New Orleans Massacre of 1866 explained

New Orleans massacre of 1866
Subheader:Part of the Reconstruction Era
Location:New Orleans, Louisiana
Target:Anti-racist marchers
Date:July 30, 1866
Type:Mass murder
Fatalities:34–200 African Americans killed and 4 whites killed[1] [2]
Injuries:150
Perps:Ex-Confederates, white supremacists, and members of the New Orleans Police Force[3]

The New Orleans Massacre of 1866 occurred on July 30, when a peaceful demonstration of mostly Black Freedmen was set upon by a mob of white rioters, many of whom had been soldiers of the recently defeated Confederate States of America, leading to a full-scale massacre.[4] The violence erupted outside the Mechanics Institute, site of a reconvened Louisiana Constitutional Convention.[5] According to the official report, a total of 38 were killed and 146 wounded, of whom 34 dead and 119 wounded were Black Freedmen. Unofficial estimates were higher.[6] Gilles Vandal estimated 40 to 50 Black Americans were killed and more than 150 Black Americans wounded.[7] Others have claimed nearly 200 were killed.[2] In addition, three white convention attendees were killed, as was one white protester.[8]

During much of the American Civil War, New Orleans had been occupied and under martial law imposed by the Union. On May 12, 1866, Mayor John T. Monroe, a Democrat who had ardently supported the Confederacy, was reinstated as acting mayor, the position he held before the war. Judge R. K. Howell was elected as chairman of the convention, with the goal of increasing participation by voters likely to vote for removal of the Black Codes.[9]

The massacre expressed conflicts deeply rooted in the social structure of Louisiana. The New Orleans massacre was a continuation of a longer shooting war over slavery (beginning with Bleeding Kansas in 1859), of which the 1861–1865 hostilities were merely the largest part.[10] More than half of the whites were Confederate veterans and nearly half of the Black Americans were veterans of the Union army. The national reaction of outrage at the earlier Memphis riots of 1866 and the New Orleans Massacre helped the Radical Republicans win a majority in both houses of Congress in the 1866 midterm elections. The riots catalyzed support for the Fourteenth Amendment, extending suffrage and full citizenship to freedmen, and the Reconstruction Act, to establish military districts for the national government to oversee areas of the South and work to change their social arrangements.

Tension builds

The State Constitutional Convention of 1864 authorized greater civil freedoms to Blacks within Louisiana yet provided no voting rights for any people of color. Free people of color, who were mixed-race, had been an important part of New Orleans for more than a century and were established as a separate class in the colonial period, before United States annexation of the territory in 1803. Many were educated and owned property and were seeking the vote. In addition, Republicans had the goals of extending the suffrage to freedmen and eliminating the Black Codes passed by the legislature. They reconvened the convention and succeeded in incorporating these goals.[11] White Democrats by and large considered the reconvened convention illegal, as they said that the voters, then limited to whites only, had accepted the constitution. White supremacy was a plank of their 1865 state party platform: "Resolved, that we hold this to be a Government of White People, made and to be perpetuated for the exclusive political benefit of the White Race, and in accordance with the constant adjudication of the United States Supreme Court, that the people of African descent cannot be considered as citizens of the United States, and that there can in no event nor under any circumstances be any equality between the white and other Races." They opposed the goals articulated by Rufus King Cutler: "We have thirty to thirty-five thousand negro and colored voters in Louisiana, and about twenty-eight to thirty-thousand white voters. We could have all the negro men and the colored men to vote with the Union men, and that, with the disenfranchisement of the leading rebels, would give the ascendancy to the unionists, and I think they could sustain themselves...with sufficient military force to enforce these provisions, we could establish a government that would be substantial and we could sustain it after its establishment."[12]

In addition, they argued legal technicalities: the elected chairman Howell had left the original convention before its conclusion and was, therefore, not considered a member, the constitution was accepted by the people, and the radicals, only 25 of whom were present at the convention of 1864, did not make up a majority of the original convention.

