8
76 Minnesota History T hroughout the spring of 1892, Minneapolis worked feverishly to prepare for the biggest, most spectacu- lar event in its short history. Civic leaders wanted their booming metropolis to look its very best so it would shine in the national spotlight when the city’s Exposition Build- ing hosted the Republican National Convention in June. Downtown would soon resemble a “mammoth peach or- chard in full blossom,” the Minneapolis Journal reported, as business leaders began decorating their storefronts with colorful flags and bunting to welcome the throngs of conventioneers. “The people of Minneapolis are now beginning to fully appreciate the importance and magni- tude of the event for which they labored so industriously. The entire populace seems to have fully entered into the spirit of the occasion,” the Minneapolis Tribune noted. 1 REPUBLICAN NATIONAL CONVENTION, MINNEAPOLIS Iric Nathanson African Americans African Americans African Americans and e 1892

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Page 1: African americans and the 1892 Republican National Convention, …collections.mnhs.org/mnhistorymagazine/articles/61/v61i... · 2014-09-10 · chard in full blossom,” the Minneapolis

76 Minnesota History

T hroughoutthespringof1892,Minneapolisworkedfeverishlytoprepareforthebiggest,mostspectacu-

lareventinitsshorthistory.Civicleaderswantedtheirboomingmetropolistolookitsverybestsoitwouldshineinthenationalspotlightwhenthecity’sExpositionBuild-inghostedtheRepublicanNationalConventioninJune.Downtownwouldsoonresemblea“mammothpeachor-chardinfullblossom,”theMinneapolis Journalreported,

asbusinessleadersbegandecoratingtheirstorefrontswithcolorfulflagsandbuntingtowelcomethethrongsofconventioneers.“ThepeopleofMinneapolisarenowbeginningtofullyappreciatetheimportanceandmagni-tudeoftheeventforwhichtheylaboredsoindustriously.Theentirepopulaceseemstohavefullyenteredintothespiritoftheoccasion,”theMinneapolis Tribunenoted.1

Republican naTional convenTion, MinneapolisIric Nathanson

African Americans

African Americans

African Americans

and the 1892

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Summer 2008 77

African Americans

African Americans

African Americans

Butnoteveryonewascelebratingastheconvention’sopeningdaydrewcloser.Inthecity’ssmallAfricanAmericancommunity,themoodwassomberasmembersparticipatedinanationaldayoffastingandprayeronMay31.Theeventhadbeenorganizedtodrawattentiontotheshamefulatrocitiesinflictedonblackpeople,mainlyintheSouth.Lynch-ingwouldreachitshighpointinAmericain1892,withthereportedmurdersof161AfricanAmericansatthehandsofwhitemobs.2

Thisdisturbingissuewouldinjectitselfintoanotherwisetypicalcon-ventionpreoccupiedwithpoliticalhooplaandfactionalbickering.Themainevent,ballotingforthepresi-dentialnominee,wasscheduledforJune10,thefinaldayoftheweeklongconclave.ManydelegateshadcometoMinneapolissimmeringwithdissatis-factionatthelacklusterperformanceoftheincumbentRepublicanpresi-dent,BenjaminHarrison,andsomewantedtodenyhimnominationforasecondterm.Ablocofanti-HarrisondelegatesralliedaroundSecretaryofStateJamesG.Blaine,whowasconsideredmorecharismaticanddynamic,althoughhehadlostthe1884presidentialelectiontoGroverCleveland.Blaine’snamewasplacedinnominationattheMinneapolisconvention,eventhoughheneveropenlyencouragedthe“dumpHarri-son”movement.Intheend,Harrisoneasilywonrenominationonthefirstballot.HewouldgoontobedefeatedbyClevelandthatfall.

EvenasJimCrowlegislationwastighteningitsholdontheSouth,the116blackdelegatestotheMinneapo-lisconvention—about13percentofthefullbody—stillconsideredthem-selvesplayersinRepublicanPartypolitics,andtheyworkeddiligentlytomaximizetheirpoliticalinfluence.

