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The
Horror of the East St. Louis Massacre The
horror of the East St. Louis massacre of July 2,1917 is told in the
eyewitness accounts of over fifty people interviewed by Mrs. Ida B.
Wells-Barnett and the eyewitness accounts of white news reporters.
What follows is a brief synopsis of a report entitled "History
of the East St. Louis, Illinois, Riot" written by Mrs. Ida B.
Wells-Barnett. This
report was held under seal by the U.S. Government as
"classified information" and the U.S. Government did not
de-classify this report until 1986. The first three stories were
told to Mrs. Wells-Barnett as she traveled back and forth from East
St. Louis to St. Louis. Taking women with trunks of their wearing
apparel, which they were able to salvage from their ransacked and
burned out homes in East St. Louis, Illinois. Mrs. Emma Ballard
said, men and boys were in the street hollering "come out,
n_____s" as they roamed up and down in the African American
district. They shot and beat every African American found on the
streets Monday night. She saw fourteen men beaten and two killed. Mrs.
Mary Howard said, that during the riot a young fellow whom she had
sent to the grocery to get a chicken, was knocked off his wheel by
the mob. Then the mob took his wheel and struck him on the side of
his head with a brick and knocked a hole in it. His name was Jimmie
Eckford, eighteen years old and he roomed at her house. He ran into
the nearest yard which happened to be that of white people. When the
mob said they would burn this house down if they didn't make Mr.
Eckford come out, the tenants picked him up and threw him out in the
street to the mob. Where
he was kicked and stamped on and beaten till they knocked his teeth
from his head and killed him. The street cars ran right along in
front of Mrs. Howard's house, and she saw white women stop the
street cars and pull African American women off and beat them. One
woman's clothes they tore off entirely, and then took off their
shoes and beat her over the face and head with their shoe heels.
Another woman who got away, ran down the street, with every stitch
of clothes torn off her back, leaving her with only her shoes and
stocking on. Mrs. Howard saw two men beaten to death. She
had escaped all excepting having rocks thrown at the house, until
this solider humiliated her by coming into her house and arresting
her and the other women there, because they couldn't find any guns
concealed. In the Chicago Herald, July 4,1917, a white reporter
wrote that the National Guards were lax and cruelly good-natured. In
one instance a corpulent African American woman brought up
the rear of procession and for several blocks a white boy,
one of the gang of stone-throwing mischief-makers, who followed
every squad, was beating her with an iron bar at intervals of a few
yards. She
did not dare to protest or to resist. She was even too frightened to
scream. At last a white man, probably a nonresident of East St.
Louis, called the attention of a guardsman to the outrage, and he
laughingly drove the boy off. The square block from Broadway and
Eighth streets was burned to an ash heap. On that corner stood an
African American commercial building containing a grocery and barber
shop. The vanguard of the rioters invaded these stores and found an
African American crouching timorously in each. The
armed invaders drove the two African Americans out through the back
doors and there they were shot down and left to be burned alive. The
shots were fired from militia rifles by khaki-uniformed men. Dozens
of men who saw it done today loudly proclaimed it so, slapped their
thighs and said the Illinois National Guard was alright. Another
white newspaper said, boys 13,14,15 and 16 were in the forefront of
every felonious butchery. Girls and women, wielding bloody knives
and clawing at the eyes of dying victims, sprang from the ranks of
the mad thousands. Another eyewitness, Mr. Carlos F. Hurd of St.
Louis, Mo., a white staff reporter, wrote and published a part of
what he saw in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch on July 3, 1917. For
an hour and a half on July 2,1917, Mr. Hurd saw the massacre of
helpless African Americans at Broadway and Fourth street, in
downtown East St. Louis, where a black skin was a death warrant. Mr.
Hurd saw man after man, with hands raised, pleading for his life,
surrounded by groups of men; men who had never seen him before and
knew nothing about him except that he was African American; and saw
them administer the historic sentence of intolerance, death by
stoning. Mr.
