the life and character of Charles before the fatal affray which led to his death.
Robert Charles was not an educated man. He was a student who faithfully investigated all the phases of oppression from which his race has suffered. That he was a student is amply shown by the Times-Democrat report of the twenty-fifth, which says:
"Well-worn textbooks, bearing his name written in his own scrawling handwriting, and well-filled copy-books found in his trunk, showed that he had burned the midnight oil, and desired to improve himself intellectually in order that he might conquer the hated white race." From this quotation it will be seen that he spent the hours after days of hard toil in trying to improve himself, both in the study of textbooks and in writing.
He knew that he was a student of a problem which required all the intelligence that a man could command, and he was burning his midnight oil gathering knowledge that he might better be able to come to an intelligent solution. To his aid in the study of this problem he sought the aid of a Christian newspaper, the Voice of Missions, the organ of the African Methodist Episcopal Church. He was in communication with its editor, who is a bishop, and is known all over this country as a man of learning, a lover of justice and the defender of law and order. Charles could receive from Bishop Turner not a word of encouragement to be other than an earnest, tireless and God-fearing student of the complex problems which affected the race.
For further help and assistance in his studies, Charles turned to an organization which has existed and flourished for many years, at all times managed by men of high Christian standing and absolute integrity. These men believe and preach a doctrine that the best interests of the Negro will be subserved by an emigration from America back to the Fatherland, and they do all they can to spread the doctrine of emigration and to give material assistance to those who desire to leave America and make their future homes in Africa. This organization is known as "The International Migration Society." It has its headquarters in Birmingham, Alabama. From this place it issues pamphlets, some of which were found, in the home of Robert Charles, and which pamphlets the reporters of the New Orleans papers declare to be incendiary and dangerous in their doctrine and teaching.
Nothing could be further from the truth. Copies of any and all of them may be secured by writing to D.J. Flummer, who is President and in charge of the home office in Birmingham, Alabama. Three of the pamphlets found in Charles's room are named respectively:
First, Prospectus of the Liberian Colonization Society; which pamphlet in a few brief pages tells of the work of the society, plans, prices and terms of transportation of colored people who choose to go to Africa. These pages are followed by a short, conservative discussion of the Negro question, and close with an argument that Africa furnishes the best asylum for the oppressed Negroes in this country.
The second pamphlet is entitled Christian Civilization of Africa. This is a brief statement of the advantages of the Republic of Liberia, and an argument in support of the superior conditions which colored people may attain to by leaving the South and settling in Liberia.
The third pamphlet is entitled The Negro and Liberia. This is a larger document than the other two, and treats more exhaustively the question of emigration, but from the first page to the last there is not an incendiary line or sentence. There is not even a suggestion of violence in all of its thirty-two pages, and not a word which could not be preached from every pulpit in the land.
If it is true that the workman is known by his tools, certainly no harm could ever come from the doctrines which were preached by Charles or the papers and pamphlets distributed by him. Nothing ever written in the Voice of Missions, and nothing ever published in the pamphlets above alluded to in the remotest way suggest that a peaceable man should turn lawbreaker, or that any man should dye his hands in his brother's blood.
In order to secure as far as possible positive information about the life and character of Robert Charles, it was plain that the best course to pursue was to communicate with those with whom he had sustained business relations. Accordingly a letter was forwarded to Mr. D.J. Flummer, who is president of the colonization society, in which letter he was asked to state in reply what information he had of the life and character of Robert Charles. The result was a very prompt letter in response, the text of which is as follows:
Birmingham, Ala., Aug. 21, 1900
 Mrs. Ida B. Wells Barnett, Chicago, Ill.:
 Dear Madam—Replying to your favor of recent date requesting me to write  you giving such information as I may have concerning the life, habits  and character of Robert Charles, who recently shot and killed police  officers in New Orleans, I wish to say that my knowledge of him is only  such as I have gained from his business connection with the  International Migration Society during the past five or six years,  during which time I was president of the society.
 He having learned that the purpose of this society was to colonize the  colored people in Liberia, West Africa, and thereby lessen or destroy  the friction and prejudice existing in this country between the two  races, set about earnestly and faithfully distributing the literature  that we issued from time to time. He always appeared to be mild but  earnest in his advocacy of emigration, and never to my knowledge used  any method or means that would in the least appear unreasonable, and had  always kept within the bounds of law and order in advocating emigration.
 The work he performed for this society was all gratuitous, and  apparently prompted from his love of humanity, and desires to be  instrumental in building up a Negro Nationality in Africa.
 If he ever violated a law before the killing of the policemen, I do not  know of it.