On July 27, Black supporters of the convention, including approximately 200 war veterans, met at the steps of the Mechanics Institute. They were stirred by speeches of abolitionist activists, most notably Anthony Paul Dostie and former Governor of Louisiana Michael Hahn. The men proposed a parade to the Mechanics Institute on the day of the convention to show their support.

Massacre

The convention met at noon on July 30, but a lack of a quorum caused postponement to 1:30.[13] When the convention members left the building, they were met by the black marchers with their marching band. On the corner of Common and Dryades streets, across from the Mechanics Institute, a group of armed whites awaited the black marchers.[14] This group was composed largely of Democrats who opposed abolition; most were ex-Confederates who wanted to disrupt the convention and the threat to white supremacy the increasing political and economic power of blacks in the state represented.

It is not known which group fired first, but within minutes, there was a battle in the streets. The black marchers were unprepared and many were unarmed; they rapidly dispersed, with many seeking refuge within the Mechanics Institute. The white mob brutally attacked blacks on the street and some entered the building:

Federal troops responded to suppress the riot and jailed many of the white insurgents. The governor declared the city under martial law until August 3.

Nearly 200 people were killed, almost all African Americans.[2] Notable among the dead were Victor Lacroix, John Henderson Jr.[15] (son of John Henderson, a U.S. Senator from Mississippi), Dr. A. P. Dostie,[16] and Rev. Mr. Jotham Horton.[17]

Reaction

The national reaction to the New Orleans riot, coupled with the earlier Memphis riots of 1866, was one of heightened concern about the current Reconstruction strategy and desire for a change of leadership. In the 1866 midterm elections, the Republican Party increased their majority further, ultimately gaining 77% of the seats in Congress. This enabled them to overturn any veto by Democratic President Andrew Johnson, who was opposed to granting equal rights to freedmen. In both houses of Congress, the faction known as the "Radical Republicans" prevailed and imposed much harsher terms of Reconstruction on the states of the former Confederacy.[18]

On March 2, 1867, the First Reconstruction Act was passed  - over President Johnson's veto[19]  - to provide for more federal control in the South. Military districts were created to govern the region until violence could be suppressed and a more democratic political system established. Ex-Confederate soldiers and leaders, most of whom were white supporters of the Democratic Party, were temporarily disenfranchised, and the right of suffrage was to be enforced for free people of color. Under the act, Louisiana was assigned to the Fifth Military District, commanded by Philip Sheridan. On assuming command of the district, the general had announced his intention to avoid the wholesale removal of civil officials unless the authorities failed “to carry out the provisions of the law or impeded reorganization.” But he soon decided that a number of officials had to go. Displeased with the civil authorities’ handling of the New Orleans riot the previous summer and their failure to bring the perpetrators to justice, Sheridan dismissed Mayor Monroe, State Attorney General Herron, and Judge Edmund Abell from office and replaced them with Republicans whom he believed would faithfully execute their duties. He also removed an aide to the New Orleans police chief for intimidating black voters and annulled a law designed to prevent former federal soldiers from serving on the New Orleans police force, stipulating that in the future one-half of the policemen be Union Army veterans.[20]

The editorial department of Harper's Weekly held that President Johnson tacitly approved the massacre by signaling that he would not use federal power to interfere in ex-Confederate paramilitary action:[21]

Benjamin Butler, an early advocate for the prospect of impeaching President Andrew Johnson, as early as October 1866 proposed alleged complicity in the massacre as one of several grounds for impeaching Johnson.[22] After his election to the United States House of Representatives in the November 1866 House elections, Congressman-elect Butler continued to assert that, among several grounds for impeaching Johnson, was that Johnson allegedly, "unlawfully, corruptly, and wickedly confederating and conspiring with one John T. Monroe...and other evil disposed persons, traitors, and rebels," in relation to the massacre.[23] Incidentally, in November 1867, when Thomas Williams authored the majority report of House Committee on the Judiciary at the conclusion of first impeachment inquiry against Andrew Johnson, the report recommending the impeachment of President Andrew Johnson outlined seventeen specific acts of alleged malfeasance by Johnson, the sixteenth of which alleged that Johnson had encouraged the massacre (which the report characterized as, "the murder of loyal citizens in New Orleans by a Confederate mob pretending to act as a police").[24] However, the United States House of Representatives voted 57–108 against impeaching Johnson on December 7, 1867.[25] When Johnson was impeached months later, none of the articles of impeachment related to the New Orleans massacre.[26]

