Little known black history: Sharecropper massacre in Elaine, AR

PliggaNease

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
The Massacre of Black Sharecroppers That Led the Supreme Court to Curb the Racial Disparities of the Justice System

White Arkansans, fearful of what would happen if African-Americans organized, took violent action, but it was the victims who ended up standing trial

Read more: https://www.smithsonianmag.com/hist...ican-americans-180969863/#y44OpsGPGqmh81Sk.99

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The sharecroppers who gathered at a small church in Elaine, Arkansas, in the late hours of September 30, 1919, knew the risk they were taking. Upset about unfair low wages, they enlisted the help of a prominent white attorney from Little Rock, Ulysses Bratton, to come to Elaine to press for a fairer share in the profits of their labor. Each season, landowners came around demanding obscene percentages of the profits, without ever presenting the sharecroppers detailed accounting and trapping them with supposed debts.


“There was very little recourse for African-American tenant farmers against this exploitation; instead there was an unwritten law that no African-American could leave until his or her debt was paid off,” writes Megan Ming Francis in Civil Rights and the Making of the Modern American State. Organizers hoped Bratton’s presence would bring more pressure to bear through the courts. Aware of the dangers – the atmosphere was tense after racially motivated violence in the area – some of the farmers were armed with rifles.

At around 11 p.m. that night, a group of local white men, some of whom may have been affiliated with local law enforcement, fired shots into the church. The shots were returned, and in the chaos, one white man was killed. Word spread rapidly about the death. Rumors arose that the sharecroppers, who had formally joined a union known as the Progressive Farmers and Household Union of America (PFHUA) were leading an organized “insurrection” against the white residents of Phillips County.

Governor Charles Brough called for 500 soldiers from nearby Camp Pike to, as the Arkansas Democrat reported on Oct 2, “round up” the “heavily armed negroes.” The troops were “under order to shoot to kill any negro who refused to surrender immediately.” They went well beyond that, banding together with local vigilantes and killing at least 200 African-Americans (estimates run much higher but there was never a full accounting). And the killing was indiscriminate—men, women and children unfortunate enough to be in the vicinity were slaughtered. Amidst the violence, five whites died, but for those deaths, someone would have to be held accountable.


Out of this tragedy, known as the Elaine massacre, and its subsequent prosecution, would come a Supreme Court decision that would upend years of court-sanctioned injustice against African-Americans and would secure the right of due process for defendants placed in impossible circumstances.

Despite its impact, little about the carnage in Elaine was unique during the summer of 1919. It was part of a period of vicious reprisals against African-American veterans returning home from World War I. Many whites believed that these veterans (including Robert Hill, who co-founded PFHUA) posed a threat as they claimed greater recognition for their rights at home. Even though they served in large numbers, black soldiers “realized over the course of the war and in the immediate aftermath that their achievement and their success actually provoked more rage and more vitriol than if they had utterly failed,” says Adriane Lentz-Smith, associate professor of history at Duke University and author of Freedom Struggles: African Americans and World War I.



During the massacre, Arkansan Leroy Johnston, who had had spent nine months recovering in a hospital from injuries he suffered in the trenches of France – was pulled from a train shortly after returning home and was shot to death alongside his three brothers. In places like Phillips County, where the economy directly depended on the predatory system of sharecropping, white residents were inclined to view the activities of Hill and others as the latest in a series of dangerous agitations.

In the days after the bloodshed in Elaine, local media coverage continued to fan the flames daily, reporting sensational stories of an organized plot against whites. A seven-man committee formed to investigate the killings. Their conclusions all too predictable: the following week they issued a statement in the Arkansas Democrat declaring the gathering in Elaine a “deliberately planned insurrection if the negroes against the whites” led by the PFHUA, whose founders used “ignorance and superstition of a race of children for monetary gains.”

The paper claimed every individual who joined was under the understanding that “ultimately he would be called upon to kill white people.” A week later, they would congratulate themselves on the whole episode and their ability to restore order confidently claiming that not one slain African-American was innocent. “The real secret of Phillips county’s success…” the newspaper boasted, is that “the Southerner knows the negro through several generations of experience.”

