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The FReeper Foxhole Remembers The New York Draft Riots of 1863 (July 13-16, 1863) - Oct. 7th, 2004
www.mrlincolnandnewyork.org ^

Posted on 10/06/2004 11:07:07 PM PDT by SAMWolf



Lord,

Keep our Troops forever in Your care

Give them victory over the enemy...

Grant them a safe and swift return...

Bless those who mourn the lost.
.

FReepers from the Foxhole join in prayer
for all those serving their country at this time.


...................................................................................... ...........................................

U.S. Military History, Current Events and Veterans Issues

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The 1863 Draft Riots


The New York draft riots were "a macabre episode, a three-day orgy of violence which sickened Lincoln to read about," wrote biographer Stephen B. Oates. "New York, in its earlier history, stands preëminent among the cities of the country for the frequency and violence of her riots," wrote historian Daniel Van Pelt in Leslie's History of Greater New York. "But up to the year 1863 — with the Doctor's Mob of 788, the riots of 1834, 1835, 1837, 1849, and the 'Dead Rabbits' exploits of 1857, not to mention Mayor Wood's performances with his 'own' police in the same year, all garnishing the record — New York is not easily excelled. In 1863 she added to that record the worst, bloodiest, most destructive and brutal riot of all. It goes by the name of the 'Draft Riots.'"


Enrollment!
Recruiting poster for the southern division of New York
Baker & Godwin, NY June 23, 1863


The draft riots stemmed from many causes — not the least of which was the way that violence had been employed for political reasons in the past three decades. But the proximate cause was the fact that New York City — which had furnished too many soldiers to the Union Army at the beginning of the war now furnished too few. Because it was failing to meet its recruitment quotas, it had fallen subject to provisions of the Enrollment and Conscription Act passed by Congress on March 3, 1863. Conscription was to be employed when enrollment targets were not met by a community. "The draft needed to be applied to New York State and city sooner than anywhere else," wrote historian Daniel Van Pelt. "At the close of the year 1862, it was reported to the department that since July, 1862, New York State was short 28,517 in volunteers, of which 18,523 was to be charged to New York City. But for this very reason conscription was least likely to be welcomed here. The revulsion in sentiment had carried an anti-war Governor, Horatio Seymour, into office" in 1862.


Recruitment of Soldiers in New York City


Unlike his Republican predecessor, Edwin D. Morgan, Governor Seymour did not construe his job as trying to do everywhere possible to forward troops to the war front. Instead, he quibbled over the accuracy of the War Department statistics. According to Seymour biographer Stewart Mitchell, "Governor Seymour was a vigorous opponent of federal conscription, first and last. To begin with, he though the law was unnecessary — which it would have been if all the states had done as well at finding soldiers as New York. In the second place, he though the at evasive and dishonest — as indeed it was. Once it was a law, however, he publicly declared that it would never work and ought to be tested in the courts. This opinion carried him beyond the position of many people who approved his course of conduct as a whole."


Conflict between the military and the rioters on First Avenue
Illustration
Illustrated London News


That set the stage for the bloody and brutal violence of July 14-17, 1863. "The draft riots, as they are called, were supposed by some to be the result of a deep-laid conspiracy on the part of those opposed to the war, and that the successful issue of Lee's invasion of Pennsylvania was to be the signal for open action. Whether this be so or not, it is evident that the outbreak in New York City on the 13th of July, not only from the manner of its commencement, the absence of proper organization, and almost total absence of leadership, was not the result of a general well-understood plot. It would seem from the facts that those who started the movement had no idea at the outset of proceeding to the length they did. They simply desired to break up the draft in some of the upper districts of the city, and destroy the registers in which certain names were enrolled," wrote Joel Tyler Headley in The Great Riots of New York City.


The Naughty Boy Gotham, who would not take the Draft
Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper, 1863


The Confederate invasion had contributed to the riots in another way. At the request of the Lincoln Administration, Governor Horatio Seymour had forwarded all available militia units from New York City to the Pennsylvania war front. "George Opdyke, the Republican mayor of New York, protested when he learned that all the troops had been ordered to leave the city for the front, but Major-General [Charles W.] Sandford declared that the governor must be obeyed. Seymour planned to replace the soldiers who had left with militia from the interior of the state, but General Wool requested him to countermand his order to this effect," wrote Seymour biographer Stewart Mitchell.