 Yours, very truly,
 D.J. Flummer
Besides this statement, Mr. Flummer enclosed a letter received by the Society two days before the tragedy at New Orleans. This letter was written by Robert Charles, and it attests his devotion to the cause of emigration which he had espoused. Memoranda on the margin of the letter show that the order was filled by mailing the pamphlets. It is very probable that these were the identical pamphlets which were found by the mob which broke into the room of Robert Charles and seized upon these harmless documents and declared they were sufficient evidence to prove Charles a desperado. In the light of subsequent events the letter of Charles, which follows, sounds like a voice from the tomb:
New Orleans, July 30,1900
Mr. D.J. Flummer:
 Dear Sir—I received your last pamphlets and they are all given out. I  want you to send me some more, and I enclose you the stamps. I think I  will go over in Greenville, Miss., and give my people some pamphlets  over there.
 Yours truly,
 Robert Charles
The latest word of information comes from New Orleans from a man who knew Charles intimately for six years. For obvious reasons, his name is withheld. In answer to a letter sent him he answers as follows:
New Orleans, Aug. 23, 1900
 Mrs. Ida B. Wells-Barnett:
 Dear Madam—It affords me great pleasure to inform you as far as I know  of Robert Charles. I have been acquainted with him about six years in  this city. He never has, as I know, given any trouble to anyone. He was  quiet and a peaceful man and was very frank in speaking. He was too much  of a hero to die; few call be found to equal him. I am very sorry to  say that I do not know anything of his birthplace, nor his parents, but  enclosed find letter from his uncle, from which you may find more  information. You will also find one of the circulars in which Charles  was in possession of which was styled as a crazy document. Let me say,  until our preachers preach this document we will always be slaves. If  you can help circulate this "crazy" doctrine I would be glad to have you  do so, for I shall never rest until I get to that heaven on earth; that  is, the west coast of Africa, in Liberia.
 With best wishes to you I still remain, as always, for the good of the  race,
 ——
By only those whose anger and vindictiveness warp their judgment is Robert Charles a desperado. Their word is not supported by the statement of a single fact which justifies their judgment and no criminal record shows that he was ever indicted for any offense, much less convicted of crime. On the contrary, his work for many years had been with Christian people, circulating emigration pamphlets and active as agent for a mission publication. Men who knew him say that he was a law-abiding, quiet, industrious, peaceable man. So he lived.
So he lived and so he would have died had not he raised his hand to resent unprovoked assault and unlawful arrest that fateful Monday night. That made him an outlaw, and being a man of courage he decided to die with his face to the foe. The white people of this country may charge that he was a desperado, but to the people of his own race Robert Charles will always be regarded as the hero of New Orleans.
BURNING HUMAN BEINGS ALIVE
Not only has life been taken by mobs in the past twenty years, but the ordinary procedure of hanging and shooting have been improved upon during the past ten years. Fifteen human beings have been burned to death in the different parts of the country by mobs. Men, women and children have gone to see the sight, and all have approved the barbarous deeds done in the high light of the civilization and Christianity of this country.
In 1891 Ed Coy was burned to death in Texarkana, Ark. He was charged with assaulting a white woman, and after the mob had securely tied him to a tree, the men and boys amused themselves for some time sticking knives into Coy's body and slicing off pieces, of flesh. When they had amused themselves sufficiently, they poured coal oil over him and the women in the case set fire to him. It is said that fifteen thousand people stood by and saw him burned. This was on a Sunday night, and press reports told how the people looked on while the Negro burned to death.
Feb. 1, 1893, Henry Smith was burned to death in Paris, Texas. The entire county joined in that exhibition. The district attorney himself went for the prisoner and turned him over to the mob. He was placed upon a float and drawn by four white horses through the principal streets of the city. Men, women and children stood at their doors and waved their handkerchiefs and cheered the echoes. They knew that the man was to be burned to death because the newspaper had declared for three days previous that this would be so. Excursions were run by all the railroads, and the mayor of the town gave the children a holiday so that they might see the sight.
Henry Smith was charged with having assaulted and murdered a little white girl. He was an imbecile, and while he had killed the child, there was no proof that he had criminally assaulted her. He was tied to a stake on a platform which had been built ten feet high, so that everybody might see the sight. The father and brother and uncle of the little white girl that had been murdered was upon that platform about fifty minutes entertaining the crowd of ten thousand persons by burning the victim's flesh with red-hot irons. Their own newspapers told how they burned his eyes out and, ran the red-hot iron down his throat, cooking his tongue, and how the crowd cheered wild delight. At last, having declared themselves satisfied, coal oil was poured over him and he was burned to death, and the mob fought over the ashes for bones and pieces of his clothes.
