A Few Red Drops

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A Few Red Drops Page 14

by Claire Hartfield


  Chicago River docks, 65–67

  Christiana Resistance, 23

  Clarke, Dorothy, 9

  Colored Men’s Library Association, 32

  Consumers Ice Company, 7

  Cour, Jan, 9

  Crawford, James, 140

  Culinary Alliance, strike by, 31

  D

  Democratic Party, 39, 51

  Dichter, Elsie, 9

  Dismond, Binga, 80

  Donnelly, Michael, 68, 69, 74

  Drake, St. Clair, 29–30

  Dunbar, Paul Lawrence, 3

  E

  “Economically Dispossessed,” 30, 61

  Efficiency Clubs, 105, 155–156

  Eighth Infantry Regiment, 79–83, 127, 129

  F

  Ferguson, Missouri, race violence in, 168, 169

  Fifteenth Amendment, 25

  Fifty-Fifth Street beach, 12

  Firemen, black, 62

  Fitzgerald, John, 124–125, 138–139

  Fitzgerald, Joseph, 59

  Fitzpatrick, John, 121

  Ford, Henry, 47

  Foster, William Z., 121, 124

  Fourteenth Amendment, 25

  Freer, L. C., 19

  G

  Gangs, 57–58, 109, 136, 168–169

  Gleeson, Ann, 8

  Glick, Frieda, 9

  Great Gate of the Union Stock Yard, 71, 136, 143, 144, 167

  Great Migration, 85–106

  H

  Harris, John Turner, 1, 5–6, 7, 10–12, 86, 140, 160, 165

  Harrison family, 133–134

  Henderson, Mr., as railroad worker, 89–90, 94–96

  Henneberry, Bernice, 8

  Highbinders (Chinese tongs), 57

  Hill, T. Arnold, 100–101, 104, 106, 137–138, 150, 163

  Holy Cross parish, 52

  Horton, Robert, 90–91, 94, 96, 98, 115

  Hudlun family, 24

  Hughes, Langston, 100

  Hunter, Mrs., 90, 93, 94

  I

  “I Am the People, the Mob” (Sandburg), 170

  Illinois and Michigan Canal, 36

  Illinois Central Railroad, 89, 94, 97–106

  Immigrants: access to American dream, 75; bad blood between black migrants and, 6; Chicago dock jobs for, 65–67; clash between black migrants and, 1, 6, 10–11, 121–127, 135; gangs of, 57–58; German, 35; Lithuanian, 35; Pole, 35; property owners’ protective associations and, 109; in World War I, 79

  Irish: in Chicago, 35, 37; in Democratic Party, 39; desire for share of new wealth, 39; English Protestants detest for Catholics, 36–37; fellowship among cattle butchers, 40; growth of numbers in America, 37; jobs for, 37, 39; lumping of with blacks, 37, 38; opposition to Thompson, “Big Bill,” 130; poverty of, 39; Ragen’s Colts as protector of, 58–59; “social athletic clubs” of, 5758; ties between politicians and gangs, 55–59; work of, for the railroads, 36

  “Irish confetti,” 59

  Irish Justice of the Stockyards District Police Court, 72

  Irish Seventh Regiment, 81

  Isbel, Lewis, 20

  J

  Jackson, A. L., 100–101, 104, 105, 122, 130, 132

  Johnson, Charles S., 89, 163

  Johnson, Jack, 115

  Jones, John, 17–20, 21, 23, 25, 60, 85

  Jones, Mary Richardson, 18, 19, 20, 22, 32–33

  Joyce, John T., 40–41, 43, 48, 121

  K

  Kaztauskis, Anatanas, 45–48

  Keeley beer brewery, 7

  Kikulski, John, 121, 123, 135, 137, 159, 165

  King, Martin Luther, Jr., 169

  L

  Labor Party, 131

  Lagstrom, Helen, 8

  Lane, Virginia, 9

  Lewis brothers, 67

  “Liberty bond” campaign, 80

  Lincoln, Abraham, 20, 25

  Local 554, 123

  Local 651, 123, 137–138

  Los Angeles, 1992 riot in, 168

  M

  Maloney, John, 59

  Martin family, 91–92

  Mayoral elections, 115, 130–132

  McDowell, Mary, 75, 157

  McKay, Claude, 119

  McKinley, William, 34

  Militia, in Chicago race riot, 151, 160

  Morine, Ruth, 8

  Morris, Nelson, 42

  Murderers (Polish gang), 57

  N

  National Association of Colored People (NAACP), 34

  National Urban League, 98

  Negro Amateur Baseball Team, 105

  Negro Fellowship League, 64, 100, 113

  Negro League’s American Giants, 58

  Nelson, Cleona, 8

  New York City, 86, 168

  Nowak, Albert, 59

  O

  Obama, Barack, 167, 168

  O’Donnell, Winifred, 8

  Ogden, William B., 24–25

  Ohlin, Gertrude, 8

  Olivet Baptist Church, 64, 111, 143

  P

  Packingtown: Black Belt and, 65–67, 136, 143; boarding houses in, 45; boundaries of, 49; Catholic churches in, 52; in Chicago race riot, 157, 158–159; children in, 54, 55, 56; Davis Square Park gathering in, 124; Democratic Irish “bosses” in, 51; disease and illnesses in, 55; disillusionment in summer of 1904, 74; firemen in, 51; gangs in, 57–58, 109; growth of, 35–36; hope for jobs in Union Stock Yard, 67; immigrants in, 75; Joyce, John, as member of, 40; lifestyle in, 50, 55; living conditions in, 50, 52–55; police of, 51, 59–60; rally around strikers, 72–74; saloons in, 50–51, 54; unemployed in, 51; women in, 52, 55–57; youth in, 57