Thelocalpressreportedregularly,ifcondescendingly,ontheiractivi-ties,intheprocessrevealinghowtheTwinCitiesAfricanAmericancom-munitysupportedthedelegates.Atonepointduringthefive-dayevent,someAfricanAmericanlead-ersbelievedthattheymightbeabletoconstitutethebalanceofpowerbetweencompetingblocs.WhiletheireffortstoorganizeanAfricanAmericanswingvotewereultimatelyunsuccessful,eventheexpectationofpotentialinfluencewouldbecomeunthinkableatlaterconventions,whereAfricanAmericanswereshutoutofthepoliticalprocessentirely.3

o nMay31,Minneapolis’sAfricanAmericancommunityhadgained

publicattentionforthecauseofcivilrightswhenmorethan1,000peoplepackedintothecity’sLaborTempleonSouthFourthStreetforarallytoconcludethenationaldayofprayer.“Itseemedasthoughtheentirecoloredpopulationofthecityhadturnedouttoprotestagainstthecrimesagainstthecoloredpeople

Iric Nathanson is writing a history of Minneapolis in the twentieth century for the Minnesota Historical Society Press. His article, “The Oppenheimer Affair: Red Scare in Minnesota,” appeared in the Spring 2007 issue of Minnesota History.

intheSouth,”theMinneapolis Tri-bunereported.WilliamR.Morris,alocalblackattorneyandcommunityleader,deliveredtheprincipalad-dress.“Formorethanaquarterofacentury,”Morrisdeclaredangrily

thenegroesofthiscountryhave

beenatthemercyofcertainwhite

citizens,who,goadedbyaninsane

desireforbloodandunprovoked

prejudiceandhatred...have

ruthlesslyandopenly,seemingly

withoutfearofGodorman,

slaughtered,butcheredandmur-

deredthem.

Infact,theAmericanpeople

havebecomesoaccustomedto

theseopenviolationsoflawthat

scarcelyapassingnoticeisgiven

them.Thatsuchanoffenseasthe

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78 Minnesota History

nestlycalluponalllawabidingciti-

zensthecountryovertoassistusin

oureffortstoputastoptothem.

Aftertherally,anotherlocalpapertookupthecauseofcivilrightsbutnotwithoutanoteofambiguity.InearlyJunetheMinneapolis Timeseditorialized,“Thatincommuni-tieswhereallthemachineryandsafeguardsoflawareinforce,poorcreaturesarehurledtodoomwithnoopportunitytobeheardintheirowndefense,isanoutrageagainstcivilizationandhumanity.”ButtheDemocratic-leaningTimesuseditseditorialmainlytocastigatetheRe-publicanPartyforfeigningsympathyfor“thecoloredman”whiledoinglittletodealwithhisplight.

Whenarepublicanorgancallsfor

politicaljusticeforthecoloredman

itinvitesexposureoftheutterhy-

pocrisyoftheattitudesofitsparty

towardthenegro.Therepublicans

haveforthirtyyearsbeenpetting

andcoddlingthenegroforpolitical

purposes.Theybeganbypromis-

inghim“fortyacresandamule,”a

promiseinconnectionwithwhich

theygraciouslytookchargeofhis

smallsavings,andkeptthemso

wellthat,ignorantandconfident

ashewas,helearnedsomethingof

thelessonthatitcostsdearlytobe

coddled.5

a sthedelegatesandtheirretinuesbeganpouringintothecity’s

UnionStationduringthedayslead-inguptotheconvention,prominentAfricanAmericanpoliticalleadersre-ceivedtheirshareofmediaattention.TheMinneapolis TimesreportedonthearrivalofJohnR.Lynch,aMis-sissippidelegatewhohadbeenchair-manoftheRepublicanconvention

butcheryofcitizensshouldbe

allowedtogounpunished...is

simplyincomprehensible.4

FollowingMorris’saddress,whichtheTribune reprintedinitsentirely,rallygoersadoptednumerousresolu-tions.Oneproclaimed:

WetheAfro-AmericansofMinne-

apolis,inmassmeetingassembled,

joinwithAfro-Americansofthe

UnitedStatesandimploreofthe

president,thehonorablesenate,

ourhonorablerepresentativesin

congresstobothenactandenforce

thelawthatjusticemaybefairly

dealtourbrethrenindistress.

