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February 24, 2005, Reason.com
Brothers In Arms:
How civil rights flowed from a rifle barrel
Dave Kopel

This is the second part of Dave Kopel's report on gun control and
race in America. The
first article looked at the history of gun laws during the post-Civil
War period.
Do minorities have a moral right—and even a moral duty—to resist mob
violence? The history of black people in America over the past century
suggests that doing so may be necessary in order to protect civil rights.
During the Jim Crow era of the late 19th and early 20th century, blacks
often offered only minimal resistance to white rioters, who were often
abetted by law enforcement officials. For example, In the
Wilmington, North Carolina riot of 1898, a mob destroyed a black
newspaper after taking offense at a newspaper opinion. Armed whites
fatally shot 12 blacks. The leader of the mob was elected mayor.
In
August 1900 in New York City, police joined an anti-black riot, often
behaving more brutally than other rioters. The mayor, the police
commissioner, and the courts covered up the officers' crimes.
The rioters in the extremely destructive
East St. Louis riot of 1917 were assisted by the police and by the
Illinois state militia. As historian Robert Fogelson recounts in his book
Violence as Protest, the white rioters:
burned houses and, with a deliberation which shocked reporters, shot
black residents as they fled the flames. They killed them as they begged
for mercy and even refused to allow them to brush away flies as they lay
dying. The blacks, disarmed by the police and the militia after an
earlier riot and defenseless in their wooden shanties, offered little
resistance.
Still, the Missouri legislature thought blacks a threat, and enacted a
law requiring a permit to obtain a handgun.
In the
Washington, D.C., riots of 1919, policemen refused to protect blacks
from rampaging soldiers and sailors. After the rioters had been allowed
several days without restraint, federal troops were finally called in
suppress the riot.
When whites and blacks rioted against each other in Detroit in 1943,
the police tried to "reason" with the white rioters (to little effect) and
killed 17 black rioters. A report by the NAACP blamed the riot on the
Detroit police's over-escalation of violence.
A 1947 report by the
President's
Committee on Civil Rights, assessing the contemporary problem of
lynching, found that "Frequently state officials participate in the crime,
actively or passively."
Black leaders such as
W.E.B. DuBois,
editor of the NAACP magazine Crisis, insisted that blacks stop
behaving like helpless victims. He wrote with disgust about black people
in Gainesville, Florida, who had acted "like a set of cowardly sheep":
Without resistance they let a white mob whom they outnumbered two to
one, torture, harry and murder their women [and] shoot down innocent
men…
No people can behave with the absolute cowardice shown by these
colored people and hope to have the sympathy or help of civilized folk…
In the last analysis lynching of Negroes is going to stop in the
South when the cowardly mob is faced by effective guns in the hands of
people determined to sell their souls dearly.
A. Philip
Randolph, editor of the socialist black magazine Messenger,
agreed: "Always regard your own life as more important than the life of
the person about to take yours, and if a choice has to be made...choose to
preserve your own and destroy that of the lynching mob."
At a protest meeting held at Carnegie Hall after the New York City
riot, one of the speakers, "Miss M.R. Lyons of Brooklyn," told the
audience:
Let every negro get a permit to carry a revolver. You are not supposed
to be a walking arsenal, but don't you get caught again. Have your
houses made ready to afford protection from the fury of the mob, and
remembering that your home is your castle and that no police officer has
a right to enter it, unless he complies with the usage of the law; see
that he does not.
Sometimes, as in Memphis, the mere presence of armed blacks constrained
white police or mob behavior. In other cases, armed blacks were partially
successful; during the 1906 Atlanta riots, according to historian John
Dittmer's
Black Georgia in the Progressive Era, although blacks "were
unable to offer effective resistance when trapped downtown or caught in
white sections of the city, they did fight back successfully when the mobs
invaded their neighborhoods."
Other times, resistance produced heavy bloodshed on both sides. In July
1919, a black who had floated into "white" water near a Lake Michigan
beach in Chicago was killed. Whites rioted, blacks fought back with
rifles, and the police stood aside. Twenty-three blacks and 15 whites were
killed in a week of rioting.
Michigan's law requiring a government permit in order to buy a handgun
was enacted after
Dr. Ossian Sweet, a black man, shot and killed a person in a mob that
was attacking his house because he had just moved into an all-white
neighborhood. The Detroit police stood nearby, refusing to restrain the
angry crowd.
Indicted for first degree murder, Sweet was acquitted after a lengthy
trial at which Clarence Darrow served as his attorney. Black newspapers
such as the Amsterdam News and the Baltimore Herald
vigorously defended blacks' right to use deadly force in self-defense
against a mob.