July 7, 1893, in Bardwell, Ky., C.J. Miller was burned to ashes. Since his death this man has been found to be absolutely innocent of the murder of the two white girls with which he was charged. But the mob would wait for no justification. They insisted that, as they were not sure he was the right man, they would compromise the matter by hanging him instead of burning. Not to be outdone, they took the body down and made a huge bonfire out of it.
July 22, 1893, at Memphis, Tenn., the body of Lee Walker was dragged through the street and burned before the court house. Walker had frightened some girls in a wagon along a country road by asking them to let him ride in their wagon. They cried out; some men working in a field near by said it was at attempt of assault, and of course began to look for their prey. There was never any charge of rape; the women only declared that he attempted an assault. After he was apprehended and put in jail and perfectly helpless, the mob dragged him out, shot him, cut him, beat him with sticks, built a fire and burned the legs off, then took the trunk of the body down and dragged further up the street, and at last burned it before the court house.
Sept. 20, 1893, at Roanoke, Va., the body of a Negro who had quarreled with a white woman was burned in the presence of several thousand persons. These people also wreaked their vengeance upon this helpless victim of the mob's wrath by sticking knives into him, kicking him and beating him with stones and otherwise mutilating him before life was extinct.
June 11, 1898, at Knoxville, Ark., James Perry was shut up in a cabin because he had smallpox and burned to death. He had been quarantined in this cabin when it was declared that he had this disease and the doctor sent for. When the physician arrived he found only a few smoldering embers. Upon inquiry some railroad hands who were working nearby revealed the fact that they had fastened the door of the cabin and set fire to the cabin and burned man and hut together.
Feb. 22, 1898, at Lake City, S.C., Postmaster Baker and his infant child were burned to death by a mob that had set fire to his house. Mr. Baker's crime was that he had refused to give up the post office, to which he had been appointed by the National Government. The mob had tried to drive him away by persecution and intimidation. Finding that all else had failed, they went to his home in the dead of night and set fire to his house, and as the family rushed forth they were greeted by a volley of bullets. The father and his baby were shot through the open door and wounded so badly that they fell back in the fire and were burned to death. The remainder of the family, consisting of the wife and five children, escaped with their lives from the burning house, but all of them were shot, one of the number made a cripple for life.
Jan. 7, 1898, two Indians were tied to a tree at Maud Post Office, Indian Territory, and burned to death by a white mob. They were charged with murdering a white woman. There was no proof of their guilt except the unsupported word of the mob. Yet they were tied to a tree and slowly roasted to death. Their names were Lewis McGeesy and Hond Martin. Since that time these boys have been found to be absolutely innocent of the charge. Of course that discovery is too late to be of any benefit to them, but because they were Indians the Indian Commissioner demanded and received from the United States Government an indemnity of $13,000.
April 23, 1899, at Palmetto, Ga., Sam Hose was burned alive in the presence of a throng, on Sunday afternoon. He was charged with killing a man named Cranford, his employer, which he admitted he did because his employer was about to shoot him. To the fact of killing the employer was added the absolutely false charge that Hose assaulted the wife. Hose was arrested and no trial was given him. According to the code of reasoning of the mob, none was needed. A white man had been killed and a white woman was said to have been assaulted. That was enough. When Hose was found he had to die.
The Atlanta Constitution, in speaking of the murder of Cranford, said that the Negro who was suspected would be burned alive. Not only this, but it offered $500 reward for his capture. After he had been apprehended, it was publicly announced that he would be burned alive. Excursion trains were run and bulletins were put up in the small towns. The Governor of Georgia was in Atlanta while excursion trains were being made up to take visitors to the burning. Many fair ladies drove out in their carriages on Sunday afternoon to witness the torture and burning of a human being. Hose's ears were cut off, then his toes and fingers, and passed round to the crowd. His eyes were put out, his tongue torn out and flesh cut in strips by knives. Finally they poured coal oil on him and burned him to death. They dragged his half-consumed trunk out of the flames, cut it open, extracted his heart and liver, and sold slices for ten cents each for souvenirs, all of which was published most promptly in the daily papers of Georgia and boasted over by the people of that section.
Oct. 19, 1889, at Canton, Miss., Joseph Leflore was burned to death. A house had been entered and its occupants murdered during the absence of the husband and father. When the discovery was made, it was immediately supposed that the crime was the work of a Negro, and the motive that of assaulting white women.
Bloodhounds were procured and they made a round of the village and discovered only one colored man absent from his home. This was taken to be proof sufficient that he was the perpetrator of the deed. When he returned home he was apprehended, taken into the yard of the house that had been burned down, tied to a stake, and was slowly roasted to death.
