Heather Cox Richardson writing on her Letters from an American substack reminds us that February 12th was the birthday of Lincoln and the NAACP.
"The spark for the organization of the NAACP was a race riot in
Springfield, Illinois, on August 14 and 15, 1908. The violence broke out
after the sheriff transferred two Black prisoners, one accused of
murder and another of rape, to a different town out of concern for their
safety.
"Furious that they had been prevented from
vengeance against the accused, a mob of white townspeople looted
businesses and burned homes in Springfield’s Black neighborhood. They
lynched two Black men and ran most of the Black population out of town.
At least eight people died, more than 70 were injured, and at least $3
million of damage in today’s money was done before 3,700 state militia
troops quelled the riot.
"When he and his wife
visited Springfield days later, journalist William English Walling found
white citizens outraged that their Black neighbors had forgotten 'their
place.' Walling claimed he had heard a dozen times: 'Why, [they] came
to think they were as good as we are!'
"'If these
outrages had happened thirty years ago…, what would not have happened in
the North?' wrote Walling. 'Is there any doubt that the whole country
would have been aflame?'"
The NAACP was born in 1909, and issued a letter.
"The call continued, 'Silence under these conditions means tacit
approval,' and it warned that permitting the destruction of Black rights
would destroy rights for everyone. 'Hence,' it said, 'we call upon all
the believers in democracy to join in a national conference for the
discussion of present evils, the voicing of protests, and the renewal of
the struggle for civil and political liberty.'
"A
group of sixty people, Black and white, signed the call, prominent
reformers all, and the next year an interracial group of 300 men and
women met to create a permanent organization. After a second meeting in
May 1910, they adopted a formal name, and the NAACP was born, although
they settled on the centennial of Lincoln’s birth as their actual
beginning."
The NAACP brought racial injustice to the public's attention.
"In 1946 it was NAACP leader White who brought the story of World
War II veteran Isaac Woodard, blinded by a police officers after talking
back to a bus driver, to President Harry S. Truman. Afterward, Truman
convened the President’s Committee on Civil Rights, directly asking its
members to find ways to use the federal government to strengthen the
civil rights of racial and religious minorities in the country.
"Truman
later said, 'When a Mayor and City Marshal can take a… Sergeant off a
bus in South Carolina, beat him up and put out… his eyes, and nothing is
done about it by the State authorities, something is radically wrong
with the system.' And that is what the NAACP had done, and would
continue to do: highlight that the inequalities in American society were
systemic rather than the work of a few bad apples, bearing witness
until 'the believers in democracy' could no longer remain silent."
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