Inviewoftherecentheinous

outragesthathavebeenperpe-

trateduponthenegroesofthe

southernstates,wedomostear-

Thomas Nast cartoon, which covered page one of the Twin Cities’ black newspaper,

June 4, 1892, when convention delegates began arriving

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Summer 2008 79

licanNational]committeemenfeltitunwisetoselectabiasedmanforsuchanimportantplace,”theMinne-apolis Tribunereported.7

Theconventionattractedhordesofpoliticaloperativesandhangers-onwholackeddelegatecredentialsbutcametotowntobeapartoftheaction.Theyincludedblackpoliti-cianandeducatorThomasE.Miller,aformerU.S.congressmanfromSouthCarolina,whotoldpoliticalreportersinWashington,D.C.,thathewasgoingtoleadacontingentof700“coloredmen”toMinneapolisto“makethingslively.”8

OneofthemostprominentnondelegatesinMinneapolisdur-ingconventionweekwasthenotedabolitionistFrederickDouglass,whohadcometotowntoparticipateinasuffragerallywithSusanB.Anthony.Douglassreceivedanenthusiasticwelcomewhenhecheckedintothecity’sleadingconventionhotel,theWest,onJune7.“Forseveralhours,hewassurroundedbyagreatcrowdeagertostroketheoldman’shead,”theTribunereportedinaless-thanrespectfultone.“Afterstandingforanhour,heexcusedhimselfforgreetinghisfriendssitting,sayingashetookhisseat,‘Idon’tbelongtotherisinggeneration.’”9

thatnominatedBlaineforpresidentin1884.LynchtoldtheTimesthathethoughtall18delegatesfromMissis-sippiwouldsupporttherenomina-tionofHarrison.Whenasked,“DoyoupredictthatHarrisonwillberenominated?”hereplied,“Idonotpredictthathewillberenominated,butIhopethathewill.”6

Meanwhile,blackRepublicanshopedthatanotherAfricanAmeri-can,JohnM.Langston,aVirginiadelegate,formercongressman,andskilledorator,wouldbenamedtem-porarychairmanoftheMinneapolisconvention.Langstonwaswidelyru-moredtobethefront-runner,butheundercuthisowneffortstogaintheprestigiouspostwhenhedeclaredhisunequivocalsupportforBlaine.InaChicagointerview,theVirginiadel-egatemaintained,“NoonebutBlainewasafriendoftheblackmanintheSouth.”Langston“camesoclosetoabusingHarrisonthatthe[Repub-

DouglasswasnottheonlyAf-ricanAmericantomixfreelywithwhiteconventioneersattheWestHotel,thepoliticalgathering’ssocialcenter.Atonepoint,ablackmanbuttonholedRepublicanNationalCommitteechairmanandBlainesupporter,JamesS.Clarkson,inthelobbyasClarksontriedtomakehiswaytotheExpositionBuilding.ThemanwantedtoknowmoreaboutthestartlingnewsfromWashingtonthatBlainehadsuddenlyresignedhispostasSecretaryofState.“Callupandseemethisafternoon,”thechair-mantoldtheunnamedbutpersistentquestioner.“I’llbehangedifIknow,”Clarksondisingenuouslyconcluded,strugglingtofreehimselfandpro-ceedtotheconvention.10

Mississippi delegate John R. Lynch

Frederick Douglass, about 1885John M. Langston of Virginia:

delegate, former congressman,

and skilled orator

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80 Minnesota History

Butracialharmonywasnotthewatchwordallovertownduringcon-ventionweek.AttheNicolletHouseonWashingtonAvenue,a“coloredman”fromLouisianagotinafightwitha“long-hairedlilywhite”fromMississippi,accordingtoareportintheJournal.“ThelatterinformedtheformerthatifhehadhiminMissis-sippihewouldmakehimblackhisbootsortakeadoseofcoldlead.TheLouisiananpromptlyhitthegentle-manfromMississippiasoundingwhackwithacane,andtherewasarow.Forafewmomentsitseemedasifthethingwasgoingtobegeneral,butsomeonepulledthecoloredmanoffandthecrowdsoughtnewexcitement.”

o ntheSundaybeforetheconven-tionopened,blackdelegates

andtheirsupportersgatheredatBethesdaBaptistChurchonSouthEighthStreettodiscussthecrisisfacingAfricanAmericansinthe

southernstates.AndrewHillier,aUniversityofMinnesotagraduateandresidentofWashington,D.C.,chairedthemeeting.HilliertoldthegroupthathewaspleasedtoseeintheaudiencesomanywhitepeoplewhomightnotbefullyfamiliarwithconditionsintheSouth.Hethende-clared,asparaphrasedinthenews-paper:“Therewasonlyonequestiontobeplacedinthe[RepublicanParty]platformtobeformulatedthisweek,whichwouldbeofseriousimporttothecoloredpeopleoftheUnitedStates,andthatwastohavetherightofAmericancitizenshipex-tendedtoallpersons.”11

