Post card of the lynching referenced by Dylan. |
Ida B. Wells and the Black press including W.E.B. Du Bois’s The Crisis and
the Chicago
Daily Defender had long exposed lynching
as a brutal tool of oppression in the Jim
Crow South. Later Billie Holiday would write and sing
about the Strange Fruit she witnessed dangling from lamp posts and
bridges on her tours of the South.
Lynchings were a terrible thing, civilized people agreed, but they were
a Southern thing.
That’s
why much of the nation was shocked to learn that on June 15, 1920 that three Black
circus workers were dragged from a Duluth, Minnesota jail, beaten, and hung by a howling mob of as many as
1,500 Citizens.
The
busy Lake Superior port and
principle city of the Iron Range,
with a tiny Black population of its own, seemed like the last place in the
country to expect such an outrage. It
was a city of hard working immigrants, most of them Finnish, Norwegian, Swede, and German. Many of them, especially the Finns, were Socialists, Wobblies, and now Communists with roots in the labor and union movements. It was not
that violence itself was unexpected there, it was just that it was not
associated with the epic battles that had long raged across the Iron range.
During
the World War “decent citizens” had
been worked up into a frenzy of patriotism
and had come to view the immigrant radicals, most of them opposed to the war,
as threats. The refusal of workers to
abide by patriotic calls for labor peace and keeping the flow of vital taconite ore to the freighters and down
to the steel mills of Gary and Chicago stoked more outrage.
In
September of 1919 a young Finish immigrant, Olli Kinkkonen, thought by a mob to be a Draft dodger, was beaten, tarred and feathered, and lynched in a
downtown park. No one was ever charged
or tried for that murder. So violence
and lynching were not unknown in Duluth.
1919
had also been a year when race riots
erupted in Chicago and in other Midwestern
cities where waves of Blacks from the south had poured into the cities to take
war time jobs. Although Duluth, with
only a handful of Blacks residents, had escaped the rioting, they had not
escaped the nation hysteria that followed.
So
the stage was set for the unexpected.
The
circus was in town. On June 14 the James Robinson Circus, a mid-sized
traveling show, rolled into town. As
always, the arrival of the circus stirred local excitement. Two young people, Irene Tusken, 19, and James
Sullivan, 18 were among the many who came down to the grounds where the
show was being set up to watch the excitement.
The Circus encouraged that—it was good for ticket sales. By design or otherwise Tusken and Sullivan,
who had arrived separately, got together on the grounds. They drifted around to the relative isolation
of an area behind the big top. A gang of Black roustabouts was unloading the menagerie
tent nearby.
What
happened next is a matter of confusion and controversy. There may—or may not—have been some kind of confrontation
between Sullivan and some of the roustabouts.
Later that evening police received a call from Sullivan’s father
claiming that his son had been attacked and robbed. The boy was questioned and told police that
five or six of the workers attacked and robbed him and then raped Tusken as he
was held at gun point. Tusken seemed frightened and confused,
but generally went along with Sullivan’s story.
All
150 Black workers from the circus were rounded up and lined up against the
railroad tracks. Sullivan was brought
there to identify the alleged assailants.
He identified six and said a few others might have been involved. The six were taken to jail.
Overnight
rumors flew around town, including reports that Tusken had been murdered. In fact the story of the rape fell apart almost
immediately. A doctor examining her the
next morning could find no physical
evidence of assault—bruising, scratches, abrasions—or rape—semen.
Local
newspaper reports sensationalized the charges, rumors ran rampant. Through the day of the 15th a crowd grew around
the jail until it became a mob of more than 1,000. An attack on the jail was expected. Authorities ordered deputies, guards, and police
on the scene not to resist an attack with firearms.
When
the mob moved on the jail, police fought back as best they could with fire hoses and truncheons. But they were
vastly outnumbered and after a vicious melee in which men on both sides were
injured they were overwhelmed. In fact
the resistance had only inflamed the mob who managed to seize three men—Elias Clayton, Elmer Jackson, and Isaac
McGhie. They were beaten inside the
jail and then hauled to the street where they were put on sham trial.
They
were taken to the center of town, the corner of 1st Street and 2nd Avenue
East where they were beaten again and hung from a lamp pole. The mob posed for pictures with the bodies
which were published in the press and later sold souvenir post cards.
