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The Union’s military draft law prompts riots in New York City. Angry, poor whites kill or wound hundreds of Black Americans.
1863 (Jul 13 - 16)
Four days of rioting ensued in New York City in protest of the union's draft law. The disturbance left more than one thousand people, mostly Black Americans, dead or wounded and resulted in approximately two million dollars in property damage. The riot grew out of the Civil War draft law's provision that allowed men to pay $300 for a substitute draftee. Since poor white laborers, many of them Irish and German immigrants, could not afford substitutes, they bore the brunt of the draft. Black Americans were ineligible (at the time) for the draft. In venting their frustrations over the draft law, the poorer laborers turned on Black Americans especially, who they regarded as the principal inheritors of the jobs they would have to leave behind to enter the army. During this period of racial tension, similar riots occurred in Boston, where twenty people were killed or wounded, and in Troy, New York, where a ship with Black servants aboard had to be diverted to avoid an attack.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.