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Re: fuagf post# 271630

Friday, 08/25/2017 9:12:55 AM

Friday, August 25, 2017 9:12:55 AM

Post# of 472939
"back then, and so the reason i felt your Dad must have basically been a conservative guy .. "

Dad didn't pay much attention to politics, he went to work, often 10 hr days, took care of the house, (remodeled the attic into bedrooms,) took care of the garden and yards. But he was conservative in that he NEVER bought a new car and never bought anything he couldn't pay cash for. I remember him telling me, "never borrow money to buy a depreciating asset", advice I have followed.

I decided to research the Port Washington riot and found it very interesting and funny as well. Those were some tough German farmers.

Civil War Draft Riots
Port Washington, Wisconsin
12 November 1862
In Ozaukee County, Wisconsin, Catholic farmers from Luxemburg practically declared a Civil War of their own against the immigrant German Protestant and native American businessmen of the county seat and trading center, Port Washington. Here the draft commissioner, William Pors, was a German Protestant and a Mason, and he was accused of exempting his Republican and Masonic friends from military service.

When Pors got ready to start the drawing of names in the courthouse, an angry crowd of about 200 farmers marched up to the courthouse. Their banners reading "NO DRAFT" made the reason for their demonstration clear, and the clubs and bricks they carried showed they meant it. Port Washingon Draft Notice Pors began drawing names, thinking the farmers were there just to protest, but then the mob rushed the courthouse. Pors was dragged to the door, thrown down the steps, and pelted with stones as he fled for his life. He took refuge in the post office, where he locked himself in the cellar.

The rioters destroyed the boxes containing the names and then roamed through the town looking for Masons to vent their anger on. In several hours of pillage and plunder the mob severely damaged the Masonic hall, looted Blake's Warehouse, broke the windows and trashed the offices of Tomlinson's Mill and smashed windows and furniture in several fine residences, one belonging to Pors himself and others to local businessmen.

Pors escaped town via horse and buggy and headed to Milwaukee for reinforcements. Expecting trouble, the town's four pound cannon used in 4th of July celebrations was loaded with the only cannon ball in Port Washington. The rioters placed it on a bluff and aimed it toward Lake Michigan. They formed a defensive line, assuming the authorities would approach from that direction.

And indeed, Governor Salomon dispatched six companies of the 28th Wisconsin Regiment, who sailed up Lake Michigan from Milwaukee on the steamers Comet and Sunbeam. Four companies of soldiers disembarked before sunrise at Port Ulao, about five miles below the town and marched the rest of the way in. The remaining two companies continued on to Port Washington aboard the steamers. At dawn on November 12, they quickly surrounded and occupied the town. Taken by surprise, about 50 rioters surrendered immediately, while others ran for the other end of town. There, they ran head-long into an advancing line of soldiers. The men of the 28th gradually surrounded the rioters.

The arrival of the 28th left the farmers dumbstruck; they had not expected an armed response. A story in the Manitowoc Herald reported that the alleged ringleader, a Mr. Kemp, had had a change of heart as soon as the soldiers arrived. Kemp had made boasts before the troops arrived that there were not enough soldiers in the state to take him. But, when Col. Lewis and a few others went to his house and took him into custody, he was "as tame as a chicken". Soon, all the rioters were in custody. According to one of the soldiers, streets once filled with angry words and threats now echoed with laughter and cheers. "We were greeted with shouts of joy and exultation from ladies at almost every house," he recalled.

The soldiers celebrated their bloodless victory by restoring the national flag atop the courthouse. They had captured 150 of the most conspicuous rioters. The prisoners were escorted to Camp Washburn by Captain White and Company F, and from there to Camp Randall in Madison, where they remained in custody for about a year.

The soldiers arrested more than 130 people, who were first held at Camp Washburn in Milwaukee and then moved to Camp Randall in Madison. No charges were filed, and all were released over the next few months.


