|
---|
- April – June
- Morgan County, WV (April 10)
- Jenkins, GA (April 13)
- Sylvester, Georgia (April 14)
- Pickens, Mississippi (May 5)
- Philadelphia (May 9)
- Charleston, SC (May 10)
- Sylvester, Georgia (May 10)
- El Dorado, Arkansas (May 21)
- Milan, Georgia (May 26)
- Putnam County, GA (May 27–28)
- New London, CT (May 30)
- Monticello, Mississippi (May 31)
- Macon, MS (June 7)
- Memphis, Tennessee (June 13)
- Bibb County, Alabama (June 18)
- (June 27)
- Macon, Mississippi (June 27)
- New London, CT (June 29)
- July
- Bisbee, AZ (July 3)
- Dublin, Georgia riot (July 6)
- Philadelphia (July 7)
- Coatesville, PA (July 8)
- Tuscaloosa, Alabama (July 9)
- Longview, TX (July 10–12)
- Baltimore (July 11)
- Garfield Park, IN (July 14)
- Port Arthur, TX (July 15)
- Louise, Mississippi (July 15)
- Washington D.C. (July 19–24)
- New York City (July 20)
- Norfolk, VA (July 21)
- New Orleans, Louisiana (July 23)
- Darby, PA (July 23)
- Newberry, SC (July 24)
- Hobson City, Alabama (July 26)
- Chicago (July 27–August 3)
- Newberry, South Carolina (July 28)
- Bloomington, Illinois (July 31)
- Philadelphia (July 31)
- Syracuse, NY (July 31)
- August – November
- Whatley, AL (August 1)
- Lincoln, Arkansas (August 3)
- Hattiesburg, Mississippi (August 4)
- Texarkana, Texas riot of 1919 (August 6)
- New York City (August 21)
- Austin, TX (August 22)
- Laurens County, GA (August 27–29)
- Knoxville (August 30–31)
- Bogalusa, Louisiana (August 31)
- Clarksdale, Mississippi (September 10)
- Omaha (September 28–29)
- Montgomery, Alabama (September 29)
- Elaine, AR (September 30–October 1)
- Baltimore (October 1–2)
- Corbin, KY (October 31)
- Macon, Georgia (November 2)
- Ocoee, FL (November 2–3)
- Magnolia, Arkansas (November 11)
- Wilmington, DE (November 13)
- Bogalusa, LA (November 22)
|
The Annapolis riot of 1919 took place on June 27, 1919, between midnight and 1 AM, in Annapolis, Maryland. A mob of African-American bluejackets from the U.S. Navy fought local Annapolis African-Americans.
Riot
The United States Naval Academy was founded in 1845 on the site of Fort Severn, and occupied an area of land reclaimed from the Severn River next to the Chesapeake Bay. In the summer of 1919 about 40 African-American bluejackets from the U.S. Navy, "the majority of them in training to be mess attendants" and attached to the training ship USS Cumberland, brawled with twice that number of local black residents. There was no white involvement in the riot.
The troubles started on July 22. According to The Washington Times, the issue was that the "jackies" had been "molesting a number of colored women". On the night of June 27 the local black community were "lying in wait" on Acton Lane, a short thoroughfare leading from West street, for the Navy men, who were described as the aggressors. Some of the combatants were armed with handguns and there were considerable shooting and throwing of bricks and other missiles; at one point it threatened to expand into a larger riot. Two people were later treated for minor gunshot wounds. Several windows were broken and there were other minor damage. The Navy men realizing they were outnumbered, withdrew. Two men were arrested with difficulty by a policeman who happened to be on the scene, "whose own life was in jeopardy." They were turned over to the Naval authorities, who sent a provost guard into the city when informed of the troubles, and promised a full investigation, for which reason the city police took no action.
There were instances of the white mobs of US Navy men attacking local black communities like during the New London Naval riots of 1919. The
Annapolis riot is commonly described as part of the Red Summer disturbances of 1919, but it is quite different from the white against black rioting that was the usual pattern.