See also

References

Notes
  • Bibliography
  • External links

    Notes and References

    1. Web site: Reconstruction in America Racial Violence after the Civil War, 1865–1876 . Equal Justice Initiative . June 26, 2020.
    2. Ball (2020), p. 211.
    3. Web site: New Orleans Massacre (1866) •. Michael. Stolp-Smith. April 7, 2011.
    4. Web site: 1866 New Orleans massacre remembered as a city-led racial attack a year after the Civil War ended. Mike. Scott. NOLA.com. 30 June 2020 .
    5. Vandal (1984), p. 137.
    6. Reynolds . Donald E. . The New Orleans Riot of 1866, Reconsidered . Louisiana History: The Journal of the Louisiana Historical Association . Winter 1964 . 5 . 1 . 5–27.
    7. Vandal (1978), p. 225.
    8. Book: Bell. Caryn Cossé. Revolution, Romanticism, and the Afro-Creole Protest Culture in Louisiana 1718–1868. 1997. LSU Press. Baton Rouge, La.. 262.
    9. Kendall (1992), p. 305.
    10. Web site: 300 unique New Orleans moments: Mechanics Institute the center of 1866 riot 300 for 300 nola.com . 2023-07-21 . www.nola.com.
    11. Kendall (1992), p. 308.
    12. Web site: Report of the Select committee on the New Orleans Riots. . 2023-07-21 . Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. 20540 USA . 45.
    13. Bell (1997), p. 261.
    14. Kendall (1992), p. 312.
    15. News: 1866-08-17 . N.O. Picayune . 2 . The Weekly Intelligencer . 2023-07-22.
    16. News: Times . Special Dispatches to the New-York . 1866-07-31 . GREAT RIOT; Anarchy and Bloodshed in New-Orleans. . en-US . The New York Times . 2023-07-22 . 0362-4331.
    17. Web site: McEvoy . Bill . 2023-05-24 . Civil War Clergy at Mount Auburn Cemetery: Jotham Horton . 2023-07-21 . Watertown News . Watertown, Mass. . en-US.
    18. Radcliff (2009), pp. 12–16.
    19. Web site: Johnson. Andrew. Veto for the first Reconstruction Act March 2, 1867 To the house of Representatives. American History: From Revolution to Reconstruction and beyond.... University of Groningen. 18 December 2016.
    20. Web site: Bradley. Mark. The Army and Reconstruction, 1865–1877. U.S. Army Center of Military History. United States Army. 14 October 2023.
    21. Web site: Item 003 .
    22. Web site: Impeachment . Newspapers.com . Perrysburg Journal . 6 August 2022 . en . subscription . October 26, 1866.
    23. Web site: The Proposed Impeachment . Newspapers.com . The Evening Telegraph (Philadelphia) . 5 March 2021 . en . subscription . 1 Dec 1866.
    24. Web site: Hinds . Asher C. . HINDS' PRECEDENTS OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE UNITED STATES INCLUDING REFERENCES TO PROVISIONS OF THE CONSTITUTION, THE LAWS, AND DECISIONS OF THE UNITED STATES SENATE . United States Congress . 2 March 2021 . 830 . 4 March 1907.
    25. Web site: The Case for Impeachment, December 1867 US House of Representatives: History, Art & Archives . history.house.gov . United States House of Representatives . 2 March 2021 . en.
    26. Web site: Congressional Research Service. Congressional Resolutions on Presidential Impeachment: A Historical Overview. Stephen W. Stathis and David C. Huckabee. December 31, 2019 . University of North Texas Libraries, Digital Library, UNT Libraries Government Documents Department.