Schiemer's Battery and a Company of the 11th NYV Scattering the Rioters at the Corner of 7th Avenue and 28th Street
Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper, 1863


New York in 1863 was beset by many problems. "Municipal services failed to keep pace with the rise in population," wrote William K. Klingaman in Abraham Lincoln and the Road to Emancipation, 1861-1865. Nearly two-thirds of New York City lacked sewers; many of the sewer lines that existed were so poorly constructed that they frequently were clogged with filth. Epidemics regularly swept through the tenements, giving New York the highest death rate of any city in the civilized world. Merchants sold milk from diseased cattle and coffee tainted with street sweepings and sawdust," wrote Lincoln chronicler William K. Klingaman. But the most important problem in mid-July was the absence of security personnel combined with the presence of angry draft dodgers. The result was an incendiary situation.


Women Pillaging During Riots
Illustration
Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper, July 25, 1865


"There were murmurings of the coming storm, but efforts to avert it were frustrated by those high in power," wrote historian Daniel Van Pelt. "Mr. George Opdyke, a Republican, was Mayor, and he foresaw that there would be trouble when the drafts should begin. He remonstrated with Governor Seymour against the withdrawal of all the militia from the city, but the Governor blandly replied that he had to obey superior orders, and that the city would be safe enough under the protection of its own police force." The New York militia had been moved South to help deal with the Confederate invasion of Pennsylvania that culminated in the Battle of Gettysburg. An important factor in the severity of the riots was their timing. The draft lottery began only a week after the Battle of Gettysburg on July 1-3, 1863. To meet the Confederate invasion of Maryland and Pennsylvania, all available militia was sent forward to Pennsylvania when the Confederates invaded the State at the end of June. New York City was not ready to handle the riots.

The Riots on July 13-16


On Saturday, July 11, President Lincoln telegraphed his son Robert at the New-York Fifth Avenue hotel in Manhattan: "Come to Washington." It is unclear why President Lincoln sent the telegram to his draft-age son — although possibly it was because Robert's mother had been injured in a serious carriage accident on July 2. There is little mystery, however, about what happened in New York City that day.


Group of Rioters Marching Down Avenue A
Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper, 1863


The draft was set to be on Saturday, July 11. William Alan Bales wrote in Tiger in the Streets: "There were two offices: one at 1190 Broadway near Twenty-ninth Street; another at 677 Third Avenue near the corner of Forty-sixth Street. The Saturday drawing was in the office at Third Avenue." Historian Stewart Mitchell noted: "The neighborhood was very much uptown in 1863, not by any means respectable, and more than three miles as the crow flies from city hall, then situated at the centre of New York."

Historian David Long, Jewel of Liberty: "A number of enrollees in each district of the city were to be chosen by lot from the list of eligible men; this would proceed until each district's quota was met. The idea was to call up 20 percent of the men on the lists. However, the share of draftees from each district varied according to the number of men who had already enlisted from that district. James McPherson points out, 'There were numerous opportunities for fraud, error, and injustice in this cumbersome and confusing process.' Ultimately, because of the numerous means for avoiding actual service, only 7 percent of those chosen ever served in the Union military." The draft of 1200 New Yorkers proceeded without disturbance that Saturday.


Group of Rioters Marching Down Second Avenue
Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper


But, noted Long, "that evening and on Sunday, in pubs and on street corners of the city's tenement districts, groups of working-class men imbibed alcohol and anti-black rhetoric in generous doses. Their mood grew increasingly ugly. By Monday, the ugly mood was incendiary." Historian John William Leonard wrote: "Sunday was used by the disaffected and desperate to plan what proved to be the most terrible and desperate riot that ever blackened the annals of New York. Some working men who had been drafted, aided by several political agitators, stirred up an opposition to further enrollment under a system which placed, as they claimed, its entire burden upon the poor.


Central Department of Metropolitan Police
Lithograph
A. Brown and Co for D.T. Valentine's Manual, 1863


One of Mr. Lincoln's aides, William O. Stoddard, had asked to take a leave from Washington to recover from overwork and malaria. Accompanied by his brother Henry, Stoddard went to New York City where "we walked blindly into the Draft Riot of 1863". According to Stoddard, "the actual operation of the draft began at the Marshal's or Enrollment Office of the Third Subdivision of the Ninth Congressional District, at 677 Third Avenue, corner of Forty-sixth Street. The drawings were made by means of a lottery wheel and proceeded throughout the day without any interruption whatever. Twelve hundred and thirty-six names were drawn, leaving only 264 men to be obtained in order to complete the quota of that subdivision. There was no question raised by anybody as to the fairness and impartiality of the day's work." Stoddard later wrote:


Scene on 32nd Street, between 6th and 7th Avenue, July 15th
Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper, 1863


We took our breakfasts early that July morning in New York City Hall Park. Not a word of any uprisings such as were going on uptown had been heard. Suddenly I saw a cart, driven furiously, on which lay a Negro, while a small mob of ruffians appeared to be trying to drag him off. In another direction a Negro was being chased and maltreated, and the air was full of dire exclamations and prophecies.