To counter this accepted narrative, Walter White, a member of the NAACP whose appearance enabled him to blend in with white residents, snuck into Phillips County by posing as a reporter. In subsequent articles, he claimed that “careful examination…does not reveal the ‘dastardly’ plot which has been charged” and that indeed the PFHUA had no designs on an uprising. He pointed out that the disparity in death toll alone belied the accepted version of events. With African-Americans making up a significant majority of local residents, “it appears that the fatalities would have been differently proportioned if a well-planned murder plot had existed among the Negroes,” he wrote in The Nation. The NAACP also pointed out in their publication The Crisis that in the prevailing climate of unchecked lynchings and mob violence against African-Americans, “none would be fool enough” to do so. The black press picked up the story and other papers began to integrate White’s counter-narrative into their accounts, galvanizing support for the defendants.



The courts were another matter altogether. Dozens of African-Americans became defendants in hastily convened murder trials that used incriminating testimony coerced through torture, and 12 men were sentenced to death. Jury deliberations lasted just moments. The verdicts were a foregone conclusion – it was clear that had they not been slated for execution by the court, they mob would have done so even sooner.

“You had 12 black men who were clearly charged with murder in a system that was absolutely corrupt at the time – you had mob influence, you had witness tampering, you had a jury that was all-white, you had almost certainly judicial bias, you had the pressure of knowing that if you were a juror in this case that you would almost certainly not be able to live in that town...if you decided anything other than a conviction,” says Michael Curry, an attorney and chair of the NAACP Advocacy and Policy Committee. No white residents were tried for any crime.

The outcome, at least initially, echoed an unyielding trend demonstrated by many a mob lynching: for African-American defendants, accusation and conviction were interchangeable.

Nonetheless, the NAACP launched a series of appeals and challenges that would inch their way through Arkansas state courts and then federal courts for the next three years, an arduous series of hard-fought victories and discouraging setbacks that echoed previous attempts at legal redress for black citizens. “It’s a learning process for the NAACP,” says Lentz-Smith. “[There is] a sense of how to do it and who to draw on and what sort of arguments to make.” The cases of six of the men would be sent for retrial over a technicality, while the other six defendants – including named plaintiff Frank Moore – had their cases argued before the United States Supreme Court. The NAACP’s legal strategy hinged on the claim that the defendants’ 14th Amendment right to due process had been violated.

In February 1923, by a 6-2 margin, the Court agreed. Citing the all-white jury, lack of opportunity to testify, confessions under torture, denial of change of venue and the pressure of the mob, Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes wrote for the majority that “if the case is that the whole proceeding is a mask – that counsel, jury and judge were swept to the fatal end by an irresistible wave of public passion,” then it was the duty of the Supreme Court to intervene as guarantor of the petitioners’ constitutional rights where the state of Arkansas had failed.

The verdict marked a drastic departure from the Court’s longstanding hands-off approach to the injustices happening in places like Elaine. “This was a seismic shift in how our Supreme Court was recognizing the rights of African-Americans,” says Curry. After a long history of having little recourse in courts, Moore vs. Dempsey (the defendant was the keeper of the Arkansas State Penitentiary) preceded further legal gains where federal courts would weigh in on high-profile due process cases involving black defendants, including Powell vs. Alabama in 1932, which addressed all-white juries, and Brown vs. Mississippi in 1936, which ruled on confessions extracted under torture.

Moore vs. Dempsey provided momentum for early civil rights lawyers and paved the way for later victories in the ’50s and ’60s. According to Lentz, “when we narrate the black freedom struggle in the 20th century, we actually need to shift our timeline and the pins we put on the timeline for the moments of significant breakthrough and accomplishments.” Despite Moore vs. Dempsey being relatively obscure, “if the U.S. civil rights movement is understood as an effort to secure the full social, political, and legal rights of citizenship, then 1923 marks a significant event,” writes Francis.


The ruling also carried broad-ranging implications for all citizens in terms of federal intervention in contested criminal cases. “The recognition that the state had violated the procedural due process, and the federal courts actually weighing in on that was huge,” says Curry. “There was a deference that was being paid to state criminal proceedings, then this sort of broke that protection that existed for states.”

The sharecroppers that had gathered in Elaine had a simple goal: to secure a share in the profits gained from their work. But the series of injustices the events of that night unleashed would - through several years of tenacious effort - end up before the nation’s highest court and show that the longstanding tradition of declaring African-Americans guilty absent constitutional guarantees would no longer go unchallenged.
 