The
three other men suspected in the rape were still in the jail. A shifting mob kept up a presence outside,
threatening a new attack. But it was not
until the next morning that National
Guard troops arrived to secure the jail and its prisoners who were moved to
the St. Louis County Jail under
heavy guard
As
the rape case against the victims evaporated over the next few days, the mob
action drew national headlines. Most
were condemning. Some Southern papers,
however, openly gloated that Yankees
were now awakening to the threat to white
womanhood and were taking vigorous “corrective action.”
But
next door in Superior, Wisconsin the
local police chief pledged that, “We
are going to run all idle Negroes out of Superior and they’re going to stay
out.” How many were actually rousted and
deported is not certain, but all of the blacks employed by a carnival visiting
the city were fired and told to leave the city.
A
Grand Jury was empaneled on June 17,
but despite loads of evidence including photographs
and the open boasts of ringleaders, the jury had a hard time brining
indictments. After a struggle, 37 were
indicted for participating in the lynching, 25 for rioting, and 12 for first
degree murder. Several were indicted on
multiple charges. In the end only three
were convicted of rioting.
Of
the Blacks suspected in the alleged rape and assault, the three survivors from
the jail and four others were indicted for rape, but the charges against all
but two were dropped. William
Miller was acquitted and Max Mason
was convicted and sentenced to serve seven to thirty years in prison. Amid growing public outrage, Mason was
released from prison after only four years on the proviso that he leave
Minnesota and never return. Somehow I
suspect he was never tempted to violate that provision.
Like
many places after such a shameful atrocity, Duluth tried hard to forget it ever
happened. Willful amnesia it’s
called. But nagging reminders kept
popping up.
In
1965 Duluth born Bob Dylan, whose
father was five years old and living two blocks from the lynching in 1920
opened his song Desolation Row with a reference to that awful night:
They’re
selling postcards of the hanging
They’re
painting the passports brown
The
beauty parlor is filled with sailors
The
circus is in town
The Duluth memorial. |
In
2003, after a long public campaign, a stunning monument to the three lynching
victims was unveiled—a plaza including three seven-foot-tall bronze statues of
the across the street from the site of the lynchings. The Clayton Jackson McGhie Memorial was designed and sculpted by Carla J. Stetson, in collaboration with
Anthony Peyton-Porter, a California based Black writer who had
taken an interest in the case.
At
the dedication Warren Read, the
great-grandson of one of the most prominent leaders of the lynch mob told the
crowd:
It was a long held family secret, and its
deeply buried shame was brought to the surface and unraveled. We will never
know the destinies and legacies these men would have chosen for themselves if
they had been allowed to make that choice. But I know this: their existence,
however brief and cruelly interrupted, is forever woven into the fabric of my
own life. My son will continue to be raised in an environment of tolerance,
understanding and humility, now with even more pertinence than before.
Read
has since written The Lyncher in Me, a memoir of his family and of his own search
for reconciliation with the decedents of Elmer Jackson.
Wow, I never knew there was such a horrible and real explanation of that powerful Dylan stanza! Thanks...as always. (And happy Bloomsday.)
ReplyDeleteDisgusting acts like this has only sown the seeds of tomorrow. This country will continue to reap what it has sown. When will all men remember to love the neighbor as thyself. Where are the remembrance of the great Lord. Instead of idols being erected. Erect a monument of the ten commandments on these spots. There shall be no idols. My God have mercy on their souls. The bible tells us if we live by these laws ALL men can be happy on this great Earth. Do you believe.
ReplyDeleteamerica is ablaze and sinking after having been torpedoed by racism! There have been many opportunities to do the right thing and time after time after time...she has chosen to look the other way while human beings were sold...she chose to look the other way when millions were being held in bondage.. she chose to look the other way when countless young black men were falsely accused, lynched and murdered! ....there is an element in this country that doesn't want to see any type of racial harmony....they are extremely threatened by it and will stop at nothing to make sure it never happens. this countries obsession with white and everything that it entails...will be the death of it. Its just that simple...you cant escape your karmic debt...no matter how many you lynch...or prop up as successful in a white mans world..as someone once said "the mark of a moral universe is long...but it bends towards justice".america has lost its moral center and god help these people when that day of retribution comes around because no one else can and nothing will..
ReplyDeletejonathan opey 5/30/2021.