Dec. 6, 1899, at Maysville, Ky., Wm. Coleman also was burned to death. He was slowly roasted, first one foot and then the other, and dragged out of the fire so that the torture might be prolonged. All of this without a shadow of proof or scintilla of evidence that the man had committed the crime.
Thus have the mobs of this country taken the lives of their victims within the past ten years. In every single instance except one these burnings were witnessed by from two thousand to fifteen thousand people, and no one person in all these crowds throughout the country had the courage to raise his voice and speak out against the awful barbarism of burning human beings to death.
Men and women of America, are you proud of this record which the Anglo-Saxon race has made for itself? Your silence seems to say that you are. Your silence encourages a continuance of this sort of horror. Only by earnest, active, united endeavor to arouse public sentiment can we hope to put a stop to these demonstrations of American barbarism.
LYNCHING RECORD
The following table of lynchings has been kept year by year by the Chicago Tribune, beginning with 1882, and shows the list of Negroes that have been lynched during that time:
1882, Negroes murdered by mobs       52
1883, Negroes murdered by mobs       39
1884, Negroes murdered by mobs       53
1885, Negroes murdered by mobs      164
1886, Negroes murdered by mobs      136
1887, Negroes murdered by mobs      128
1888, Negroes murdered by mobs      143
1889, Negroes murdered by mobs      127
1890, Negroes murdered by mobs      171
1891, Negroes murdered by mobs      192
1892, Negroes murdered by mobs      241
1893, Negroes murdered by mobs      200
1894, Negroes murdered by mobs      190
1895, Negroes murdered by mobs      171
1896, Negroes murdered by mobs      131
1897, Negroes murdered by mobs      156
1898, Negroes murdered by mobs      127
1899, Negroes murdered by mobs      107
Of these thousands of men and women who have been put to death without judge or jury, less than one-third of them have been even accused of criminal assault. The world at large has accepted unquestionably the statement that Negroes are lynched only for assaults upon white women. Of those who were lynched from 1882 to 1891, the first ten years of the tabulated lynching record, the charges are as follows:
Two hundred and sixty-nine were charged with rape; 253 with murder; 44 with robbery; 37 with incendiarism; 4 with burglary; 27 with race prejudice; 13 quarreled with white men; 10 with making threats; 7 with rioting; 5 with miscegenation; in 32 cases no reasons were given, the victims were lynched on general principles.
During the past five years the record is as follows:
Of the 171 persons lynched in 1895 only 34 were charged with this crime. In 1896, out of 131 persons who were lynched, only 34 were said to have assaulted women. Of the 156 in 1897, only 32. In 1898, out of 127 persons lynched, 24 were charged with the alleged "usual crime." In 1899, of the 107 lynchings, 16 were said to be for crimes against women. These figures, of course, speak for themselves, and to the unprejudiced, fair-minded person it is only necessary to read and study them in order to show that the charge that the Negro is a moral outlaw is a false one, made for the purpose of injuring the Negro's good name and to create public sentiment against him.
If public sentiment were alive, as it should be upon the subject, it would refuse to be longer hoodwinked, and the voice of conscience would refuse to be stilled by these false statements. If the laws of the country were obeyed and respected by the white men of the country who charge that the Negro has no respect for law, these things could not be, for every individual, no matter what the charge, would have a fair trial and an opportunity to prove his guilt or innocence before a tribunal of law.
That is all the Negro asks—that is all the friends of law and order need to ask, for once the law of the land is supreme, no individual who commits crime will escape punishment.
Individual Negroes commit crimes the same as do white men, but that the Negro race is peculiarly given to assault upon women, is a falsehood of the deepest dye. The tables given above show that the Negro who is saucy to white men is lynched as well as the Negro who is charged with assault upon women. Less than one-sixth of the lynchings last year, 1899, were charged with rape.
The Negro points to his record during the war in rebuttal of this false slander. When the white women and children of the South had no protector save only these Negroes, not one instance is known where the trust was betrayed. It is remarkably strange that the Negro had more respect for womanhood with the white men of the South hundreds of miles away, than they have today, when surrounded by those who take their lives with impunity and burn and torture, even worse than the "unspeakable Turk."
Again, the white women of the North came South years ago, threaded the forests, visited the cabins, taught the schools and associated only with the Negroes whom they came to teach, and had no protectors near at hand. They had no charge or complaint to make of the danger to themselves after association with this class of human beings. Not once has the country been shocked by such recitals from them as come from the women who are surrounded by their husbands, brothers, lovers and friends. If the Negro's nature is bestial, it certainly should have proved itself in one of these two instances. The Negro asks only justice and an impartial consideration of these facts.