Darrow
summed up for the jury: "eleven of them go into a house, gentlemen,
with no police protection, in the face of a mob, and the hatred of a
community, and take guns and ammunition and fight for their rights, and
for your rights and for mine, and for the rights of every being that
lives. They went in and faced a mob seeking to tear them to bits. Call
them something besides cowards."
In Tulsa during and after World War I, the police worked closely with
the "Knights of Liberty," a group which wore masks and attacked blacks and
union organizers. In the
1921 Tulsa riots,
armed blacks protected an alleged black rapist from a lynch mob. A small
white army, led by the American Legion and with the approval of the police
and city government burned a one-mile square black district to the ground.
As many as 200 blacks died, but about 50 whites also lost their lives in
the riot.
The eminent historian
John Hope
Franklin wrote: "The self-confidence of Tulsa's Negroes soared, their
businesses prospered, their institutions flourished, and they simply had
no fear of whites...After 1921, an altercation between a white person and
a black person was not a racial incident...It was just an
incident."
After the Tulsa Riots, Herbert H. Harrison, the president of the
Liberal League of Negro America, told a New York audience that more white
riots were possible soon:
I advise you to be ready to defend yourselves. I notice the State
Government has removed some of its restrictions upon owning firearms,
and one form of life insurance for your wives and children might be the
possession of some of these handy implements.
In 1936 in Gordonsville, Virginia, an elderly black man and his sister,
William and Cora Wales, shot a sheriff who had come to arrest Mr. Wales on
false charges of threatening a white woman. The arrest was a pretext to
force the Waleses to sell their property to the town, for a cemetery
expansion. An enraged crowd of 5,000 grew outside the Wales's home.
Roy Wilkins, a
future head of the NAACP, reported what happened next:
There was a slight flaw in the set-up, however. The man and woman had
arms and they were not afraid to shoot…The leaders of the five
thousand…had numbers. They had machine guns. They had sulphur bombs.
They had tear gas bombs. But the two in the house had rifles, shotguns,
and perhaps a pistol or two. Not so good. Not half as good as one lone
Negro with nothing but his bare hands…
The mob sent a request that the United States Marine Corps send some
men from Quantico to take care of the Waleses. The Marines refused.
After night fell, the crowd threw a torch on the house, and shot the
Wales as they were silhouetted against the fire. After the fire had
cooled, souvenir hunters hacked the Waleses' bodies into tiny pieces.
Wilkins defended the Waleses for standing up to the system after a
lifetime of humiliating oppression.
In the 1950s and 1960s, a new civil rights movement began in the South.
White supremacist tactics were just as violent as they had been during
Reconstruction. Over 100 civil rights workers were murdered during that
era, and the Department of Justice refused to prosecute the Klan or to
protect civil rights workers adequately. Help from the local police was
out of the question; Klan dues were sometimes collected at the local
station.
Blacks and civil rights workers armed for self-defense.
Daisy Bates,
the leader of the Arkansas NAACP and publisher of the Arkansas State
Press during the Little Rock High School desegregation case, recalls
that three crosses were burned on her lawn and gunshots fired into her
home. Her husband, L. C. Bates, stayed up to guard their house with a .45
semi-automatic pistol. Some of their friends organized a volunteer patrol.
After the Bates's front lawn was bombed, Mrs. Bates telegrammed
Attorney General Herbert Brownell in Washington. He replied that there was
no federal jurisdiction, and told them to go to the local police. "Of
course that wasn't going to protect us," Mrs. Bates remembered.
State or federal assistance sometimes did come—not when disorder began,
but when blacks reacted by arming themselves. In North Carolina, Governor
Terry Sanford (who later served as an anti-gun U.S. Senator) refused to
command state police to protect a civil rights march from Klan
attacks—until he was warned that if there were no police, the marchers
would be armed for self-defense.
Based in local churches, the
Deacons for Defense and Justice set up armed patrol car systems in
cities such as Bogalusa and Jonesboro, Louisiana, and within their spheres
of operations succeeded in deterring Klan and other attacks on civil
rights workers and black residents. Of civil rights workers killed in the
South, almost none were armed.
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, a self-described
"Second
Amendment absolutist," grew up in segregated Birmingham, Alabama,
where her father, a Presbyterian minister, was a community leader in the
civil rights struggles. According to a Nov. 17, 2004, article in the
Montgomery Advertiser:
During the bombings of the summer of 1963, her father and other
neighborhood men guarded the streets at night to keep white vigilantes
at bay. Rice said her staunch defense of gun rights comes from those
days. She has argued that if the guns her father and neighbors carried
had been registered, they could have been confiscated by the
authorities, leaving the black community defenseless.
