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Race, Place and Repertoire Change in U.S. Lynching, 1830-1930

Race, Place and Repertoire Change in U.S. Lynching, 1830-1930. Richard Hogan Paper presented at Social Science History Association Meetings, Vancouver, Canada, November 2012. Preliminaries. The Problem: romanticizing Old West to legitimate lynching as vigilantism

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Race, Place and Repertoire Change in U.S. Lynching, 1830-1930

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  1. Race, Place and Repertoire Change in U.S. Lynching, 1830-1930 Richard Hogan Paper presented at Social Science History Association Meetings, Vancouver, Canada, November 2012

  2. Preliminaries • The Problem: romanticizing Old West to legitimate lynching as vigilantism • The goal: rewrite Western and Southern histories: interests and actors and epochs; repertoire change and learning to lynch

  3. Guiding Assertions • Vigilantism is contentious gathering in defense of class interests not adequately defended by local authorities • Lynching tends to be confounded with vigilantism but tends to differ • Status versus class interests • Public ritual of private justice • Terrorize and torture “other” • Both are Part of Old Repertoire

  4. Old and New Repertoires of Contention in U.S., 1652-1996 anti-proprietor revolts: 1652-1691 militia rebellions: 1676-1691 festivals: Stamp Act of 1765 tax revolts: 1765-1794 food riots: 1713-1837 tenants’ rebellions: 1745-1766 squatters’ rebellions: 1782-1850 slave rebellions: 1663-1860 vigilantism: 1771-1865 LYNCHING 1830-1930 Patronized OLD Orientation To Powerholders expulsion:1765-1861 boycotts: 1765-present cooperatives: 1870-present election rally public meeting strike demonstration social movement NEW Autonomous National Local Scope of Action

  5. Social Change in the U.S., 1620-1945 Colonial America: 1620-1765 Colonial Revolt: 1765-1815 National Period: 1815-1861 Revolutionary Period: 1861-1945 Consolidation and Increase in Scale: 1945-present

  6. Two Simple Questions • How and why does lynching emerge in 1830 as an alternative to frontier vigilantism, plantation flogging, and paramilitary runaway slave patrols? • How and why does lynching change between 1830 and 1930?

  7. Simple Answers • Lynching is innovation at the margin of vigilantism and terrorism • Defense of class and status interests • Inspired by political opportunities • transformation of U.S. institutions, 1830-1930 • Specific form shaped by • Nature of republican capitalism then and there • Cultural baggage brought along • Experience of institutional transformation

  8. Simple Distinction • Frontier Vigilantism • White men • Somewhat public meeting: gathering of citizens • Private posse, judge, jury, execution • Leave the body hanging to warn would-be outlaws • Southern Lynching • white on black • Public spectacle of disguised members of KKK • No attempt to mimic due process • Torture and barbarism

  9. The Messy Details of History • There seem to be distinct vigilante and lynching behaviors • Vigilantism in West before 1876 • Lynching in South after 1890 • But these vary from State to State and seem to converge over time • vigilantism becomes more or less racial and barbarous in general • Before and after Civil War/Reconstruction

  10. Data • Michael Pfeifer, The Roots of Rough Justice (U. IL, 2011) • Stephen J. Leonard, Lynching in Colorado (U. CO, 2002) • Michael Pfeifer, Lynching Beyond Dixie (U. IL, forthcoming) • Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Abandoned Lands, “Reports of Outrages” (Gov. Bullock’s correspondence, GA archives, 1868)

  11. Black Vigilante Lynching Victims Reported for South, 1824-1862, by Date and Method (N=56) Source: Pfeifer (2011), Appendix

  12. Vigilante Lynching Victims from Colorado, 1859-1919 * Other victims included four blacks, one Chinese, five Italians, and five Mexicans. Source: Leonard (2002), Appendix A

  13. Lynching Outside South by Race 1837-1889 and 1890-1943 (N=578) Source: Pfeifer (forthcoming)

  14. Lynching Outside South by Method before 1890 and after 1889 (N=578) * coded as most barbaric (in descending order: mutilation, burning, strangulation, beating, flogging, hanging, shooting) when more than one method was used) Source: Pfeifer (forthcoming)

  15. Lynching by Race in Arizona and Indiana Source: Pfeifer (forthcoming)

  16. Lynching by Race in Arizona and Indiana before 1877 Source: Pfeifer (forthcoming)

  17. Lynching by Race in Arizona and Indiana after 1876 Source: Pfeifer (forthcoming)

  18. Lynching Victims by Region and State (N=578) Source: Pfeifer (forthcoming)

  19. Taking Stock • Antebellum Southern lynching moves toward vigilantism (hanging) • Non-South vigilantism moves toward lynching (becomes racial and barbarous) • Each State is different • Indiana horse-thief protection towards KKK • Arizona terrorist colonialism toward vigilantism - Midwest and Western States vary

  20. Lessons to Learn • Variation across time and place makes validity and reliability of estimates problematic • Further we move from data the more problematic this becomes • So let’s get close to Georgia outrages • Reported by Freedmen’s Bureau to Governor • Covering January to November election of 1868 • Indicates mix of crimes, vigilantism, lynching

  21. Crimes Imputed from Outrages Reported in Georgia, January-November 15, 1868 (N=355) * “Other” includes threatening with weapon (5), kidnapping (4), unknown (wounded: 3), hanging (not killed: 2), attempted murder (2) Source: Bureau of Refugees, Freedman (1868)

  22. Race of Perpetrator (N=425) Source: Bureau of Refugees, Freedman (1868)

  23. Percent Arrested by Race of Perpetrator (N=425) Source: Bureau of Refugees, Freedman (1868)

  24. Percent Arrested by Race for Murders (N=119) Source: Bureau of Refugees, Freedman (1868)

  25. Rationale for Outrages (N=355) Source: Bureau of Refugees, Freedman (1868)

  26. Deconstructing Outrages • Outrages: 355 victimizations (and 425 perpetrators, including groups) • Vigilantism: no arrest or other effort by authorities to sanction the perpetrators (N=302 victimizations) • Lynching: murder by three or more perpetrators, including groups (N=45 victimizations)

  27. Predicting Contention and Elections • ZINBE model predicts outrages, vigilantism, and lynching • Petit-Bourgeois artisans and farmers, black schools, enduring Republican partisanship mitigate against outrages • slack resources and April vote for Republican governor inspire outrages • Outrages, vigilantism, and lynching should tend to discourage November vote for U. S. Grant

  28. ZINBE Models Predicting Outrages, Vigilantism, and Lynching (N=120) * p<.1 ** p<.05 *** p<.01 (two tails)

  29. OLS Models Predicting U. S. Grant Vote in November 1868 in GA Counties, using Outrages, Vigilantism, or Lynching (N=129) * p<.1 ** p<.05 *** p<.01 (two tails)

  30. So What? • Validity: What is lynching (as opposed to outrage or vigilantism)? • Reliability: Racial violence by any other name? • Significance • Outrage and vigilantism as popular (racist and patriarchal) justice • Lynching as terrorism: the Radical Republicans were right; the KKK did steal the election

  31. Savannah Editor on KKK (7/1/1871) deprecate living

  32. Savannah Editor (12/10/1870)

  33. Questions? • Thanks for your patience • Y’all come back now, y’hear

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