This marker was erected in 2012 by the Wisconsin Historical Society.

http://www.28thwisconsin.com/service/riots.html

Appears that while the soldiers won, the farmers were not forced to fight in the Civil War.

Like I said, my great grandfathers were farmers concerned with developing their farms and feeding their large families. I doubt they had any extra food to ship to the Union Army. Another great grandfather arrived with his wife and children in 1865.

I discovered that there were also draft riots in New York City that were far worse than the Port Washington riot.



On July 13, 1863, as the second day of a new military draft lottery in New York City got underway, demonstrations broke out across the city in what began as an organized opposition to the first federally mandated conscription laws in the nation’s history, but soon morphed into a violent uprising against the city’s wealthy elite; its African-American residents; and the very idea of the Civil War itself. The New York City Draft Riots, which would wreak havoc on the city for four days and remain the largest civilian insurrection in American history, exposed the deep racial, economic and social divides that threatened to tear the nation’s largest city apart in the midst of the American Civil War.

Thanks to its status as the business capital of the United States, New York City was a deeply divided city at the start of the Civil War in April 1861. Its merchants and financial institutions were loath to lose their southern business and the city’s then-mayor, Fernando Wood, had called for the city to secede from the Union. Meanwhile, to the city’s poorer citizens, the war increasingly came to be seen as benefitting only the rich, as the coffers of the city’s elites filled with the financial spoils of battle and the conflict became known as a “rich man’s war, poor man’s battle.” The passage of the nation’s first military draft act, in March 1863, only worsened the situation. Not only did it allow men (presumably only the wealthy) to buy their way out of military service by paying a commutation fee of $300 (more than $5,500 in today’s money), it also exempted blacks from the draft, as they were not yet considered American citizens. Opposition to the draft was widespread across the North, and in New York, some of the loudest critics of the bill could be found in city government, as politicians (primarily Democratic) railed against the legality of the bill and its impact on the city’s working class poor.

As the July draft approached, New York City was already on edge. A labor demonstration earlier that year had turned violent, as had a protest by the city’s white, largely immigrant dockworkers, who refused to work alongside African-American workers. The two groups, on the lowest rung of the socio-economic ladder, had long jostled for the city’s lowest paying jobs, and tensions had only increased as the war continued.

Remarkably, the first day of the draft, Saturday, July 11, passed largely without incident. However, as the initial lists of the conscripted began to spread, a large-scale protest movement got underway. When officials (accompanied by just a dozen police officers) arrived at the city’s Provost Marshall’s office on the morning of Monday, July 13, they found a restless, anxious crowd of roughly 500, many of them armed. Shortly after the draft’s 10:30 a.m. start time, a volunteer fire company, angered at the military conscription of their chief two days earlier, arrived on the scene. Known as Black Joke Engine Co. No. 33, the burly group was just as famous for their fist-fighting skills as they were for their fire fighting. The men soon began to smash the building’s windows and force their way inside, followed closely by the growing mob. After breaking in, they destroyed much of the draft equipment as local officials fled the scene. The protestors, meanwhile, began to spread out across the city, growing in numbers.

An early target of the mob was the pro-war press, particularly the New York Tribune, run by ardent abolitionist Horace Greeley. By mid-morning a group of protestors had descended on the city’s lower Manhattan media district and were only turned away under heavy fire by armed newspaper staffers. Around the same time, another mob contingent laid waste to the one of the city’s armories. Late that afternoon, the crowd reached the Colored Orphan Asylum on Fifth Avenue and 43rd Street, home to more than 230 children. The orphanage’s staff was able to evacuate all of the children to safety, but just minutes later the mob turned on the building with a savage ferocity, uprooting trees, destroying clothing, toys and supplies before setting fire to the building. As the first day of the riots wore on, many of its early members, whose opposition had been focused solely on the draft itself, turned away from the increasingly violent mob. Many, including some of the men from the Black Joke Engine Co. would spend the next several days combating the rioters and protecting the city’s citizens.



