Today's news in major cities, regional and local areas hich can include accident reports

Wednesday, September 28, 2022

[New post] How White Supremacy Was Codified Into Law in America

Site logo image Margaret A. Burnham posted: ""The Black Man Is a Person Who Must Ride 'Jim Crow' in Georgia" –W.E.B. DuBois * A nineteenth-​century federal case, United States v. Cruikshank, foreshadowed what was at stake in the twentieth-​century struggle over federalism and citizenship. The cas" Literary Hub

How White Supremacy Was Codified Into Law in America

Margaret A. Burnham

Sep 28

"The Black Man Is a Person Who Must Ride 'Jim Crow' in Georgia"
–W.E.B. DuBois
*

A nineteenth-​century federal case, United States v. Cruikshank, foreshadowed what was at stake in the twentieth-​century struggle over federalism and citizenship. The case concerned a massacre that took place in Colfax, Louisiana, on Easter Sunday 1873. When the guns fell silent in a confrontation over the results of an election pitting Republicans, Black and white, against white Democrats, many of whom were former Confederate soldiers and members of groups like the Ku Klux Klan, 3 white men and somewhere between 60 to 150 Black men were left dead, and the parish courthouse, the site of the siege, was virtually in ashes.

Historian Eric Foner described this event in majority-​Black Grant Parish as the "bloodiest single instance of racial carnage in the Reconstruction era." It "taught many lessons," he wrote, "including the lengths to which some opponents of Reconstruction would go to retain their accustomed authority." Although 97 members of the white mob were indicted under federal law, only 9 were charged. Congress investigated the massacre and released a report describing it as a "deliberate, barbarous, cold-​blooded murder" that was a "foul blot on the page of history," but the appellate courts overturned all the ensuing convictions.

The most harmful opinion came not from the US Supreme Court, but from one of its justices, Joseph P. Bradley, who was sitting on the federal appeals court along with two other judges. Bradley construed the laws that the Reconstruction Congress adopted to curtail racist terror in a manner that made it clear the federal courts would view with hostility any congressional efforts to confer all the elements of citizenship on the formerly enslaved.

He read narrowly the constitutional grant of power to Congress to pass such laws. He reduced congressional power to hold individuals liable for civil rights violations. He heightened the prosecutor's burden in these cases by demanding proof of intentional discrimination. And, in effect, he reinforced the widely held belief that Black people should not be permitted to bear arms, notwithstanding the Second Amendment. The long shadow cast over federal civil rights enforcement by Bradley's opinion, which was endorsed by the Supreme Court, has crippled civil rights enforcement to this day.

Such violence, at once calculated and casual, reconstructed the culture of policing from one generation to the next, from slavery through Jim Crow and beyond.

In Louisiana, the reaction to Bradley's opinion was swift and brutal. Night riders in Colfax slit the throat of a Black man named Frank Foster who was, disastrously, in the wrong place at the wrong time. A few days later, one of the defendants in the Cruikshank trial, seemingly emboldened by the Bradley decision, helped an armed group force five Republican officials to leave their posts. Mob terror against Republicans picked up across the South, escalating the full-​throttled project of violent redemption.

The Cruikshank case was about more than abstract theories of federalism and the separate powers of Congress and the courts. The limits on the constitutional authority of Congress to control racist violence changed the balance of power in favor of state and local police, prosecutors, and courts, who could thereafter enforce white supremacy without much fear of federal oversight. As the cases described in my new book, By Hands Now Known underscore, the violent enactment of Jim Crow's precepts aligned with the unfettered power exercised by local police—​elected sheriffs and their deputies in the rural South, police chiefs and their officers in the cities and towns.

Slavery abides in all American institutions, but its formative and enduring presence in policing during Jim Crow was particularly palpable. Indeed, the unremitting lines between violent policing, slavery, and Jim Crow were pronounced well into the twenty-first century. It could be perceived in the violence that claimed the lives of Trayvon Martin, the teenager who in 2012 violated the "white space" rule; Sandra Bland, who in 2015 defied the "never talk back to a white cop" rule; and George Floyd, the tall Black man whose mere existence was so irksome to a white officer that he felt entitled to perform a public execution in 2020. Such violence, at once calculated and casual, reconstructed the culture of policing from one generation to the next, from slavery through Jim Crow and beyond.

The violent enactment of Jim Crow's precepts aligned with the unfettered power exercised by local police—​elected sheriffs and their deputies in the rural South, police chiefs and their officers in the cities and towns.