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barbielore · 9 months ago
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As February is Black History Month / African-American History Month (I'll be honest I don't know whether either of those terms are preferred - if someone could let me know, I would appreciate it), I thought I would make a post about how Mattel and the Barbie brand have intersected with this.
I have previously made some posts about this subject so just to collate some links:
A brief history of depictions of Black Barbies.
One of Mattel's first media tie-in dolls - Julia from the show Julia.
Alpha Kappa Alpha Barbie to commemorate America's first Black sorority.
Backstory on two of the dolls in the Barbie doll line depicted exclusively as Black women - Christie and Nikki.
The lore of Brooklyn and Malibu.
To expand on the above - I must shout out again Kitty Black Perkins by name even though I mentioned her in the history of Black Barbies post. Perkins is a now-retired Barbie designer credited with designing the first Barbie to be depicted as Black (that is to say, not a Francie or a Christie or another character - but Barbie), among other Barbies.
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In addition to the first Black Barbie, Perkins is credited with design of four Holiday Barbies, as well as a number of other Barbies and friends of Barbie - apparently designing or having input into the design of hundreds of Barbies.
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Without the influence of Perkins, it's very possible that we would not have modern doll releases featuring Brooklyn as a lead alongside Malibu.
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Mattel have included a number of historical Black women in their Inspiring Women collection; this is not all of them by any means, but an example.
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petervintonjr · 1 month ago
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I figure it's never a bad thing to revisit and study the remarkable legacy of Ida B. Wells, and to understand just what it was she was fighting against. Don't kid yourselves folks; lynching is still very much a thing in 2024. (Looking at you, Gov. Parson, who I am certain slept soundly and untroubled last night)
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247reader · 5 days ago
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Day 31: Ida B. Wells!
Ida Wells was born, enslaved, on a Mississippi plantation in 1863. The end of the Civil War brought her family freedom, and her father, a carpenter, became a leader in the local black community - a successful businessman, active in local politics, and a member of the inaugural board of what is now Rust College and was then called Shaw University. It was to Shaw that Ida went for her own education - but her life was turned upside down by the near simultaneous deaths of her parents.
Ida refused to let her younger siblings be separated. She took work as a teacher, and she and her grandmother raised the children; eventually, Ida and her youngest remaining sisters settled in Memphis, where Ida continued to teach, went back to college, and began her political activism, writing articles for local publications. She was dragged out of a segregated train car after refusing to give up her seat, and sued - winning in the lower courts, but losing when the railroad appealed. Undaunted, Ida continued her writing career, even after being fired from her teaching job for her beliefs.
In 1892, three black men, including Thomas Moss, a business owner and friend of Ida’s, were dragged from a Memphis jail and lynched. Ida, grief stricken and horrified, spoke out - with her voice, and with her pen. Mob violence forced her to flee Memphis, but it wouldn’t silence her, and from New York, Ida tried to spread the word about what was being done to her people. She gave speeches in Britain and the US - and met a kindred soul, fellow activist Ferdinand Barrett, who she married in 1895. The couple would have four children, and work together as equal partners for the rest of their lives.
Ida spoke out for civil rights, for worker’s rights, for an end to segregation, and for women to have the vote. By the time of her death in 1931, she was an acknowledged and influential leader, a voice who was never silenced, and a woman whose words still ring out through the years.
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boricuacherry-blog · 5 months ago
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blackstar1887 · 1 year ago
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The Fearless Trailblazer: Ida B. Wells' Legacy of Justice and Equality
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misscromwellsmonocle · 1 year ago
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Ida B Wells (1893)
She was an American investigative journalist, educator and an early leader in the civil rights movement.
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readyforevolution · 1 month ago
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urbs-in-horto · 8 months ago
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chrisdevins · 1 year ago
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Legends from the past are great, but living Legends are better. #s
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lightdancer1 · 2 years ago
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And then Ida B. Wells:
Ida B. Wells was likewise a figure of transition, like Booker T. Washington and W.E.B. Du Bois, her contemporaries. She was one of those Black activists of the era of the transition from emancipation to shaping the contours of Black history when Black people determined their own affairs as much as possible. She was also the leader of a one-woman war against lynching, one that she won and which marked one of the greatest victories of its era, as well as a founder of the NAACP.
I spotlighted these two first to note a point that all historians must always keep in mind. Periodization is a thing of convenience and jargon. People's lives are not shaped by it save in retrospect and what are seen as different eras are ones that people live through one after the other.
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