Hurd saw one of these men, almost dead from a savage shower of
stones, hanged with a clothes line, and when it broke, hanged with a
rope which held. Within a few spaces of the pole from which he was
suspended, four other African Americans lay dead or dying, another
had been removed dead, a short time before. Mr. Hurd saw the pockets
of two of these African Americans searched, without the finding of
any weapon. Mr. Hurd saw one of these men, covered with blood and
half conscious, raise himself on his elbow, and look feebly about,
when a young man, standing directly behind, lifted a flat stone and
hurled it directly upon his neck. This young man was much better
dressed than most of the others. He walked away unmolested. Mr.
Hurd saw African American women begging for mercy and pleading that
they had harmed no one, set upon by white women of the baser sort,
who laughed and answered the cource sallies of men as they beat the
women faces and breasts with fists, stones and sticks. "Get a
n____r," was the slogan, and it was varied by the recurrent
cry, "Get another." It was nothing so much as the holiday
crowd, with thumbs turned down, in the Roman Coliseum, except that
here the shouters were their own gladiators, and their own wild
beasts. The
sheds in the rear of African American houses, which were themselves
in the rear of the main buildings on Fourth Street, had been ignited
to drive out the African American occupants of the houses. And the
slayers were waiting for them to come out. It was stay in and be
roasted, or come out and be slaughtered. A moment
before Mr. Hurd arrived, one African American had taken the
desperate chance of coming out and the rattle of revolver shots,
which Mr. Hurd heard as he approached the corner, was followed by
the cry, "they've got him," and they had. He laid on the
pavement, a bullet wound in his head and his skull bare in two
places. At every movement of pain which showed that life still
remained, there came a terrific kick in the jaw or the nose, or a
crashing stone, from some of the
men who stood over him. At
the corner, a few steps away, were a Sergeant and several guard men,
the Sergeant approached the ring of men around the prostrate African
American. "This man is done for," he said. "You're
better get him away
from here." No one made a move to lift the blood-covered form,
and the Sergeant walked away, remarking, when Mr. Hurd questioned
him about an ambulance, he said, "that the ambulances had quit
coming." However, an undertaker's ambulance did come 15 minutes
later, and took away the lifeless African American, who had in the
meantime been further kicked and stoned. The
mob then turned to see a lynching. An African American who had his
head laid open by a great stone-cut had been dragged to the mouth of
the alley on Fourth Street and a small rope was being tied about his
neck. It broke when it was pulled over a projecting cable, letting
the African American fall. A stouter rope was secured. Right there
Mr. Hurd his most sickening sight of the evening. To put the rope
around the African American's neck, one of the lynch men stuck his
fingers inside the gaping scalp and lifted the African American's
head by it. "Get hold and pull for East St. Louis," called
a man with a black coat and a new straw hat on as he seized the
other end of the rope, and lifted the body seven feet from the
ground, and left it hanging there. A
mob of white men formed and burned all the African American houses
on Bond Avenue between Tenth and Twelfth Streets, 43 houses being
destroyed. In the fire zone at Sixth and Broadway two African
Americans are reported to have burned to death. At Fifth and
Railroad, another death by fire was reported. One of the
mid-afternoon killings was at 4 o'clock, at Broadway and Main
Street. An African American was shot down. One
of those firing on him being a boy in short trousers. The driver of
the first ambulance that came was not permitted to remove this body,
and it layed for an hour beside the street car tracks seen by the
passengers in every passing car. At 9:30 that morning an African
American still living, but in critical condition, was found in a
sewer manhole at Sixth Street and Broadway. He was beaten by the mob
with paving bricks 13 hours before and thrown in. The two-year old
African American child who was killed was the daughter of William
Forest of 1118 Division Ave.. A
bullet fired into the house entered the body near the heart. The
following stories were told to Mrs. Ida B. Wells-Barnett after she
met with Illinois Governor Lowden on July 9,1917. He told her to
return to St. Louis to get him the names of people who would
testify. John Avant said, he worked at the C.B.&Q.. He was with
about twenty-five other African Americans who got off of work on
Tuesday mourning. They were sitting or standing around the
restaurant where they usually ate, when six soldiers and four or
five policemen came upon them suddenly and shot into the crowd,
wounding six. One of the number has since died. They
also were searched and even had their pocket knives taken from them.
