Home Visiting the Museum For Educators Research and Explore


 



























 

Riots and Civil Unrest

Contents
1863 Draft Riots > Orange and Green Riots of 1870 and 1871

1863 Draft Riots
Eager to prove their patriotism and quiet nativist critics, New York's Irish immigrants volunteered in large numbers to fight in the Union army, often serving with great distinction in such regiments as the Fighting 69th. Yet New York's Archbishop Hughes spoke for a number of Irish and non-Irish in the city when he predicted that Catholics would fight only for the preservation of the Union, not for the end of slavery. Like others, he regarded abolitionists as dangerous radicals and supported the Church's official position that slavery was allowable under canon law as long as owners did not mistreat their slaves. He also argued that slaves in the South were often better off than the Irish poor in Northern cities, particularly the slums of New York.1

Therefore, the country met President Abraham Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation of January 1863 with mixed reactions. Republicans saw it as a necessary war measure that would give a much-need moral tone to the North's struggle and help attract African American volunteers to a diminishing army. Conversely, Northern Democrats felt the Proclamation detracted from the main goal of the war, which was the preservation of the union. New York Tammany politicians in particular viewed both the Proclamation and the Conscription Act passed soon after as evidence of the Lincoln administration's growing centralization of power away from the city into the hands of the Republican elite.2

Irish workers objected to emancipation and conscription on more practical terms; angered by wartime job shortages and low wages, and fearful of African-American job competition, they saw both acts as an attempt to uplift African Americans at their expense. Such fears came to a head when officials in New York tried to enforce the first federal draft on July 12. Despite their distinguished military service, Irish immigrants were still the most underrepresented group in the army compared to the overall population, so the first draw fell most heavily on them. Angered by a controversial $300 exemption waiver in the Conscription Act, which would allow wealthier individuals to buy their way out of service, workers protested the draft by attacking various symbols of Republican, federal, and abolitionist power, including an uptown draft office, the office of newspaper editor Horace Greeley, and the homes of prominent Republicans. The protesters the first day included German, Irish, and native industrial workers and artisans, but they had limited aims and soon dissipated. They were followed by mobs of laborers and longshoremen, many of them Irish, who turned increasingly violent as they tore up railroad lines, burned down the Colored Orphan Asylum, and brutally beat and killed soldiers, African Americans, and authority figures. By the time five Union regiments were able to march up from the Battle of Gettysburg to restore peace on July 15-16, at least 105 people had been killed, including at least eleven black men beaten and lynched by the mobs.3

Irish opposition to emancipation and conscription gave them a reputation for treason and disloyalty, discounting the loyal service of thousands of Irish volunteers in the Union army. For many nativist critics, Irish participation in the Draft Riots was another indication of Irish immigrants' savagery, unfitness for self-government, and their inferiority to other white races. Newspapers like Greeley's Herald Tribune and George William Curtis' Harper's Weekly highlighted Irish involvement in the riots, featuring illustrations of simian-faced mobs and denounced their "barbarism."4

Conversely, Irish papers were quick to defend the reputation of the Irish community, contesting the characterization of the mob as solely "Irish" and playing up the role of Irish men and women who worked to end the violence. While a new draft was conducted the following month without incident by "Boss" William M. Tweed (1823-1878) and his Tammany Hall Democrats, the memory of the riots remained fresh in the minds of the African American community and the Protestant elite, who forever associated the affair with the "savage Irish." In the months after the riots, Republican leaders paraded African-American victims around the city, honoring them with military marches and public ovations. Despite this treatment, blacks fled from the city in droves, fearful that similar outbreaks of violence would occur again.5

The reactions of nativists, radical Republicans, and elite reformers toward Irish involvement in the draft riots cemented immigrants' devotion to Tammany Hall and the Democrats. Tammany claimed to represent the interests of the poor and working class, as opposed to the Republican Party and reformers, who they identified with uptown aristocrats and nativism. Boss Tweed and his Tammany ring recognized the potential political strength of the city's Irish population and other immigrant groups, who continued to arrive in droves during the 1860s and 1870s.6

The Draft Riots continued to linger in the city's memory as the worst episode of ethnic and racial violence in New York's history. Irish opposition to abolition and fears of African-American competition left bitter feelings between the two groups, while nativist reformers and Republicans viewed Irish advancement through Tammany with resentment. Continued immigration of poor Catholic Irish throughout the 1870s and 1880s maintained the image of the violent "shanty Irish." Long after the second and third generations of famine immigrants had begun to establish an economic foothold in the city, Anglo Americans continued to deny them social acceptance based on their religion and perceived inability to assimilate. It was only with the arrival of Southern and Eastern European immigrants that they could view the less-foreign Irish as acceptable and loyal Americans.7

See also: African-Americans; Irish; The Meehan-Moore Family; Nativism and Discrimination; Ninety-Seven Orchard Street/The Irish at 97 Orchard Street.

1 Iver Bernstein, The New York City Draft Riots: Their Significance for American Society and Politics in the Age of the Civil War (New York: Oxford University Press, 1990); Frederick M. Binder and David M. Reimers, All the Nations Under Heaven: An Ethnic and Racial History of New York City (New York: Columbia University Press, 1995); Michael A. Gordon, The Orange Riots: Irish Political Violence in New York City, 1870 and 1871 (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1993); Kevin Kenny, The American Irish: A History (New York: Longman, 2000).
2 Ibid.
3 Ibid.
4 Ibid.
5 Ibid.
6 Ibid.
7 Ibid.

previous page << >> next page

© 2005 Lower East Side Tenement Museum




 

 

 

 

 



108 Orchard Street | 212-431-0233 | lestm@tenement.org