Biden designates the site of 1908 race riot in Springfield, Illinois, a national monument
Source: CNN
President Joe Biden signed a proclamation Friday designating the site of a 1908 race massacre in Springfield, Illinois, a national monument.
For two nights in August 1908, a White mob laid siege to Springfield, indiscriminately looting, burning and destroying Black-owned homes and businesses, in a race riot that would become known as the Springfield Massacre.
Two Black men were lynched during the riot and their deaths fueled calls to start a national movement for political and racial justice that ultimately led to the creation of the oldest civil rights organization in the country: the NAACP.
Biden marked the 116th anniversary of the riots by calling out the movement in recent years to “literally erase history” by limiting what can be taught in schools about America’s complex, racist past.
The president said the new national monument preserves part of that history, “so our children, our grandchildren, everybody, understands what happened – and what can still happen.”
“Over 100 years ago this week, a mob not far from Lincoln’s home unleashed a race riot in Springfield that literally shocked the conscience of the nation,” Biden said. “A lot of people forgot it. … We can’t let these things fade.”
lllinois Sens. Tammy Duckworth and Dick Durbin and civil rights leaders, including NAACP President Derrick Johnson, joined the president in the Oval Office ceremony.
Ahead of the ceremony, Johnson told CNN the 1908 riots underscored the need for change in America.
“It was a catalyst, not only for the creation of the NAACP… but the catalyst to recognize that the political tool of race and ethnic difference and othering is more harmful to our democracy than it should be,” Johnson said.
Duckworth, who helped lead the push in Congress to make the site a national monument, said in a statement she hopes the designation will “help ensure the painful lessons learned here will not be lost for the generations of Americans to come.”
The commemoration of the 1908 race riot comes weeks after the city found itself at the epicenter of calls for racial justice after a White sheriff’s deputy shot and killed Sonya Massey, an unarmed Black woman, in her home.
“We still have lots of work to do to improve race relations, but we won’t give up,” Kathryn Harris, the retired director of the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum and a local historian, told CNN following Massey’s death.
Harris said she found it ironic the state’s capital – which takes pride in being the hometown of “The Great Emancipator” Lincoln – should once again find itself the focus of national conversations around racial justice.
The 1908 riot in Springfield was part of a pattern of White-on-Black violence that may not be widely taught or recognized today.
Just over a decade after the Springfield riot, White mobs descended on Black communities in major cities across the United States during the summer of 1919. The series of White-on-Black riots largely targeted Black veterans returning home from World War I, according to the National Archives.
NAACP field secretary James Weldon Johnson dubbed the events the “Red Summer” because of the bloodshed White mobs left in their wake as they attempted to reinforce a racial hierarchy that was challenged during World War I.
More than 100 Black Americans were killed in Elaine, Arkansas, in one of the bloodiest attacks that summer, according to the National Archives.
In 1921, a White mob in Tulsa, Oklahoma, razed the Greenwood district in what would become known as the Tulsa Race Massacre. The neighborhood, which African Americans had dubbed “Black Wall Street,” had been home to wealthy Black business owners and doctors.
More than a century later, the remaining survivors of the Tulsa Massacre appealed a decision to dismiss their lawsuit seeking reparations. They’ve vowed to continue their fight up to the Supreme Court.
But despite an effort in recent years to teach the history of race riots in some schools, many of these historic incidents and sites continue to go unrecognized, leaving local activists to pick up the mantle to preserve an uncomfortable part of American history.
For years Teresa Haley, former president of the Springfield chapter of the NAACP, has led an effort to preserve and commemorate the Springfield Massacre through a project called Visions 1908.
In 2014, local archeologists uncovered the foundations of several homes that were destroyed during the riots, Haley said. The administration’s decision to declare the site a national landmark, she said, is a long time coming.
“The people in Springfield can truly begin to heal because it’s been a deep, dark secret that no one wanted to talk about except for those of us in the Black community who were directly impacted by the 1908 riots,” Haley said, adding that she’s working to build a monument on land that was donated by the city which she hopes will help preserve the riot’s legacy.
“It’s going to allow people to say, ‘Oh my God, this happened right here in Springfield on the ground in which I’m standing,’” she said. “This is Springfield’s history, it’s Illinois history and it’s American history.”
By: Chelsea Bailey
Next Article Previous Article