Bloody Monday

Bloody Monday
Louisville Bloody Monday Election Riots of 1855
DateAugust 6, 1855
Location
Caused byAnti-immigrant rhetoric
MethodsRioting, marauding, pogrom, arson
Parties
Casualties
Death(s)22+
Arrested5
Detained5
Charged5

Bloody Monday was a series of riots on August 6, 1855, in Louisville, Kentucky, an election day, when Protestant mobs attacked Irish and German Catholic neighborhoods. These riots grew out of the bitter rivalry between the Democrats and the Nativist Know-Nothing Party. Multiple street fights raged, leaving twenty-two people dead, scores injured, and much property destroyed by fire. Five people were later indicted, but none were convicted, and the victims were not compensated.

Causes

Bloody Monday was sparked by the Know Nothing political party (officially known as the American Party), fed in large part by the radical, inflammatory anti-immigrant writings, especially those of the editor of the Louisville Journal, George D. Prentice.[1] Irish and Germans were recent arrivals and now comprised a third of the city's population.[2]

Like other major cities on the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers, Louisville grew rapidly in the previous two decades because of heavy immigration from Ireland and Germany. There were 11,000 immigrants out of a white population of 36,000. Most were Roman Catholics, but there was also a large German Lutheran element. The vast majority were Democrats.[3][4]

Election day

According to the Louisville Daily Journal by Monday morning the city was "...in possession of an armed mob, the base passions of which were infuriated to the highest pitch by the incendiary appeals of the newspaper organ and the popular leaders of the Know Nothing party."[5] The Know-Nothings formed armed groups to guard the polls on election day. Hundreds were deterred from voting by direct acts of intimidation, others through fear of consequences. In the Sixth Ward William Thomasson, a former Congressman from the district, while appealing to the maddened crowd to cease their acts of disorder and violence was struck from behind and beaten.

St. Martin of Tours Catholic Church, Louisville, Kentucky

In the afternoon a general row occurred on Shelby street, extending from Main to Broadway. Some fourteen or fifteen men were shot, including Officer Williams, Joe Selvage and others. Two or three were killed, and a number of houses, chiefly German coffee houses, broken into and pillaged. About 4 o'clock, a vast crowd armed with shotguns, muskets and rifles were proceeding to attack the new German parish of St. Martin of Tours on Shelby street. Mayor Barbee, himself a Know-Nothing, assuaged them and the mob returned to the First Ward polls. An hour afterwards the large brewery on Jefferson street, near the junction of Green, was set on fire.[5] Rev. Karl Boeswald was fatally injured by a hail of flying stones while on his way to visit a dying parishioner.

Late in the afternoon three Irishmen going down Main street, near Eleventh, were attacked, and one knocked down. Irish in the neighborhood responded by firing repeated volleys from the windows of their houses on Main street. Mr. Rodes, a river-man, was shot and killed by one in the upper story, and a Mr. Graham met with a similar fate. An Irishman who discharged a pistol at the back of a man's head was shot and then hung but survived. After dusk, a row of frame houses on Main street between Tenth and Eleventh, the property of Mr. Quinn, a well known Irishman, were set on fire. The flames extended across the street and twelve buildings were destroyed. These houses were chiefly tenanted by Irish, and upon any of the tenants venturing out to escape the flames, they were immediately shot down. Those badly wounded by gun shot could not escape from the burning buildings.[5]

Aftermath

Only by Louisville Mayor John Barbee's intervention, despite being a Know-Nothing, was the bloodshed and the property destruction brought to an end, including his personal intervention that saved the Cathedral of the Assumption from destruction by the mob. Immediately after Bloody Monday Louisville Bishop Martin Spalding and Protestant leaders called for calm rather than revenge.[6]

By the time it was over, more than 100 businesses, private homes and tenements had been vandalized, looted and/or burned, including a block long row of houses known as Quinn's Row.[7] Historians estimate the death toll at 19–22,[8] while Catholics (including Bishop Martin John Spalding of Louisville) set the death toll at well over 100, with entire families consumed in the fires.

Weapons, arms and later bodies of the dead, were stored in Louisville Metro Hall (the old Jefferson County Courthouse, now the Mayor's Office), a Know-Nothing stronghold at the time. Sporadic violence and attacks had occurred in the year and months leading up to August 6, continuing for some time afterward.[9]

No one was ever prosecuted in connection with the riots.[7] The elected Whig mayor, James S. Speed, had been ousted in June by a court order. Speed, who upon his marriage, had converted to Catholicism, left Louisville for Chicago, never to return.[9]

Legacy

The riots had a profound impact on emigration from Louisville, causing more than ten thousand citizens to pack and leave for good, most to St. Louis, Chicago and Milwaukee, and a large group who left in 1856 for Prairie City, Kansas. Only the Civil War, with the trade and commerce it represented, halted this trend. The loss of population caused dozens of local businesses to close, affecting arts, education, and charitable causes with the loss of members and money. Empty storefronts were the norm on once-bustling commercial corridors and many of the destroyed and charred ruins lay untouched for years afterward, as a silent reminder of that terrible day. According to journalist Peter Smith, some scholars consider the exodus of immigrants fleeing or avoiding Louisville as having weakened the city economically causing it to be eclipsed by St. Louis and Cincinnati, although others disagree.[6]

