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One of the ugliest racial riots in American history occurs this week (Aug 14) in Springfield, Illinois.
Before the race riots are over, forty homes are burned to the ground, 24 businesses are destroyed, and seven people are dead: two black people (lynched by the angry mob) and five white people (accidentally killed during the riot).
It all begins with a charge of rape. A black man named George Richardson is accused of rape by a white woman named Mabel Hallem. When word of this alleged crime is published in the newspaper (only a month after a similar claim by another white woman against another African American man inflamed racial tensions), the white population of Springfield erupts. An angry mob storms the jailhouse and demands the two black men be released and face instant "justice."
The scene is so ugly that the Governor of Illinois, Charles Dineen (photo), calls in the state militia to quell the violence. With the help of the state militia, the sheriff manages to get the prisoners out of town before they are killed.
But the angry mob simply displaces their anger at all African Americans, and starts rampaging through their neighborhoods, burning down homes and businesses. At it's peak, the mob is composed of 12,000 people. One black business owner, a barber named Scott Burton stands his ground in front of his business, and is shot to death. The mob drags his body into a town square and strings him up from a tree.
Then someone in the mob remembers another black man (84-year-old William Donnegan) is married to a white woman and lives nearby. They go his home, slit his throat, and string up his dead body from a tree in the schoolyard across the street from his home. This seems to satisfy the blood lust of the mob, and the riot finally ends.
107 people were eventually indicted for their roles in this ugly night, but only one was convicted...and he was convicted of stealing a saber from a guard. The woman who made the rape claim that started this whole thing later admits that she made it up. The rape never occurred.
As a result of this night, a meeting is held in New York City to discuss the national problem of racial intolerance. This incident is one of 89 confirmed lynchings in America in 1908, and reasonable Americans are appalled. That meeting in New York eventually leads to the creation of the NAACP.
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