  Parker, Richard E., 122

  Patriotism, 79, 82

  Police: black, 62, 63; in Black Belt, 113–114; in Chicago race riot, 145–146, 149, 150, 153–154, 157; strikebreakers and, 72, 73

  Private security guards, 148–149

  Property owners’ property associations, 109

  Pryor, Edward, 81

  Public transportation workers, strike by, 148, 154–155

  Q

  Quinn Chapel, 23, 31, 64

  R

  Race, 7, 10, 49–50

  Race riots, 166, 168–169

  Ragen, Frank, 58, 59, 60

  Ragen’s Colts, 58–60, 109, 132, 136, 141–142, 165, 168

  Railroads, immigrant construction of, 36

  “Red Summer,” 161, 169

  Refined, 29, 32, 61, 64

  Refrigerated railcar, 42–43

  Republican Party, 25, 34, 130

  Respectables, 30, 32, 60–61, 64

  Riffraff, 30, 61, 111

  S

  St. Bridget parish, 52

  St. Mary of Perpetual Help parish, 52

  Sandburg, Carl, 169, 170

  Schools, segregated, 62–63

  Sisters Home Mission, 91

  Slavery, 23, 24–25

  So Sos (Italian gang), 57

  South: black population in, 86; cotton in, 85–86; schools in, 92

  South Carolina, race disturbances in, 161

  State Street “Stroll,” 64

  Stauber, George, 140, 141, 163

  Steam locomotives, 36

  Stockyards Aid Society, 72

  Stockyards Labor Council, 121, 122–123

  Streetcars, 60–61, 100

  Strikebreakers, 69–75

  Strikers, 31, 71–75, 148, 154–155

  Stuart, Louise, 8

  Sweitzer, Robert, 131, 132

  Swift, Gustavus Franklin, 41–45, 42, 48, 67–68

  Swift, Louis, 68, 74, 84, 101, 104, 121–122, 124, 132, 137, 151

  Swift & Company, 41, 69, 86, 149, 167

  Swift Premiums, 105, 106

  T

  Thirteenth Amendment, 25

  Thompson, “Big Bill,” 115, 116, 127, 130–132, 131, 134, 143, 146, 151–152, 165

  Tongs, 57

  Torpedoes (Italian gang), 57

  Travelers Aid Society, 98

  Tri-Street Athletic Club, 58

  Tuberculosis, 108

  Turtle, as Supe
rintendent of Police, 67

  Twenty-Ninth Street beach, 7, 10–11, 13, 140, 167

  Twenty-Sixth Street beach, 1, 5–6, 7, 12, 126, 167

  Twigglies (black gang), 57

  U

  Underground Railroad, 19

  Unions, 68–75, 123, 136, 137–138

  Union Stock Yard, 76–77; black workers in, 84, 104, 143; children in, 70; “disassembly” line in, 47; divide and conquer tactics in, 67–68; domination of, by Armour, Philip, and Morris, Nelson, 42; finding uses for all animal parts as problem in, 43; inspection of cattle carcasses in, 44; jobs in, 67, 102, 132; morning “shapeup” at, 46–47; need for workers in, 84; 1904 strike against, 69–74, 125; opening of, 39, 41; pecking order in, 104; strikebreakers and, 69–73; unskilled immigrants in, 35, 45–47; women in, 68, 84; working conditions in, 47–49, 48

  United States Employment Service, 128

  Urban League, 98, 99, 100, 102–105, 108–111, 110–111, 138, 150, 155

  V

  Voting rights, 33–34, 90

  W

  Wabash YMCA, 32, 64, 100, 104–105, 113, 122, 132, 155, 155

  Washington, Booker T., 93

  Washington, D.C., race disturbances in, 161

  Washington, Lt., 148

  Washington Park, 136

  Wells, Ida B., Club, 32–33

  Wells-Barnett, Ida B., 27–29, 32–34, 63, 80, 85–86, 97, 100, 113, 143, 153–154, 165, 169

  Williams, Charles, 1, 5–7

  Williams, Eugene, 1, 5–7, 10–11, 13, 17, 18, 136, 140–141, 163, 164, 165

  Williams, Lawrence, 1, 5–7

  Williams, Paul, 1, 5–7

  Wilson, Woodrow, 79, 80, 84, 124, 136

  Wolves (black gang), 57

  Women: in Black Belt, 111; concerns of packinghouse employees, 68; in Packingtown, 52, 55–57; in Union Stock Yard, 68, 84; voting rights for, 33

  Women’s clubs, 82

  World War I, 10, 79–84, 86–88, 121, 127

  About the Author

  Photo by Brian McConkey

  CLAIRE HARTFIELD received her B.A. from Yale University and her law degree from the University of Chicago. As a lawyer, she specialized in school desegregation litigation. More recently, she has been involved in setting policy and creating programs in a charter school setting on Chicago’s West Side, which is predominantly African American. She heard stories of the 1919 race riot from her grandmother, who lived in the Black Belt in Chicago at the time, and was moved to share this history with younger generations. Ms. Hartfield lives in Chicago.

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