Calvary Patrolling the Streets
Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper, 1863


A first I did not understand the matter, but the truth dawned on me as my blood rose hotter, and I went back to my room. There was my pistol belt, knife and all, and the weapon was of heavy calibre. Henry had none, so I gave him mine, and we went hastily to Maiden Lane, where the gun stores were, to get me a new outfit. I was just in time, for hardly had I buckled on my longer-barreled, heavier shooting iron, when all those stores were closed by order of the police, and by the fear of their owners that they would soon be looted if they were open. We had plenty of ammunition, but where we were to use it we could not guess. The idea was in my mind that any mob would be likely to plunder the moneymen, and so I led the way toward Wall Street.


Rioters Lynching a Black Man


When we reached the corner of the Sub-Treasury, there were on the steps was General Ward B. Burnett, organizing a company of volunteers that promised to be a good one. I knew that he had commanded the First New York Volunteers in the Mexican War and was accounted a brave, capable officer. That was the man to serve under, and we at once fell into line, recalling our soldier experience in the Rifles. The General swore us in, gave us instructions, looked very cool, and determined but a little bloodthirsty, and we were posted. That is, we were put temporarily in charge of the Treasury, under the impression that there was to be an immediate attack on it. Later we were transferred to the portico of the Custom House, where we kept company with a wide-mouthed mountain howitzer."


Police Battling Rioters
Illustration


The riots had an anti-Protestant as well as anti-upper class basis. According to Stoddard, there was a clear class division in the rioters: "I saw a surging, swaying crowd coming up Broadway, whooping, yelling, blaspheming and howling, demoniacs such as no man imagined the city of New York to contain. There were women among them and half-grown boys, but none of them seemed to be American. Who were they? They carried guns, pistols, axes, hatchets, crowbars, pitchforks, knives, bludgeons — the red flag. 'Down with the rich men! Down with property! Down with the police!'"



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Monday was the most violent day of the riots. Federal officials attempted to restart the draft process but protestor attacked the enrollment office on Third avenue. Workplaces emptied as workers joined the mob — who even attacked Police Superintendent John A. Kennedy. At 10 a.m., "Superintendent of Police Kennedy while on a tour of inspection in citizen's clothes was recognized by a mob at Forty-sixth Street and Lexington Avenue, containing many criminals who had too good cause to know him. He was beaten into insensibility and left to drown in a puddle of water, when rescued by a friend," wrote historian Daniel Van Pelt. The rioters gathered in front the New York Tribune office, trashed the offices on the first floor. Violence spread throughout Manhattan. The draft office at Third Avenue and 46th Street was destroyed. Only the courageous efforts of New York City police prevented the mob from destroying police headquarters on Mulberry Street. A group of invalid soldiers pressed into duty was beaten.


Mob Burning the "Colored Orphan Asylum"


Iver Bernstein contended in The New York City Draft Riots: "The lines between constituencies were sometimes blurred. Some Germans appeared among Tuesday's and Wednesday's rioters, some Irish left the streets Monday afternoon. Occasionally artisans rioted through the week, and sometimes industrial workers and laborers dropped out of the crowds early on. But the most clear and abrupt social division was that between journeymen in the older artisan trades, who limited their participation to Monday's demonstrations, and workers in newer industrial occupations and common laboring, who persisted in the midweek revolt. By Tuesday the riot had entered a new phase in which the animus came primarily from Monday's most violent rioters."