Theworkoftheconventionbeganinearnestafteropeningday—Mon-day,June6.ManyAfricanAmericandelegatessoongrewincreasinglyun-easyasreportsreachedthemaboutcredentialdisputesbetweenmulti-racialandall-whitedelegationsfromcertainsouthernstates.Theiruneasinessonlyintensifiedwhentheylearnedthatthecredentials

Pomp and circumstance: delegates parading up Nicollet Avenue, 1892

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Summer 2008 81

committeehadresolvedakeydisputebyseatinganall-whiteAlabamadel-egationinplaceofamixeddelega-tionofblacksandwhites.12

“Thereistroublewiththecoloreddelegates,”theMinneapolis Timesreported.“Theyaretalkingthemat-teroveramongthemselvesandthinkthattheyhavethebalanceofpowerinthisconvention....Therewaslotsoftalkaboutthewaythecoloreddelegateswerebeingignoredbytheconvention,andsomethoughtthesentimentwastofreezethemoutentirely.”

TheTimeswentontotellofa“massmeeting”of“Afro-Americansofthenorthwest,”whichdrewupsev-eralresolutionstobesenttothecre-dentialscommitteeprotesting“theseatingofthesocalled‘LilyWhite’republicans”fromAlabama.“Re-solved,thatiftherepublicannationalconventionrecognizesawhiteman’srepublicanparty,itwillmeetwithastrongprotestfrom4,000,000ofAfro-AmericanvotersoftheUnitedStates.”Thearticlethenreportedaboutapossibleconventionwalkoutbyblackdelegates.“Thisrumorwasverifiedbyseveralparties,whosaidthattherewasadangerofsomesuchmove...andthataplanwasonfoottohaveallthecoloreddelegatesuniteonsomeoneman.”

Meanwhile,theMinneapolis JournalcommentedontheleveragethattheAfricanAmericandelegatescouldexertiftheycametogetherinasinglevotingbloc.“The100oddcol-oreddelegatestothe...conventionclearlyholdthebalanceofpower.Iftheyvoteasaunit,theymaybeabletonamethenominee.”13

OnJune8blackdelegatescau-cusedtodeterminethebestcourseofactiontofollowduringtheremainingdaysoftheconvention.“Therewasanundercurrentinfavorofdropping

RussellA.Alger.Butunityprovedtobeelusive,withpriorcommitmentstyingsomedelegatestocandidatesthattheydidnotenthusiasticallysupport.Intheend,theboomletforAlgernevergainedmomentum,andhisnamewasnotputinnomination.

Theblackdelegatesmayhavebeensplitontheircandidateprefer-ences,buttheydidcometogethertoendorseastronglywordedresolutionthattheysubmittedtotheconven-tion’splatformcommittee.Itcalleduponthepartytoguaranteethepro-tectionof“lives,liberty,andrights”ofallcitizens.Inpart,theresolutionread:“TheRepublicanPartyregardstheapparentincreaseoflynchingsofAfro-AmericansintheSouthwithgreatalarm.Lynchlawistheshame,disgraceandhorroroftheciviliza-tionofourcommoncountryandtheRepublicanPartypledgesitselftodoallinitspowertowipethefoulblotfromtheescutcheonofthenation.”

b lackdelegatesleftMinneapolisunsureoftheirfutureroleinthe

RepublicanParty.Theironlysolacewasarathertepidandindirectcon-demnationoflynchingwrittenintothepartyplatform:“Wedenouncethecontinuedinhumanoutragesper-petrateduponAmericancitizensforpoliticalreasonsincertainSouthernStatesoftheUnion.”Buttherewasnofollow-uppledgetoactagainstthese“outrages.”14

Inmanyways,theMinneapolisconventionwasaforeshadowingofevenmoredifficultdaysaheadforAfricanAmericans,astheirrighttovotewassystematicallystrippedawayallovertheSouth.Theywouldneedtowaitforgenerations—wellintothenextcentury—beforecorrec-tiveactionwastakentorestorethoserights. a

bothBlaineandHarrison,”theJour-nalreported.Somecaucusattendeesurgedtheirfellowblackdelegatestocoalescearoundadark-horsecan-didate,formerMichiganGovernor

Keepsake ribbon from

Pillsbury Company

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82 Minnesota History

Notes1.Minneapolis Journal,June2,1892,

p.4;Minneapolis Tribune,June4,1892,p.1.Ontheconvention,seeIricNathanson,“‘Theballothasbeenfoughtandwon’:The1892RepublicanConvention,”Hennepin History65(Fall2006):16–29.