Mrfreddygoodbud

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
murdered two hundred people men women and CHILDREN and got away with it, and shit like this aint even the tip of the iceberg....

this happend after many of our people just got back from defending this country in a world war....

we are not dealing with men, we are dealing with soulless savages...

there is no other explanation
 

ORIGINAL NATION

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
I noticed that these were some of our darker brothers and sisters. As time goes by we have to change more and more to become like them. They do not beat, or lynch us like they use to because we have become so much like them but time can repeat itself. We have been unknowingly helping the enemy for far to long. It seems like the only time we could use violence was to defend white power and still doing the same today. I do not believe in violence but how is it that so much violence can be used to defend what whites represent but we cannot use violence to defend ourselves. And how in the hell do the most violent and murderous people on the face of the earth is always trying to teach us about love and always make it seem as though they are the leaders in love and humanity.
I am going to try to read the whole article later but I have constant headaches and back aches. And it has made a lot of things hard for me to do that I use to do.
 

BigATLslim

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
What I have learned about Africans in america history: if it's cruel, and you have a hreat imaginatuon, they did it to us and that makes me mpre determined to teach our own that becoming to friendly can bring an untimely demise
 

bgbtylvr

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
....but, we're supposed to shut up and forget.

We did and we have. Speak with our dollars. We don’t though. Chinese whooping black Women asses and they still go back for nails and weave. As a man you check her on that! But you wanna smash so....

NFL owners saying fuck yo struggle, and we still go. Said it many a times, lot of you kneegrows will be wearing nfl gear and sitting in the stands, making your oppressors even richer “Maaaaan, shiiiiiiiiit, I gots ta have me some football man.” Shots ring out, black kid dies in the street, a momma cries, cops gets off plus backpay, and you in line to give Jerry Jones and Phuk Yo Hood all your paycheck. So we haven’t forgotten, we don’t care. We would rather be entertained than enlightened. Fags and Jews running away with the bag, we sitting around “IMO give the NFL $400 this weekend, and pay$35 to park and $44 for two chicken fingers and a beer, but that’s wroooong how they did Kaepernick. Them players need to do something!” (LMAO)

No need to mad at the past when you’re ignoring the present. Won’t vote. Skip jury duty. Ride for Cosby and RKelly, and black owned businesses charge too much. $40 to park at the stadium where they hate you, talk down a black on his prices and go shop with the foreigners.
 

ballscout1

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
I often sit here and wonder if we as a people would be better off if we actually were educated .

We complain about being told to get over it but we retain nothing and then pretend we never knew.

I posted this starting back in 2013 or 2012..

http://www.bgol.us/forum/index.php?...in-elaine-race-riot-lynching-massacre.875992/

http://www.bgol.us/forum/index.php?threads/elaine-race-massacre.821953/

http://www.bgol.us/forum/index.php?...9-hundreds-of-blacks-killed-by-whites.788227/

http://www.bgol.us/forum/index.php?posts/11618321/

https://www.bgol.us/forum/threads/when-the-democrats-were-the-party-of-hate.998920/#post-18904599

https://www.bgol.us/forum/threads/r...9-the-elaine-race-riots.916295/#post-17015418

And here we are again with it being new.

Damn crakkas don't teach this in school :rolleyes2:
 

DaSupremeWun

Music Producer/Writer
BGOL Investor
Thanks for the drop, i never knew about this. This type of shit gets my blood boiling. It's a reminder of how much of a coward that these insecure pussy ass cacs really are. But ...but racism don't exist. We should get over it...
 

dbluesun

Rising Star
Platinum Member
thanks never heard of this,but there is a lot that we aren't aware of
new modes of doing for the next rip needed
 

trstar

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
I often sit here and wonder if we as a people would be better off if we actually were educated .

We complain about being told to get over it but we retain nothing and then pretend we never knew.

I posted this starting back in 2013 or 2012..

http://www.bgol.us/forum/index.php?...in-elaine-race-riot-lynching-massacre.875992/

http://www.bgol.us/forum/index.php?threads/elaine-race-massacre.821953/

http://www.bgol.us/forum/index.php?...9-hundreds-of-blacks-killed-by-whites.788227/

http://www.bgol.us/forum/index.php?posts/11618321/

https://www.bgol.us/forum/threads/when-the-democrats-were-the-party-of-hate.998920/#post-18904599

https://www.bgol.us/forum/threads/r...9-the-elaine-race-riots.916295/#post-17015418

And here we are again with it being new.

Damn crakkas don't teach this in school :rolleyes2:
Appreciate the knowledge drop.

Some posts unfortunately get overlooked
 
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