Andrews of Virginia and other Ringleaders
Illustration
Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper, July 25, 1865


The authorities had a difficult time mobilizing what little resources they had. "Mayor Opdyke got word of the trouble at about a quarter to ten in the morning and telegraphed to Governor Seymour three times in one day, trying to reach him by way of Albany," wrote historian Stewart Mitchell. But Seymour was in New Jersey and wasn't reached by telegraph until much later in the day" Attorney George Templeton Strong went to the St. Nicolas Hotel on Monday, July 13 to beg "that martial law might be declared. [Mayor George] Opdyke said that was Wool's business, and Wool said it was Opdyke's, and neither would act. 'Then, Mr. Mayor, issue a proclamation calling on all loyal and law-abiding citizens to enroll themselves as a volunteer force for defense of life and property.' 'Why, 'quoth Opdyke, 'that is civil war at once.' Long talk with Colonel Cram, Wool's chief of staff, who professes to believe that everything is at it should be and sufficient force on the ground to prevent further mischief. Don't believe it. Neither Opdyke nor General Wool is nearly equal to this crisis. Came off disgusted. Went to Union League Club awhile. No comfort there. Much talk, but no one ready to do anything whatever, not even to telegraph to Washington."


Andrews of Virginia Haranguing the Mob
Illustration
Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper, July 25, 1865


Strong himself was ready. "We telegraphed, two or three of us, from General Wool's rooms, to the President, begging that troops be sent on and stringent measures taken. The great misfortune is that nearly all our militia regiments have been despatched to Pennsylvania. All the military force I have seen or heard of today were in Fifth Avenue at about seven P.M. There were two or three feeble companies of infantry, a couple of howitzers, and a squadron or two of unhappy-looking 'dragoons.'"


Police Battling Rioters in Front of the Tribune
Illustration


On Monday, Provost Marshal General. James B. Fry telegraphed Acting Assistant Provost. Marshal General Robert Nugent in New York City: "Apply to General Wool for force, if you have not done so, to quell the riot reported in Third avenue, provided it is serious. You had better concentrate your Invalid Corps with other forces, and act directly against the rioters, in conjunction with the city police. I have telegraphed General Wool. Report condition of affairs." Fry telegraphed General Wool: "It is reported that a serious riot is in progress in Third avenue, and that the provost marshal's office has been burned. Will you please furnish at once all the force you can to enforce the enrollment act, provided the necessity for it is as represented?" Later Monday, Fry telegraphed General John Wool on Monday: "Adjutant General Sprague, now here, informs me that Colonel [Henry L.] Lansing, at New Dorp, has 300 or 400 men available for the riot, and also two companies, under Major [George W.] Scott, on Riker's Island. General Sprague says these are all subject to your orders. The marines and sailors at the navy yard and receiving ship will, I presume, co operate, if applied to by you."


Brutal Murder of Col. H.F. O'Brien, near his residence, July 14
Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper, 1863


"No black person was safe. Rioters beat several, lynched a half-dozen, smashed the homes and property of scores," wrote historian James McPherson. "Mobs also fell upon several business establishments that employed blacks. Rioters tried to attack the officers of Republican newspapers and managed to burn out the ground floor of the Tribune while howling for Horace Greeley's blood. Several editors warded off the mob by arming their employees with rifles; Henry Raymond of the Times borrowed three recently invented Gatling guns from the army to defend his building." Biographer Augustus Maverick wrote: "A signal illustration of Raymond's courage in the presence of danger was given in the terrible 'Riot Week' of July 1863, when, under pretence of resisting a draft for troops, the mob of New York committed the vilest excesses, and the day held undisputed possession of the city, encouraged the deeds of violence by the Governor of the state and by incumbents of judicial office, and sustained by the traitorous journals of the day. The offices of the loyal newspapers were put in posture of defence, to avert apprehended attack, was the proprietors of the Times planted revolving cannon in their publications office, and provided great store of other death-dealing weapons with which to repel invasion. Beneath the spector of battery and bomb, Raymond steadily poured a gallant fire into the ranks of the mob, its official supporters, and the editors who encouraged it." Maverick one other unlikely defensive weapon which reportedly protected the Times: Copperhead editor Benjamin Wood standing in the doorway and lecturing would-be arsonists about property rights.
1 posted on 10/06/2004 11:07:08 PM PDT by SAMWolf
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To: snippy_about_it; PhilDragoo; Johnny Gage; Victoria Delsoul; The Mayor; Darksheare; Valin; ...
On both Monday and Tuesday some leading Republicans were clearly targeted by rioters. Mayor George Opdyke's house on Fifth Avenue was attacked. The office of the New York Times prepared itself for attack. The home of New York Postmaster Abram Wakeman was torched. The offices of the New York Tribune came under direct attack. Tribune Editor Horace Greeley later wrote:


Riots on Lexington Avenue
Illustration
Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper, July 25, 1865


On the 13th of July, 1863 (the first day of the Draft Riots in our city), the editor of the Tribune was visited in his office about midday by a devoted friend, who urged and entreated him to accompany the said friend to his home, a few miles distant. That friend assured him that he knew that he life of said editor was to be taken forthwith — that it had been plotted and settled that he should be an early and certain victim of the ruffian mob then howling about the Tribune office, and inciting each other to the assault, which they actually made at dusk that night, when they smashed the windows, furniture, etc., and set fire to the building, but were promptly routed and expelled by the police. Riot, arson, and pillage were then rife in different sections of our city, of which the rebel mob appeared to have undisputed possession. The editor (who writes this) informed his friend that nothing would induce him to leave the city — that he was where he had a right to be — and where he should remain. That friend, after exhausting remonstrance and entreaty, left him to his fate, not expecting to see him again. After five P.M. of that day, the editor, having finished his work at the office, went over to Windust's eating-house for his dinner, passing through the howling mob for nearly the entire distance, and recognized by several of them. Two friends accompanied him, but not at his invitation or suggestion. Neither of the three was harmed. At Windust's dinner was ordered and eaten exactly as on other days, but in the largest room in the house, without the shadow of hiding or concealment of any kind. Dinner finished, the editor took a carriage and drove to his lodging, where he resumed writing for the Tribune, and continued it through the evening, sending down his copy to the office, and being visited thence by friends who informed him of the mob's assault, and the narrow escape of the building and contents from destruction. Remaining all night at his lodging, he returned next morning to the office (now being armed), saw from a window the mob howling in its front hastily repaired to the City Hall Park, there to listen to a harangue from Horatio Seymour, and remained there nearly to the close of the day [Tuesday], when he was finally induced to leave by the representation of the good and true soldier who commanded it as fortress, that he would prefer that the mob should not be provided with the extra inducements for assault which the known presence of Mr. Greeley in the building would afford. He returned to the office next morning, though the first hackman to whom he applied refused to let him enter his carriage; and he was in the office nearly throughout each day of that memorable week up to Friday evening, when he (as usual) took the Harlem cars for home at Chappaqua, where he spent the Saturday, as he has done nearly every Saturday, save in winter, for the last fifteen years. And whoever asserts that he at any time that week 'was hiding under Windust's table' is a branded liar and villain, as Mr. Windust, Mr. William A. Hall, and other surviving and most credible witnesses will gladly attest."


Irish Thugs Attack Blacks in Riots
Sketch
Harper's Illustrated Weekly


It was a close call for Greeley and his newspaper. "Chanting, 'We'll hang old Greeley to a sour apple tree, And send him straight to Hell,' the mob poured down upon Printing House Square. The police guarding the Tribune were overwhelmed; fires were started in half a dozen spots in the building; desks, tables, type forms, and printing presses were smashed; Greeley and his assistants escaped in the nick of time. The editor was chased into a Park Row restaurant, where he hid under a table," wrote Oliver Carlson in a biography of rival editor James Gordon Bennett.


Attack on Croton Cottage
Illustration
Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper, July 25, 1865


Historian Frank Klement wrote: "The first day's rioting seemed to be directed at the draft and symbols of authority. The second day's violence featured attacks upon blacks and their businesses. Some buildings were burned and black men were assaulted and beaten or killed. A mob attacked and burned the Colored Orphan Asylum (all 237 children escaped) — there was no such institution for the orphans of Irish-Americans and German-Americans. Arson and plunder and killings continued for two more days." Noted historian Daniel Van Pelt: "By the heroism and coolness of the attendants the two hundred young inmates were fortunately conducted to a place of safety by a rear door as the raging fiends broke in the front door. The torch was applied in twenty places at once, and the building burned to the ground. From day to day the mob became bolder in their depredations. They went comparatively unresisted over the entire island."