2.Forlynchings,seeLibraryofCon-gress,TimeLineofAfricanAmericanHis-tory,1881–1900:http://lcweb2.loc.gov/ammem/aap/timelin2.html(accessedMar.31,2008).In1885theMinnesotacensuscounted673blacksinMinneapolisandSt.Anthony.Theirnumbersdoubledby1895;DavidV.Taylor,African Americans in Min-nesota(St.Paul:MinnesotaHistoricalSoci-etyPress,2002),17.

3.NoAfricanAmericanswereincludedinMinnesota’sdelegation,despitethebesteffortsoflocalblackstosecureaslotforFredrickL.McGhee,aprominentSt.PaulattorneyandmemberofthestateRepubli-canCentralCommittee.StateRepublicanleadersinsteadappointedhimanat-largepresidentialelector,denyinghimaroleinshapingpolicybutauthorizinghimtocastoneofthestate’selectoralvotesinNovem-ber.EventhathonorwasrescindedafterafirestormofprotestfromScandinavianRe-publicans,whocomplainedthattheirlargeethniccommunitywasdeniedrepresenta-tion.ASwedishAmericanwasappointedinhisplace.SeePaulD.Nelson,Fredrick L. McGhee, A Life on the Color Line, 1861–1912

(St.Paul:MinnesotaHistoricalSocietyPress,2002),35–36.

4.Hereandbelow,Minneapolis Tri-bune,June1,1892,p.5.The Appeal,theTwinCities’AfricanAmericanweeklynews-paper,reportedontheeventinbothcities;seeJune4,1892,p.5,8.

5.Minneapolis Times,June2,1892,p.4.6.Minneapolis Times,June4,1892,p.2.7.Minneapolis Tribune,June4,1892,

p.1,quotingJamesS.Clarkson,chairmanoftheRepublicanNationalCommittee,assayingthatLangstonwas“probablythebesttalkerwewillhave.”Atemporarychairactsuntilacommittee,assembledattheconven-tion,choosesapermanentchair.J.SloatFassettofNewYorkwasnamedtemporarychair;OhiogovernorWilliamMcKinleytookthepermanentpost.

8.Minneapolis Journal,June2,1892,p.7.FormoreonMiller,seeAfricanAmericanVoicesinCongress,www.avoiceonline.org/cbc/bios19th.html(accessedMar.4,2008).

9.Minneapolis Tribune,June8,1892,p.7.

10.Hereandbelow,Minneapolis Jour-nal,June8,1892,p.6.

11.Minneapolis Tribune,June6,1892,p.5.

12.Hereandtwoparagraphsbelow,Minneapolis Times,June10,1892,p.3.

13.Hereandtwoparagraphsbelow,Minneapolis Journal,June9,1892,p.2.

HarrisonretainedsignificantsupportinMinnesota’sAfricanAmericancommunity.The Appealeditorializedthathehad“ablyandsatisfactorilyperformedhisduties”;June4,1892,p.2.

14.The1892DemocraticPartyplatform,adoptedlaterthatyearinChicago,madenoreferencetoracialatrocitiesintheSouth.Rather,itmaintainedthatracialantago-nismsintheUnitedStateshad“happilyabated.”Forbothpartyplatforms,seeAmericanPresidencyProject,www.presi-dency.ucsb.edu/platforms.psp(accessedMar.6,2008).

ForadiscussionoftheRepublicanPartyanditsambivalentattitudestowardAfricanAmericansduringthelaternineteenthcen-tury,seeStanleyP.Hirshson,Farewell to the Bloody Shirt: Northern Republicans and the Southern Negro, 1877–1893(Bloomington:IndianaUniversityPress,1962);JoelWil-liamson,The Crucible of Race: Black-White Relations in the American South since Emancipation(NewYork:OxfordUniver-sityPress,1984);J.MorganKousser,The Shaping of Southern Politics: Suffrage Re-striction and the Establishment of the One-Party South, 1880–1910(NewHaven:YaleUniversityPress,1974);VincentP.DeSan-tis,Republicans Face the Southern Ques-tion—The New Departure Years, 1877–1897(Baltimore:JohnsHopkinsUniversityPress,1959).

Conventioneers inside Exposition Hall, from TheAppeal, June 11, 1892

All illustrations are from MHS collections. Object photography by Eric Mortenson/MHS.

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