One of the shots fired took off an arm of a woman who was working in
this restaurant. One of the half dozen men standing around, told
Mrs. Well-Barnett that he saw a woman and two children killed, also
her husband. That they were going across the bridge and the mob
seized the baby out of her arms and threw it into the river. Frank
Brown said, he saw a man hit an African American with a piece of
iron and shoot him four times in the stomach. Mrs.
Mary Lewis said, she saw the mob kill a man a few doors away. The
mob had broken windows in her house and set it on fire, shooting
into it. Her sister was in the house, but escaped, being shot, and
was badly stoned. Her husband, though shot, got up and ran about 40
feet before they finished him. William Lues, an employee of the
Wabash R.R.CO., was on his way home from work, sitting between his
employer and his employer's son in the street car, when the mob
grabbed him, shot him to pieces and then put a rope around his neck
and dragged him in the streets. James
Taylor said, the mob started at 2:30. At 4:15 they hanged two
African Americans who were coming from work, to a telegraph pole and
shot them to pieces. He saw them rush to cars and pull women off and
beat them to death, and before they were quite dead. Stalwart men
jumped on their stomachs and finished them by trampling them to
death. This was at the corner of Broadway and Collinville. The cars
were crowded and moving, yet they jumped on and pulled them off. Others
they stuck to death with hat pins, sometimes picking out their eyes
with them before they were quite dead. An old African American woman
between 70 and 80 years old who had returned to her house to get
some things, was struck almost to death by women, then men stamped
her to death. An African American store keeper at Eighth and
Broadway with his family was shot and wounded. The store was set on
fire and they burned to death. George Launders and Robert Mosely
were burned to death at the Library Flats at Eighth and Walnut. African
American men had their fingers cut off by the mob and their heads
split open with axes. Will Morgan, employed at the B.&O.
Roundhouse, saw the mob make the African Americans swim into the
Cahokia River, then shoot them, one being killed instantly. The
others managed to struggle back to shore, only to be stoned to death
by children. Mr. Buchanan said, he saw them beat men down with
revolvers and clubs; white men knocked African American women down,
and then the white women would finish by beating them to death or
nearly so. Every
African American man that he saw get out of Black Valley alive, the
soldiers would march them to the police station, badly beaten though
they were, and scarcely able to walk, with their hands raised in
front of them and afraid to turn their heads. The mob threw bricks
at their heads and bodies, because the soldiers had their bayonets
pointed at either side of them. They did the women the same way,
excepting their hands were not raised in front of them. They
were dodging around the soldiers to keep the mob from hitting them
with bricks, stones and sticks. Their clothing badly torn. An
Associated Press dispatch of July 10,1917, from East St. Louis had
the following: "A man arrested by Capt. O.C. Smith, F Company,
police, ostensibly "on order of the state's attorney."
Captain Smith asserted that he heard the man say," I've killed
my share of Negroes today. I have killed so many I am tired and
somebody else can finish them." When Capt. Smith went to the police station yesterday to prefer a formal charge he found that the prisoner had been released." This was just a small part of the horror of the racial massacre which occurred on July 2,1917 in East St. Louis, Illinois. It's estimated that from 40 to 150 African Americans were killed and that 6,000 African Americans were driven from their homes, that were indiscriminately burned. All the impartial witnesses agree that the police were indifferent or encouraged the barbarities, and that the major part of the Illinois National Guard was indifferent or inactive. No organized effort was made to protect the African Americans or disperse the murdering groups. |