Destruction of the Provost Marshalls Office
Illustration
Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper, July 25, 1865


Lincoln's son Robert was still missing on Tuesday but evidently en route to the White House. A worried father sent Robert a telegram: "Why do I heard no more of you?" The 14th was also the day that Governor Seymour arrived in the city. He met Mayor Opdyke at the St. Nicholas Hotel around noon and then addressed citizens rioters in front of City Hall. "The Governor made a few remarks intended to allay the popular excitement, and earnestly counseled obedience to the laws and constituted authorities. He also read a letter, containing a statement that the conscription had been postponed by the authorities in Washington," wrote Major T. P. McElrath. "This speech of Governor Seymour, owing to his well-known affiliation with the opposition, was severely criticised by his political opponents, chiefly on account of his opening it with the words, 'My friends.' While he was speaking, however, his previous proclamation showed that he was exerting his influence for suppressing the insurrection, and he could hardly be expected to address a peaceable audience with the invective applicable to red-handed rioters and incendiaries. In his remarks he expressed his belief that the conscription act was illegal, and announced his determination to have it tested in the courts. In dwelling upon these points he may have violated good taste, but it must be borne in mind that his purpose was to soothe an unusual popular excitement, and the end was justified in using whatever reasonable arguments were available for that purpose."


Assaults During Riot
Illustration
Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper, July 25, 1865


On arrival in the city, Governor Seymour "issued two proclamations," noted historian Sidney David Brummer. "One reminded those who had resorted to violence 'under an apprehension of injustice that the only permissible opposition to the draft was an appeal to the courts. 'Riotous proceedings,' he proclaimed, 'must and shall be put down. The laws of the State of New York must be enforced, its peace and order maintained, and the lives and property of all its citizens protected at any and every hazard.' And the Governor threatened that unless the rioters retired to their homes and employments, he would use all the power necessary to restore tranquility to the City. The second proclamation declared the City to be in a state of insurrection — an act of wisdom, since it permitted the complete and legal use of the military, the only power capable of suppressing the disturbance. Of course, the Unionist press did not fail to point out that the Governor had not announced that the laws of the United States must and would be enforced. Appended to one of the proclamations was a request that loyal citizens should enroll at designated places to aid in preserving peace. This idea was carried out."


Angry mob watches as the body of a lynched African American man burns
Photomechanical Print


That night, attorney George Templeton Strong wrote in his diary: "At 823 [Broadway — headquarters of the U.S. Sanitary Commission] with [Dr. Henry W.] Bellows four to six; then home. At eight to Union League Club. Rumor it's be attacked tonight. Some say there is to be great mischief tonight and that the rabble is getting the upper hand. Home at ten and sent for by Dudley Field, Jr., to confer about an expected attack on his house and his father's, which adjoin each other in this street just below Lexington Avenue."


Sacking of the brownstone houses in Lexington Avenue by the rioters on Monday, July 13
Illustration
New York Illustrated News


By Tuesday, Union officials in Washington began to understand how serious the situation was when they received telegrams such as this from Provost Marshal, John Duffy: "Headquarters destroyed by the mob. Papers safe." Fry telegraphed Nugent on Tuesday: " Suspend the draft in New York City and Brooklyn." In another Tuesday telegram, Fry wired Colonel Nugent: "Set your detectives at work to ascertain the names of the ringleaders and other principal men concerned in the late riot, and to get evidence against them, so that they may be arrested and tried." Provost Marshal General Fry wrote Secretary of War Edwin M. Stanton on Tuesday.


Rioters chasing negro women and children through the vacant lots in Lexington Avenue
Illustration
New York Illustrated News


"The enforcement of the draft was yesterday seriously resisted in the ninth district of the city of New York. The mob, variously estimated in numbers up as high as 30,000, attacked the officers of this bureau in the performance of their duty, and destroyed the building in which the draft had been conducted, and many of the rolls, records, and appurtenances connected with the draft. The military and the police force of the city on duty there were overwhelmed and dispersed.


Sacking Brooks' Clothing Store
Engraving
Harper's Weekly


In the present condition of things, I do not think the draft can be made without additional force. I therefore recommend that four regiments of infantry and a battery of artillery be sent immediately to New York City, and, without intending to travel beyond the line of my duty, I would state that I think the public interest, so far as my department is concerned, would be greatly promoted if Major General [Irvin] McDowell can be assigned to such command as will enable him to direct the military operations necessary to enforce the draft in the State of New York and New England. The numbers and importance in this riot are doubtless greatly exaggerated, but I deem it sufficiently serious to justify the suggestions herein made."


