Read Blood at the Root: A Racial Cleansing in America Online
Authors: Patrick Phillips
Tags: #NC, #United States, #LA, #KY, #Social Science, #SC, #MS, #VA, #20th Century, #South (AL, #TN, #History, #FL, #GA, #WV), #Discrimination & Race Relations, #State & Local, #AR
188
By the early 1930s
: Interview with Mattie Daniel, February 23, 2014; Directory of the City of Detroit, 1930,
U.S. City Directories, 1821–1989
, Ancestry .com, accessed November 13, 2015; 1940 U. S. Census, Detroit, Wayne, Michigan; roll T627_1839; p. 9B; Enumeration District 84-25.
189
“the sound of a hammer”
: Kenneth Stahl, “The Great Rebellion: A Socioeconomic Analysis of the 1967 Detroit Riot,” http://www.detroits-greatrebellion.com/The-Road-to-67-.html, accessed October 1, 2015.
189
“like sleeping on a volcano”
: Laura Arnold, as quoted in Glenda Elizabeth Gilmore,
Gender and Jim Crow: Women and the Politics of White Supremacy in North Carolina, 1896–1920
(Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1996), 132.
190
“ever talked too much about”
: Interview with Mattie Daniel, February 23, 2014.
190
The African American population of the city
: Campbell Gibson,
Population of the 100 Largest Cities and Other Urban Places in the United States: 1790 to 1990
(Washington: U.S. Bureau of the Census, Population Division, Working Paper 27, 1998).
191
168 black families:
“The 1943 Detroit Race Riots,”
Detroit News
online, February 10, 1999, http://blogs.detroitnews.com/history/1999/02/10/the-1943-detroit-race-riots/; accessed February 27, 2015.
192
“I’d rather see Hitler”
: Ibid.
192
“the Belle Isle Bridge”
: Ibid.
192
thirty-four confirmed killings
: Ibid.
193
“We hope for better things”
: Ibid.
193
“Klan-ridden regime”
: Gilbert King,
Devil in the Grove
(Harper, 2013), 262.
193
“Before God, friend”
:
Rome News-Tribune
(GA), August 2, 1942.
193
“I was told stories”
: Interview with Helen Matthews Lewis by Jessie Wilkerson, May 28 2010 (U-0490). Southern Oral History Program Collection 4007, Southern Historical Collection, Wilson Library, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
194
“My father came home”
: Ibid.
194
“When I was in school”
: Ibid.
195
“used them for flagstones”
: Ibid.
196
“we don’t allow niggers”
: “Cumming Deplores Racial Harassment,”
Atlanta Constitution
, May 8, 1968, 3.
196
“Wait until the night comes!”
: Stephen Tuck,
Beyond Atlanta: The Struggle for Racial Equality in Georgia
(Athens: University of Georgia, 2003), 242.
196
“sorry to read of it”
: “Cumming Deplores Racial Harassment,”
Atlanta Constitution
, May 8, 1968, 3.
197
“in traveling over the county”
: Garland C. Bagley,
History of Forsyth County
, vol. 2 (Milledgeville, GA: Boyd Publishing, 1990), 614.
197
“people of the county”
: Ruth Mae Jordan Berry, handwritten account, November 1980.
197
“As they grew older”
: Bagley,
History
, 614.
CHAPTER 16: THE ATTEMPTED MURDER OF MIGUEL MARCELLI
198
since they were children
: Interview with Deidre Brown-Stewart, October 25, 2014.
200
Sophisticated Data Research
: “Gunshot Victim Returns for March,”
Gainesville Times
, January 23, 1987, 10A.
201
“spent much of Saturday drinking”
: “Trial Hears 2nd Witness in Forsyth,”
Gainesville Times
, November 18, 1980, 12A.
202
“We talked about shooting”
: “Forsyth Jury Convicts Crowe in Shooting Here,”
Forsyth County News
, November 25, 1980.
202
“looking at me with a mean face”
: “Forsyth Shooting Trial in Third Day,”
Gainesville Times
, November 19, 1980, 14A.
203
“I felt a great weakness”
: Ibid.
203
“a group of men”
: “Gunshot Victim Returns for March,”
Gainesville Times
, January 23, 1987, 10A.
203
“an extremely distraught black woman”
: “Trial Hears 2nd Witness in Forsyth,”
Gainesville Times
, November 18, 1980, 12A.