That year also saw scattered violence in Chicago, St. Louis, Columbus, Cincinnati and New Orleans. However, within ten years, Louisville elected a German born-man, Philip Tomppert as Mayor.[10]

A series of commemorations was held to mark the 150th anniversary of Bloody Monday. According to one of the organizers, Vicky Ullrich, whose German-speaking Swiss ancestors fled to Indiana, "...with another influx of immigrants increasing the diversity of Louisville, it's important that Bloody Monday be remembered so that a similar event does not happen again."[6] In 2006, the Louisville Ancient Order of Hibernians, and the German-American Club raised the funds to erect an historic marker at the site of Quinn's Row,[11] which was the site of a small commemoration on March 17, 2015.[12]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Congleton, Betty, (1965). "George D. Prentice and Bloody Monday: A Reappraisal". Register of the Kentucky Historical Society 65: 220–39.
  2. ^ McGann, Agnes G. (1944). Nativism in Kentucky to 1860. Washington, D.C.: Catholic University of America.
  3. ^ Thomas P. Baldwin, "The Public Image Of Germans in Louisville and in Jefferson County, Kentucky, 1840–72," Yearbook of German-American Studies (1994) Vol. 29, p. 83–90.
  4. ^ Kleber, p 97.
  5. ^ a b c "The Election Riots. Bloody Work. Murder and Arson. Twenty Men Killed". The Louisville Daily Courier. August 7, 1855. p. 4. Retrieved May 2, 2024 – via newspapers.com.
  6. ^ a b c Article in two parts:
  7. ^ a b Mittlebeeler, Emmet V. (1992). "The Aftermath of Louisville's Bloody Monday Election Riot of 1855". Filson Club History Quarterly, 66 (2): 197–219.
  8. ^ Hutcheon, Jr., Wallace S. (1971). "The Louisville Riots of August, 1855". Register of the Kentucky Historical Society 69: 150–72.
  9. ^ a b Deusner, Charles E. (1963). "The Know Nothing Riots in Louisville". Register of the Kentucky Historical Society 61: 122–47.
  10. ^ Yater, George H. (2001). "Bloody Monday". In Kleber, John E. (ed.). The Encyclopedia of Louisville. Lexington, Kentucky: University Press of Kentucky. p. 97. ISBN 0-8131-2100-0. OCLC 247857447. Archived from the original on March 13, 2023. Retrieved October 31, 2023.
  11. ^ "Bloody Monday Memorial". Ancient Order of Hibernians. Archived from the original on September 9, 2022. Retrieved May 2, 2024.
  12. ^ Clevenger, Michael (March 17, 2015). "Louisville's somber Bloody Monday recalled". The Courier-Journal. Retrieved May 2, 2024.

References

  • Baker, David L. "The Joyce Family Murders: Justice and Politics in Know-Nothing Louisville." Register of the Kentucky Historical Society 102.3 (2004): 357–382. online
  • Baldwin, Thomas D. "George D. Prentice, the Louisville Anzeiger, and the 1855 Bloody Monday Riots." Filson Club History Quarterly 67 (1993): 482–95.
  • Congleton, Betty (1965). "George D. Prentice and Bloody Monday: A Reappraisal". Register of the Kentucky Historical Society. 65: 220–39. online
    • Mallalieu, William C. "George D. Prentice: A Reappraisal Reappraised." Register of the Kentucky Historical Society 64.1 (1966): 44–50. online
  • Deusner, Charles E. (1963). "The Know Nothing Riots in Louisville". Register of the Kentucky Historical Society. 61: 122–47. online
  • Fischer, Greg. Germans in Louisville: A History (Arcadia Publishing, 2008).
  • Harper, Leslie Ann. "Lethal Language: The Rhetoric of George Prentice and Louisville's Bloody Monday." Ohio Valley History 11.3 (2011): 24–43. excerpt
  • Hutcheon Jr., Wallace S. (1971). "The Louisville Riots of August, 1855". Register of the Kentucky Historical Society. 69: 150–72. online
  • McGann, Agnes G. (1944). Nativism in Kentucky to 1860. Washington, D.C.: Catholic University of America.
  • Mittlebeeler, Emmet V. (1992). "The Aftermath of Louisville's Bloody Monday Election Riot of 1855". Filson Club History Quarterly. 66 (2): 197–219.
  • O’Toole, William, and Charles E. Aebersold. "Research Note: Louisville’s Bloody Monday Riots from a German Perspective." Filson Club History Quarterly 70 (1996): 419–425.
  • Yater, George H. (2001). "Bloody Monday". In Kleber, John E. (ed.). The Encyclopedia of Louisville. Lexington, Kentucky: University Press of Kentucky. p. 97. ISBN 0-8131-2100-0. OCLC 247857447. Retrieved October 31, 2023.

38°15′28″N 85°46′02″W / 38.25778°N 85.76722°W / 38.25778; -85.76722