Burning of the 2nd Avenue Armory
Illustration
Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper, July 25, 1865


Episcopal minister Morgan Dix, son of the city's military commander, later wrote: "Thus the days wore on, with dust and smoke, with fire and flame; with sack of private dwellings and burning of charitable institutions, armories, and draft stations; with blood and wounds, and every imaginable instance of atrocity on the part of the maddened mob, till regiments, hurriedly withdrawn from the front, came speeding back to the city, and we saw the grim batteries and weatherstained and dusty soldiers tramping into our leading streets as if into a town just taken by siege. There was some terrific fighting between the regulars and the insurgents; streets were swept again and again by grape, houses were stormed at the point of the bayonet, rioters were picked off by sharpshooters as they fired on the troops from the house-tops; men were hurled, dying or dead, into the streets by the thoroughly enraged soldiery; until at last, sullen and cowed, and thoroughly whipped and beaten, the miserable wretches gave way at every point and confessed the power of the law. It has never been known how many perished in those awful days."


Police Battling Rioters
Engraving
Harper's Weekly


Major T.P. McElrath wrote: "Scenes of violence and carnage, such as I have described, prevailed in the streets of New York from Monday noon until Thursday night. The political sentiment, which displayed itself in the original assault on the draft office, in Third avenue, disappeared after that demonstration, and thenceforward the mob was actuated solely by an instinct of rapine and plunder."
2 posted on 10/06/2004 11:08:01 PM PDT by SAMWolf (Earn cash in your spare time - blackmail your friends.)
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The four days of violence resulted in the death of 119 people and the injury of 306 more. The damage to property was roughly $1.5 million. "As calm was restored, New York resembled an occupied city. When the draft resumed a month later, 43 regiments were stationed in the vicinity. The drawing was completed without further disturbance"


3 posted on 10/06/2004 11:08:24 PM PDT by SAMWolf (Earn cash in your spare time - blackmail your friends.)
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Veterans for Constitution Restoration is a non-profit, non-partisan educational and grassroots activist organization. The primary area of concern to all VetsCoR members is that our national and local educational systems fall short in teaching students and all American citizens the history and underlying principles on which our Constitutional republic-based system of self-government was founded. VetsCoR members are also very concerned that the Federal government long ago over-stepped its limited authority as clearly specified in the United States Constitution, as well as the Founding Fathers' supporting letters, essays, and other public documents.





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4 posted on 10/06/2004 11:08:40 PM PDT by SAMWolf (Earn cash in your spare time - blackmail your friends.)
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To: A Jovial Cad; Diva Betsy Ross; Americanwolf; CarolinaScout; Tax-chick; Don W; Poundstone; ...



"FALL IN" to the FReeper Foxhole!



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5 posted on 10/06/2004 11:12:37 PM PDT by snippy_about_it (Fall in --> The FReeper Foxhole. America's History. America's Soul.)
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To: SAMWolf

Geez. What an awful event. I would expect the same thing or something similar at least would happen today the way things are.


6 posted on 10/06/2004 11:20:24 PM PDT by snippy_about_it (Fall in --> The FReeper Foxhole. America's History. America's Soul.)
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To: snippy_about_it; SAMWolf
You KNOW the socialists and marxists in the dimocrap party would absolutely LOVE to have a similar incident before the election ... :(

Hiya Snippy and Sam .... with all the incidents that have happened in the last couple of weeks, all over the country, the "revolutionaries" are doing their best to spark CWII. Keep your powder dry kids!

And now, I'm gonna go snag a cold brew and bail.

±
"The Era of Osama lasted about an hour, from the time the first plane hit the tower to the moment the General Militia of Flight 93 reported for duty."
Toward FREEDOM

7 posted on 10/06/2004 11:31:27 PM PDT by Neil E. Wright (An oath is FOREVER)
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To: snippy_about_it

Good Night Snippy.


8 posted on 10/06/2004 11:35:38 PM PDT by SAMWolf (Earn cash in your spare time - blackmail your friends.)
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To: Neil E. Wright
You KNOW the socialists and marxists in the dimocrap party would absolutely LOVE to have a similar incident before the election

They would have a field day with it and use it for the next 50 years..

9 posted on 10/06/2004 11:36:40 PM PDT by SAMWolf (Earn cash in your spare time - blackmail your friends.)
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To: SAMWolf
"I saw a surging, swaying crowd coming up Broadway, whooping, yelling, blaspheming and howling, demoniacs...

Who woulda thunk that Deaniacs were around in 1863? I thought it was strictly a 2004 phenomona.

10 posted on 10/06/2004 11:42:27 PM PDT by ProtectOurFreedom
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To: snippy_about_it; SAMWolf; Professional Engineer; Samwise; Matthew Paul; PhilDragoo; radu; All

Good morning everyone!

