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HR1477 |
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LRB095 22133 KXB 52422 r |
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| HOUSE RESOLUTION
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| WHEREAS, One hundred years ago, Springfield, Illinois was |
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| familiar to people as the home of the 16th president, Abraham |
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| Lincoln; but on August 14, 1908, the city would enter the |
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| history books as the home of a terrible race riot; and
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| WHEREAS, According to a May 31, 2008 article in the State |
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| Journal-Register and other sources familiar with the events of |
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| the race riot, at the turn of the century racial tensions were |
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| high in the city because of the use of black workers as scabs |
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| labor during strikes; and
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| WHEREAS, On July 4, 1908, Clergy Ballard awoke to find a |
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| man standing near his daughter's bed; the intruder fled and |
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| Ballard gave chase; after catching up with the intruder, |
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| Ballard's throat was slashed with a straight razor; before he |
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| died, Ballard identified the assailant as Joe James, a black |
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| man with a long record of minor crimes; and
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| WHEREAS, White citizens of the town were enraged by the |
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| crime, thinking that the murder was the result of a thwarted |
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| sexual assault of a white woman by a black man; a crowd of |
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| whites caught James and beat him unconscious; the police |
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| rescued James, arrested him, and locked him in the city jail; |
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| and |
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LRB095 22133 KXB 52422 r |
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| WHEREAS, On Friday, August 14 of that same year, the local |
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| newspaper ran the story of a white woman, Mabel Hallam, who had |
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| allegedly been raped by a local black man, George Richardson; |
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| Hallam, the 21-year-old wife of a well-known streetcar |
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| conductor, claimed that the black caretaker had dragged her out |
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| of bed and assaulted her the night before; police arrested |
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| Richardson and took him to the city jail; and
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| WHEREAS, That evening, a crowd of white citizens gathered |
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| in downtown Springfield, outraged by the fact that two black |
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| men had allegedly committed brutal crimes against white |
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| townspeople; the crowd demanded the release of the prisoners, |
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| but Sheriff Charles Werner was able to remove the two from jail |
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| and transport them to safety in nearby Bloomington, with the |
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| help of restaurant owner Harry Loper; when the crowd learned |
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| that Loper had aided in the transport of the two black men, |
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| they walked to his restaurant, trashed the building, and |
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| torched his expensive automobile; and
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| WHEREAS, Later that evening, Governor Charles S. Deneen |
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| activated the State militia; the crowd directed their anger |
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| toward the rest of Springfield's minorities; they proceeded to |
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| Fishman's Hardware, owned by a Jewish businessman, and stole |
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| weapons to use in the further destruction of homes and |
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| businesses; then the mob moved on the Levee, a predominantly |
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LRB095 22133 KXB 52422 r |
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| African-American area, and destroyed numerous black-owned |
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| businesses; as the crowd moved on towards the Badlands, another |
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| black neighborhood, they encountered a black barber named Scott |
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| Burton, who attempted to defend his business with a warning |
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| shot from a shotgun; he was killed when the crowd returned |
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| fire, his shop was burned, and his body was hung from a tree; |
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| and
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| WHEREAS, The mob then burned black-owned homes in the |
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| Badlands; an estimated 12,000 people had gathered to watch the |
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| houses burn; when firefighters arrived, people in the crowd |
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| impeded their progress and cut their hoses; African American |
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| citizens were forced to flee the town, find refuge with |
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| sympathetic whites, or hide in the State Arsenal; the National |
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| Guard was finally able to disperse the crowd late that night; |
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| and
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| WHEREAS, Saturday, August 15 saw 5,000 National Guard |
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| troops sent to the city to keep the peace, along with curiosity |
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| seekers and tourists who had read about the riots in the |
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| newspaper; the peace was soon broken, however, when a new mob |
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| formed and began marching toward the State Arsenal, where many |
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| black residents were being housed; when confronted by the |
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| National Guard, the crowd changed direction and instead walked |
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| to the home of 84-year-old black resident William Donnegan; |
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| although he had committed no crime, Donnegan was married to a |
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LRB095 22133 KXB 52422 r |
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| white woman; when he came outside, the mob captured him, cut |
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| his throat, and lynched him in a tree in the schoolyard across |
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| the street from his home; and |
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| WHEREAS, The riots ended, leaving 40 homes and 24 |
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| businesses in ruins, and seven people confirmed dead; a grand |
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| jury brought 107 indictments against individuals who had |
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| allegedly participated in the riots, but only one man was |
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| convicted; Mabel Hallam later admitted that her accusation of |
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| rape against George Richardson was false, and Richardson was |
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| released from jail; Joe James was convicted of the murder of |
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| Clergy Ballard and was hanged in the Sangamon County Jail on |
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| October 23, 1908; as a direct result of the Springfield Race |
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| Riot, a meeting was held in New York City to discuss solutions |
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| to racial problems, leading to the formation of the National |
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| Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP); |
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| therefore, be it
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| RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE |
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| NINETY-FIFTH GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that we |
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| recognize this sad chapter in history and realize that from the |
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| aftermath comes insight and education, helping us to better |
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| deal with racial issues; and be it further
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| RESOLVED, That a suitable copy of this resolution be |
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| presented to the Springfield Chapter of the NAACP as a symbol |