Reverend John Wesley Rice never crossed the dividing line between
self-defense and aggression. One man who did, though, was
Robert Williams, President of the Monroe, North Carolina, NAACP. In
the mid-1950s, Williams began leading demonstrations against the city's
whites-only policy at the city swimming pool. Ku Klux Klan death threats
came by telephone. Thousands of people gathered at Klan rallies to
denounce both Williams and Dr. Albert Perry, another Monroe civil rights
advocate. Williams responded by chartering an official NRA gun club, and
using it to teach black people how to defend themselves.
Civil rights volunteers, in groups of 50 a night, took turns standing
guard at Albert Perry's house. They dug foxholes, piled up sandbags, and
kept steel helmets and gas masks handy. They also stockpiled over 600
firearms.
On the night of October 5, 1957, a Klan motorcade approached the Perry
house. The civil rights workers opened fire, having been told not to shoot
unless necessary. As the writer Julian Mayfield recalled in James Forman's
book
The Making of Black Revolutionaries:
The fire was blistering, disciplined and frightening. The motorcade of
about eighty cars, which had begun in a spirit of good fellowship,
disintegrated into chaos, with panicky, robed men fleeing in every
direction. Some had to abandon their automobiles and continue on foot.
Two years later, Williams began to advocate more than mere resistance
to white attacks. On the steps of a courthouse, following trials in which
two white men were acquitted of allegedly attacking black women, Williams
called for black lynching of white criminals: "if it's necessary to stop
lynching with lynching, then we must be willing to resort to that method."
Williams was suspended from the NAACP. He appealed to the NAACP's
National Convention. The NAACP convention delegates upheld the suspension,
and adopted a Resolution observing that Williams "suggested violence as a
means of redress of wrongs and not in self-defense or rights of person and
property."
The Convention also adopted a Preamble to the Resolutions Committee
report, stating: "we do not deny but reaffirm the right of individual and
collective self-defense against unlawful assaults. The NAACP has
consistently over the years supported this right by defending those who
have exercised the right of self defense…"
Daisy Bates, the Little Rock civil rights leader whose family was armed
for self-defense with a Colt .45, spoke in favor of the suspension. The
resolution suspending Williams and the addition of the Preamble language
about self-defense were both adopted unanimously by the Convention.
However, the delegates were voting according to the "unit rule," whereby
the delegates from a given region would cast their votes in accordance
with the preference of the majority of the delegates within that region.
Press reports suggested that there had been 17 votes (out of 781) against
condemning Williams, although, pursuant to the unit rule, the official
tally was unanimous. There was no suggestion that any of the delegates had
voted against the self-defense language in the Preamble.
Also speaking in favor of the suspension resolution had been Rev.
Martin Luther King, Jr. King predicted that mass non-violent
actions—boycotts, marches, sit-ins, and the like—would liberate blacks,
and "retaliatory violence" would not. At the same time, King distinguished
Williams' call for lynchings from violence "exercised in self-defense."
King described the latter type of violence "as moral and legal" in all
societies, and noted that not even Gandhi condemned it.
The civil rights movement of the twentieth century is rightly
celebrated as one of the greatest victories of non-violent protest in
history. But avoiding aggressive violence does not mean submitting
passively to thugs and murderers. As even the most committed civil rights
advocates understood, self-defense is an essential human right; the
effect, and often the intent, of gun laws was to take that right away from
people who had no other protection. Civil rights triumphed thanks to
people who were willing to put themselves in harm's way—and defend
themselves while doing so.
Buy Brothers in
Arms
Some citations for items in this article
Detroit riot: Walter White & Thurgood Marshall, What Caused the
Detroit Riot? (N.Y.: NAACP, 1943). 1947 report: To Secure These
Rights (N.Y: Simon & Schuster, 1947).
DuBois: "Cowardice," Crisis, Oct. 1916.
Randolph: "How to Stop Lynching," Messenger, Aug. 1919.
Lyons: "Negroes’ Public Protest," N.Y. Times, Sept. 13, 1900.
Harrison: "New Yorkers Urged to Arm Themselves," Baltimore
Afro-American, June 10, 1921.
Wilkins: "Two Against 5,000," Crisis, June 1936.
NAACP 1959 Convention: Gloster B. Current, "Fiftieth Annual Convention,"
Crisis, Aug.-Sept. 1959;
Herbert Shapiro, White Violence and Black Response: From
Reconstruction to Montgomery, p. 461.
Dave Kopel is Research Director
of the Independence Institute. This article
is based on his book
The Samurai, the Mountie, and the Cowboy: Should America Adopt the Gun
Controls of Other Democracies? The book contains citations to numerous
secondary sources discussing the issues in this article. |