See also
References
|
---|
|
|
|
|
|
July |
---|
- Bisbee, Arizona (July 3)
- Dublin, Georgia (July 6)
- Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (July 7)
- Coatesville, Pennsylvania (July 8)
- Tuscaloosa, Alabama (July 9)
- Longview, Texas (July 10–12)
- Baltimore, Maryland (July 11)
- Garfield Park riot of 1919 (July 14)
- Port Arthur, Texas (July 15)
- Louise, Mississippi (July 15)
- Washington, D.C. (July 19–24)
- New York City, New York (July 20)
- Norfolk, Virginia (July 21)
- New Orleans, Louisiana (July 23)
- Darby, Pennsylvania (July 23)
- Gilmer, Texas (July 24)
- Newberry, SC (July 24)
- Hobson City, Alabama (July 26)
- Chicago, Illinois (July 27–Aug 3)
- Newberry, South Carolina (July 28)
- Bloomington, Illinois (July 31)
- Syracuse, New York (July 31)
- Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (July 31)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Categories |
---|
- Red Summer
- Riots and civil disorder in the United States
- White American riots in the United States
- Racially motivated violence against African Americans
|
|
|
---|
|
---|
Before 1900 | |
---|
1900–1940 | |
---|
After 1940 | |
---|
|
|
Multiple victims |
---|
- Death of Joseph Smith (Joseph Smith, Hyrum Smith) (1844)
- Marais des Cygnes, KS, massacre (1858)
- Great Hanging at Gainesville, TX (1862)
- New York City draft riots (1863)
- Detroit race riot (1863)
- ? Lachenais and four others (1863)
- Fort Pillow, TN, massacre (1864)
- Plummer Gang (1864)
- Memphis massacre (1866)
- Gallatin County, KY, race riot (1866)
- New Orleans massacre of 1866
- Reno Brothers Gang (1868)
- Camilla, GA, massacre (1868)
- Steve Long and two half-brothers (1868)
- Pulaski, TN, riot (1868)
- Samuel Bierfield and Lawrence Bowman (1868)
- Opelousas, LA, massacre (1868)
- Bear River City riot (1868)
- Chinese massacre of 1871
- Meridian, MS, race riot (1871)
- Colfax, LA, massacre (1873)
- Election riot of 1874 (AL)
- Juan, Antonio, and Marcelo Moya (1874)
- Benjamin and Mollie French (1876)
- Ellenton, SC, riot (1876)
- Hamburg, SC, massacre (1876)
- Thibodeax, LA, massacre (1878)
- Mart and Tom Horrell (1878)
- Nevlin Porter and Johnson Spencer (1879)
- Elijah Frost, Abijah Gibson, Tom McCracken (1879)
- T.J. House, James West, John Dorsey (1880)
- New Orleans 1891 lynchings (1891)
- Ruggles Brothers (CA) (1892)
- Thomas Moss, Henry Stewart, Calvin McDowell (TN) (1892)
- Porter and Spencer (MS) (1897)
- Phoenix, SC, election riot (1898)
- Wilmington, NC, insurrection (1898)
- Julia and Frazier Baker (1898)
- Pana, IL, riot (1899)
- Watkinsville lynching (1905)
- 1906 Atlanta race massacre
- Kemper County, MS (1906)
- Walker family (1908)
- Springfield race riot of 1908
- Slocum, TX, massacre (1910)
- Laura and L.D. Nelson (1911)
- Harris County, GA, lynchings (1912)
- Newberry, FL, lynchings (1916)
- East St. Louis, IL, riots (1917)
- Lynching rampage in Brooks County, GA (1918)
- Jenkins County, GA, riot (1919)
- Longview, TX, race riot (1919)
- Elaine, AR, race riot (1919)
- Omaha race riot of 1919
- Knoxville riot of 1919
- Red Summer (1919)
- Duluth, MN, lynchings (1920)
- Ocoee, FL, massacre (1920)
- Tulsa race massacre (1921)
- Perry, FL, race riot (1922)
- Rosewood, FL, massacre (1923)
- Jim and Mark Fox (1927)
- Thomas Shipp and Abram Smith (1930)
- Tate County, MS (1932)
- Thomas Harold Thurmond and John M. Holmes (1933)
- Roosevelt Townes and Robert McDaniels (1937)
- Beaumont, TX, Race Riot (1943)
- O'Day Short, wife, and two children (1945)
- Moore's Ford, GA, lynchings (1946)
- Harry and Harriette Moore (1952)
- Anniston, AL (1961)
- Freedom Summer Murders (James Chaney, Andrew Goodman, Michael Schwerner) (1964)
- Henry Hezekiah Dee and Charles Eddie Moore (1964)
|
|
General | |
---|
Anti-lynching movement |
|
---|
Defenders of lynching | |
---|
Memory | |
---|
Related articles | |
---|
Categories |
- Lynching in the United States
- Lynching deaths in the United States
|
---|
|