11 posted on 10/07/2004 1:03:54 AM PDT by Soaring Feather (~Poetry is my forte~)
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To: snippy_about_it

Good morning Snippy and everyone at the Foxhole.


12 posted on 10/07/2004 3:00:20 AM PDT by E.G.C.
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To: SAMWolf

These riots were very much on my mind in the run-up to the RNC. Kudos to the NYPD for handling that potential multi-day riot.


13 posted on 10/07/2004 3:12:12 AM PDT by gridlock (BARKEEP: Why the long face? HORSE: Ha ha, old joke. BARKEEP: Not you, I was talking to JF'n Kerry!)
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To: snippy_about_it; SAMWolf; All

October 7, 2004

Becoming What We Are

Read: Philippians 3:1-11

The Lord is the Spirit; and where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is liberty. —2 Corinthians 3:17

Bible In One Year: Isaiah 28-29; Philippians 3


At a British university, a group of students had raised the question, "What do you want to be?" Different answers were given—a champion athlete, an influential politician, a noted scholar. Shyly, yet clearly, one student said something that caused thoughtful silence: "You may laugh at me, but I want to be a saint."

Imagine—a saint! Whatever his concept of sainthood, many in our secular society would view that ambition as eccentric. Yet if we are Christians, it ought to be the highest priority of our life. The essence of sainthood is simply to be like Jesus. Paul said that the overarching purpose of God the Father is to make us like His Son (Romans 8:29).

Of course, every believer is guaranteed perfect conformity to Christ in the world to come. But God does not want us to wait passively until we enter heaven for that supernatural transformation to take place (1 John 3:2). We are to be cooperating with the Holy Spirit to grow more and more like Christ "in this world" (4:17).

Yes, we are already saints by faith in Christ Jesus (Philippians 1:1). But each day we face the challenge of becoming what we are—Christlike in every area of our lives. —Vernon Grounds

More like the Master I would live and grow,
More of His love to others I would show;
More self-denial, like His in Galilee,
More like the Master I long to ever be. —Gabriel

To belong to Christ is to be a saint; to live like a saint is to be like Christ.

14 posted on 10/07/2004 4:19:42 AM PDT by The Mayor (Because God is with us, we need not fear what lies ahead)
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To: gridlock; SAMWolf; snippy_about_it; Neil E. Wright

This qoute could have been lifted right out of the 2004 RNC protest, eh.

"I saw a surging, swaying crowd coming up Broadway, whooping, yelling, blaspheming and howling, demoniacs such as no man imagined the city of New York to contain. There were women among them and half-grown boys, but none of them seemed to be American. Who were they? They carried guns, pistols, axes, hatchets, crowbars, pitchforks, knives, bludgeons ? the red flag. 'Down with the rich men! Down with property! Down with the police!'"

Regrads

alfa6 ;>}


15 posted on 10/07/2004 5:16:31 AM PDT by alfa6 (I'm just an analog guy in a digital world.)
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To: SAMWolf

The more things change, the more they stay the same.

Kerry has a plan.

16 posted on 10/07/2004 5:53:50 AM PDT by Samwise (The Pajama People: They also serve who hunt and peck.)
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To: snippy_about_it; bentfeather; Samwise
Good morning ladies. Flag-o-gram.


17 posted on 10/07/2004 6:18:48 AM PDT by Professional Engineer (John F'n Kerry: The Ultimate Risky Scheme.)
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To: Samwise; SAMWolf

In re Kerry, here's the report on the Vietnam Veteran program we had in Monroe, NC, last night.

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1237494/posts

We had one of the Swift Boat vets, who was the gunner on John Kerry's boat, and a retired Air Force pilot who had spent *over 7 years* in prison in North Vietnam. They were very determined to get out the truth about John Kerry.


18 posted on 10/07/2004 6:28:09 AM PDT by Tax-chick (It's possible that I look exactly like Catherine Zeta-Jones.)
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To: ProtectOurFreedom

Morning ProtectOurFreedom.

They've mellowed out in 2004, now they mostly just tear up lawn signs and key your car. ;-)


19 posted on 10/07/2004 6:55:50 AM PDT by SAMWolf (Earn cash in your spare time - blackmail your friends.)
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To: bentfeather

Good Morning Feather.


20 posted on 10/07/2004 6:56:07 AM PDT by SAMWolf (Earn cash in your spare time - blackmail your friends.)
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