Performance of power and degradation, of Black otherness—​this alienation of Black humanity, illegalization of Black life—​is just half of the story of the parallels between modern policing and slavery. Black communities have fought back, and that militant history—​the other half of the story—​establishes that protest against police violence has always been central to Black social movements.

From 1865 to the present, Black people have identified "law enforcement officers" as perhaps their most potent existential threat. In the first year of the twentieth century, a race riot broke out in New York City's Tenderloin district. The police force encouraged a mob intent on a lynching. New York activists who gathered the testimony of eighty victims reported that "it was the night sticks of the police that sent a stream of bleeding colored men to the hospital."

Led by T. Thomas Fortune, a prominent Black journalist of the day, New Yorkers formed the Citizens' Protective League to pursue prosecutions against the officers. The league was not successful and the officers went back to their beats. That was more than a century ago, long before three Black women coined the phrase Black Lives Matter.

Lawless police acting on behalf of the state has defined how Black people experienced American law for two centuries, and concomitantly, Black struggles for citizenship and meaningful democratic participation have always included radical demands for relief from such state violence. When, in current times, the Department of Justice defers to state prosecutors and juries, and when the federal courts enfeeble civil rights remedies that might make victims whole, as they do by allowing police to escape civil liability by claiming immunity, they are calling up the old playbook. Hovering all around us, in our august federal courts as much as in our county courtrooms, is the law of Jim Crow and, as well, its antecedent, the law of slavery.

_____________________________________

Excerpted from By Hands Now Known: Jim Crow's Legal Executioners by Margaret A. Burnham. Copyright © 2022. Available from W.W. Norton & Company.

Comment

Unsubscribe to no longer receive posts from Literary Hub.
Change your email settings at manage subscriptions.

Trouble clicking? Copy and paste this URL into your browser:
https://lithub.com/how-white-supremacy-was-codified-into-law-in-america/

Powered by Jetpack
Download on the App Store Get it on Google Play
at September 28, 2022
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest

No comments:

Post a Comment

Newer Post Older Post Home
Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

JHI Blog: Recent posts

...

  • [New post] My Week In Books (15 Aug 2021) #booklove #bookupdate #MeAndMyBooks
    yvonnembee posted: " I have had a great week with the book reading, there have been some fabulous ones. The weather here ha...
  • [New post] 6 Apps You Must Add to Your iPhone ASAP | FinanceBuzz
    lhvi3...
  • [New post] Is Chicken In A Biskit Coming Back? We Just Got Word That It Might Be
    trentbartlett posted: "Rumours around this snack's return have been floating around the internet for a little while now...

Search This Blog

  • Home

About Me

Today's news in major cities, regional and local areas which can include accident reports, police & emergency responses, criminal and court proceedings or live
View my complete profile

Report Abuse

Blog Archive

  • January 2026 (8)
  • December 2025 (17)
  • November 2025 (10)
  • October 2025 (13)
  • September 2025 (10)
  • August 2025 (8)
  • July 2025 (5)
  • June 2025 (7)
  • May 2025 (3)
  • April 2025 (10)
  • March 2025 (8)
  • February 2025 (6)
  • January 2025 (4)
  • December 2024 (6)
  • November 2024 (8)
  • October 2024 (9)
  • September 2024 (8)
  • August 2024 (5)
  • July 2024 (10)
  • June 2024 (10)
  • May 2024 (11)
  • April 2024 (4)
  • March 2024 (1462)
  • February 2024 (3037)
  • January 2024 (3253)
  • December 2023 (3238)
  • November 2023 (3122)
  • October 2023 (3010)
  • September 2023 (2524)
  • August 2023 (2299)
  • July 2023 (2223)
  • June 2023 (2164)
  • May 2023 (2229)
  • April 2023 (2135)
  • March 2023 (2236)
  • February 2023 (2171)
  • January 2023 (2326)
  • December 2022 (2500)
  • November 2022 (2470)
  • October 2022 (2648)
  • September 2022 (1909)
  • August 2022 (1839)
  • July 2022 (1856)
  • June 2022 (1969)
  • May 2022 (2411)
  • April 2022 (2354)
  • March 2022 (1867)
  • February 2022 (1013)
  • January 2022 (1050)
  • December 2021 (1620)
  • November 2021 (3122)
  • October 2021 (3276)
  • September 2021 (3145)
  • August 2021 (3259)
  • July 2021 (3084)
Powered by Blogger.