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Nevilledog

(51,023 posts)
Thu Sep 30, 2021, 11:19 PM Sep 2021

Sept. 30th, 1919 - Hundreds of Black People Killed in Elaine, Arkansas, Massacre



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Equal Justice Initiative
@eji_org
On this day in 1919, enraged white mobs began a massacre of hundreds of innocent Black women, men, and children, after white men attempted to invade a Black farmer's union meeting. To overcome racial inequality, we must confront our history.

September 30th, 1919 A History of Racial Injustice
On this day, enraged white mobs began a massacre of hundreds of Black people.
calendar.eji.org
6:00 AM · Sep 30, 2021



On the night of September 30, 1919, approximately 100 Black farmers attended a meeting of the Progressive Farmers and Household Union of America at a church in Phillips County, Arkansas. Many of the farmers were sharecroppers on white-owned plantations in the area and the meeting was held to discuss ways they could organize to demand fairer payments for their crops.

Black labor unions such as the Progressive Farmers were deeply resented among white landowners throughout the country because unions threatened to weaken white aristocratic power. The union also made efforts to subvert racial divisions in labor relations and had hired a white attorney to negotiate with land owners for better cotton prices.

Knowing that Black union organizing often attracted opposition, Black men stood as armed guards around the church while the Phillips County meeting took place. When a group of white people from the Missouri-Pacific Railroad attempted to intrude and spy on the meeting, the guards held them back and a shootout erupted. At least two white men were killed, and enraged white mobs quickly formed.

The mobs descended on the nearby Black town of Elaine, Arkansas, destroying homes and businesses and attacking any Black people in their path over the coming days. Terrified Black residents, including women, children, and the elderly, fled their homes and hid for their lives in nearby woods and fields. A responding federal troop regiment claimed only two Black people were killed but many reports challenged the white soldiers’ credibility and accused them of participating in the massacre. Today, historians estimate hundreds of Black people were killed in the massacre.

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