Home / Full timeline / Race riots take place in Brownsville, Texas when Black soldiers retaliate to racial slurs by white civilians. As a result, President Theodore Roosevelt dishonorably discharges the soldiers without any investigation or trial. After pushback, some of the soldiers are reenlisted.
Race riots take place in Brownsville, Texas when Black soldiers retaliate to racial slurs by white civilians. As a result, President Theodore Roosevelt dishonorably discharges the soldiers without any investigation or trial. After pushback, some of the soldiers are reenlisted.
1906 (Apr 13)
White civilians and Black soldiers clashed at Brownsville, Texas, apparently after Black soldiers had retaliated to racial slurs and taunting by whites. The violence that erupted resulted in the deaths of at least three white men, and the soldiers were consequently dishonorably discharged by President Theodore Roosevelt. The president's handling of the matter convinced many Blacks that they could not look to him for help in the wake of increasing anti-Black assaults. When Congress met in December of 1906, a group of Northerners, led by Senator Joseph B. Foraker of Ohio, argued that a full investigation and trial should have preceded the president's action. An investigation was launched by the Senate in January of 1907, but the Senate committee's majority report upheld the soldiers' dishonorable discharges. In 1909, however, Senator Foraker won approval to allow the reenlistment of some of the soldiers.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.