203
“Would you help me?”
: Ibid.
203
“There’s nothing more I can do here”
: “Forsyth Shooting Trial in Third Day,”
Gainesville Times
, November 19, 1980, 14A.
204
“I think I killed the black son of a bitch”
: Ibid.
204
“I’m not telling”
: Ibid.
204
“I’ll get burned out”
: Ibid.
205
“I was scared”
: “Forsyth Jury Finds Man Guilty of Assaulting Black,”
Gainesville Times
, November 20, 1980.
205
“a .38 caliber bullet”
: “Trial Hears 2nd Witness in Forsyth,”
Gainesville Times
, November 18, 1980, 12A.
206
“Twelve men and women”
: “A Myth Exploded in Forsyth County,”
Gainesville Times
, November 21, 1980, 4A.
206
“it is simply a happenstance”
: “Lily-White Forsyth Looks Ahead—Racial Change Is Blowing in the Wind,”
Atlanta Journal
, November 8, 1977.
CHAPTER 17: THE BROTHERHOOD MARCH, 1987
207
A twenty-three-year-old African American man
: “A Racial Attack That, Years Later, Is Still Being Felt,”
New York Times
, December 18, 2011.
207
“Overcoming fear”
: “March,”
Gainesville Times
, January 15, 1987, 10A.
208
“only one minister”
: “Proposed ‘Walk for Brotherhood’ Is Cancelled,”
Forsyth County News
, January 11, 1987.
209
“Chuck was talking about”
: “Couple Hopes to Revive March,”
Forsyth County News
, January 14, 1987.
209
“I got a thirty-aught-six bullet”
: “Racist Threats Fail to Break Efforts for a Freedom March
,” New York Times
, January 11, 1987.
209
“
the threats . . . were much more violent
”: “Proposed ‘Walk for Brotherhood’ Is Cancelled,”
Forsyth County News
, January 11, 1987.
210
“After Saturday . . . you’re dead”
: “Racist Threats Fail to Break Efforts for a Freedom March,”
New York Times
, January 11, 1987.
210
“five Mexican construction workers”
: “Racists Rout Brotherhood March,”
Bangor News
, January 19, 1987, 11.
210
“By the time this newspaper is printed”
: “Let’s Get on to Better Things,”
Forsyth County News
, January 18, 1987.
211
“We do not condone needless efforts”
: “The Right to Demonstrate,”
Gainesville Times
, January 16, 1987.
212
“We are protesting against racemixers”
: Plaintiff’s Exhibit 61,
Hosea Williams v. Southern White Nights of the Ku Klux Klan
, District Court of the Northern Division of Georgia, March 24, 1987.
212
more than twenty-five hundred whites gathered
: “Mob of 2,500 Racists Attacks 75 Marchers,”
Gainesville Times
, January 18, 1987.
213
“most of the demonstrators”
: “Klan Supporters Hold Own ‘March.’ ”
Forsyth County News
, January 18, 1987, 3
213
“Go home, niggers!”
: “White Protestors Disrupt ‘Walk for Brotherhood’ in Georgia Town,”
New York Times
, January 18, 1987, 24.
213
the 1958 bombing of Bethel Baptist Church
: Diane McWhorter,
Carry Me Home: Birmingham, Alabama; The Climactic Battle of the Civil Rights Revolution
(New York: Simon & Schuster, 2001), 133–35.
214
“we don’t want niggers”
: “Klan Supporters Hold Own ‘March,’ ”
Forsyth County News
, January 18, 1987.
214
the parking lot of Jim Wallace’s gas station
: “Klan Supporters Hold Own ‘March,’ ”
Forsyth County News
, January 18, 1987.
215
“as the thing began to swell”
: “Terror in Forsyth,”
Gainesville Times
, January 18, 1987, 2B.
216
“People from Forsyth”
: “Walk,”
Forsyth County News
, January 18, 1987, 3A.
218
had only seventy men
:
Hosea Williams v. Southern White Nights of the Ku Klux Klan
, District Court of the Northern Division of Georgia, March 24, 1987, Civil Action C87-565A.
218
Only a few hundred yards
: “Police Admit We Lost Control,”
Gainesville Times
, January 18, 1987, 2B.
218
“a friendly white neighbor”
: Peter Levy, ed.,
The Civil Rights Movement in America
(Santa Barbara: Greenwood / ABL-CLIO, 2015), 338.