The carnage in New Orleans was set
in motion in the fall of 1890, when the city’s popular police chief,
David Hennessy, was assassinated on his way home one evening. Hennessy had no
shortage of enemies. The historian John
V. Baiamonte Jr. writes that he had once been tried for murder in
connection with the killing of a professional rival. He is also said to have
been involved in a feud between two Italian businessmen. On the strength of a
clearly suspect witness who claimed to hear Mr. Hennessy say that “dagoes” had
shot him, the city charged 19 Italians with complicity in the chief’s murder.
That the evidence was distressingly weak was evident from
the verdicts that were swiftly handed down: Of the first nine to be tried, six
were acquitted; three others were granted mistrials. The leaders of the mob
that then went after them advertised their plans in advance, knowing full well
that the city’s elites — who coveted the businesses the Italians had built or
hated the Italians for fraternizing
with African-Americans — would never seek justice for the dead. After
the lynching, a grand jury investigation pronounced the killings praiseworthy,
turning that inquiry into what the historian Barbara Botein describes as “possibly
one of the greatest whitewashes in American history.”
The blood of the New Orleans victims was scarcely dry when
The Times published a cheerleading news story — “Chief
Hennessy Avenged: Eleven of his Italian Assassins Lynched by a Mob” —
that reveled in the bloody details. It reported that the mob had consisted
“mostly of the best element” of New Orleans society. The following day, a scabrous
Times editorial justified the lynching — and dehumanized the dead,
with by-now-familiar racist stereotypes.
“These sneaking and cowardly Sicilians,” the editors wrote,
“the descendants of bandits and assassins, who have transported to this country
the lawless passions, the cutthroat practices … are to us a pest without
mitigations. Our own rattlesnakes are as good citizens as they. Our own
murderers are men of feeling and nobility compared to them.” The editors
concluded of the lynching that it would be difficult to find “one individual
who would confess that privately he deplores it very much.”
Few who march in Columbus Day parades or recount the tale of
Columbus’s voyage from Europe to the New World are aware of how the holiday
came about or that President Benjamin
Harrison proclaimed it as a one-time national celebration in 1892 — in
the wake of a bloody New Orleans lynching that took the lives of 11 Italian
immigrants.
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