After a night of heavy rain, rioters returned to the streets early on Tuesday, July 14, looting and destroying businesses in the downtown area, including a large Brooks Brothers’ store, which as a contractor for the U.S. government, had been churning out thousands of pieces of military garb for more than two years. The mob also began constructing barricades around the city that proved difficult for police to overcome. The targeted attacks on blacks intensified and included the lynching of at least two African-American men: a young sailor who had been attacked after speaking to a young white boy and a man who had been captured and killed while attempting to escape to Brooklyn (reportedly disguised in his wife’s clothing). Among the dead that day was Col. Henry O’Brien, the commander of a local regiment who had come to the aid of beleaguered policemen and been attacked and killed by the angry mob. As the violence continued to spread, New York politicians squabbled amongst themselves about how to bring order to the city. The Democratic governor, who had openly opposed the draft law before it went into effect, seemed reluctant to move forcefully against the demonstrators. The city’s Republican mayor, well aware of the shortage of available police officers, formally asked the War Department to send federal troops, but stopped short of declaring martial law and turning over control of the situation to federal officials.

At least four more blacks were killed on Wednesday, July 15, as the riots reached their third day. Desperate to contain the violence, New York Police Commissioner Thomas Acton and Harvey Brown of the New York National Guard decided to concentrate their vastly outnumbered forces at key parts of the city, including the area around City Hall, and northern outposts on the city’s east side, allowing them to target the barricaded areas more efficiently, but leaving other areas of the city vulnerable to attacks. In fact, two key decisions that afternoon—the passage of an emergency bill that would provide low-interest loans to New Yorkers wishing to buy draft exemptions and the announcement of the suspension of the draft itself—did little to quell the violence, as the riots spread to neighboring communities in Brooklyn and Staten Island.

Hoping to appeal to the now largely Irish Catholic mob, secular leaders implored religious leaders to get involved, and early on the morning of Thursday, July 16, Archbishop John Hughes delivered an appeal for peace from his residence near St. Patrick’s Cathedral (still under construction and located in what was then the northern section of the city). By mid-day, the first of more than 4,000 federal troops, fresh from the horrors of Gettysburg, arrived in the city. Within hours, they faced off against rioters in what is now the city’s Murray Hill neighborhood in what became the final clash of the New York City Draft Riots.


African-American orphanage destroyed in the New York draft riots, 1863. (Credit: Alamy)

Estimates vary greatly as to the number of people killed in the Draft Riots, though most historians believe around 115 people lost their lives, including nearly a dozen black men who were lynched after being brutally beaten. Hundreds of buildings were damaged—and as many as 50 burnt to the ground—causing millions of dollars in damage. Republican Mayor George Opdyke vetoed the Democratic-sponsored bill providing funds for draft exemptions—but the veto was promptly overturned by the Tammany Hall-controlled city council. In fact, if it were possible for the draft riots to have any “winners,” then the men of Tammany were just that. Their membership had swelled in recent years thanks to their targeting of newly arrived immigrants as their voting base, and their championing of the rights of the city’s workers before, during and after the increased their popularity. Within a decade, they were in firm control of the levers of city government.

The long term damage to New York’s black population was significant: In the aftermath of the riots, the city’s black population plummeted by more than 20 percent, to below 10,000 (the lowest number since the 1820s), as blacks fled the city in droves. Many of those who stayed relocated from their racially mixed neighborhoods to areas with an elevated police presence or to the relative safety of the outskirts of the city. In all, just 67 people were convicted for their role in the riots and none received significant sentences. One month later, New York City’s Civil War-era draft resumed, this time peacefully, and concluded 10 days later. Thanks to physical deferments, exemptions and commutations, fewer than 2,400 of the 80,000 men drafted from New York State entered the U.S. Army through the new draft. One group, however, did not need encouragement (or legal force) to bring them to the field of battle. In March 1864, the city’s first all-black volunteer regiment—1,000 strong—proudly marched through the same streets that had teemed with violence less than a year before.

http://www.history.com/news/four-days-of-fire-the-new-york-city-draft-riots

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