This essay
was inspired by a class I substituted in a couple of days one year at Howard
High School in the late 1990’s. The
teacher for whom I was substituting taught American History, and the period the
classes were currently in was the War Between the States, though this material
here covers mostly the time from Reconstruction thru Redemption to Jim Crow.
My point
in sharing the information was that blacks in Chattanooga in the latter half of
the 19th century and early 20th century had much more
power and control over their own lives than their descendants who marched,
demonstrated, and were beaten and killed as part of the civil rights movement.
After
conferring with the regular teacher, I stepped out into the hallway to view
what some of the students had posted on the wall as part of this section. They were to write letters posing as either a
soldier in the field or a sweetheart at home, depending on their sex. With just two of three exceptions, the
students chose to identify as Confederates.
That may
sound strange to some, but Tennessee was a Confederate state, after all. It’s more about home and belonging and having
every bit as much right to the history of their home as the descendants of
those who oppressed them.
Chattanooga
was very fortunate after the Civil War in that it experienced no outbreak of
riots like that in Memphis 1-3 May 1866.
In that violence, 46 blacks and 2 whites were killed, 75 other persons
were wounded, 5 black women were raped, over 100 people robbed, and 4 churches,
12 schools, and 91 houses were burned to the ground. These “riots” were actually an invasion of
the black shantytown near Fort Pickering by white policemen, firemen, laborers,
and small businessmen.
Since
September 1863, Chattanooga had served as headquarters for the Union Army’s
Department of the Cumberland, and, later, beginning with the Atlanta Campaign,
as rear base for its primary field component, the Army of the Cumberland, after
serving as its bivouac in the winter of 1863-1864.
From late
1863 through mid-spring 1864, five infantry regiments of the United States
Colored Troops were transferred to Chattanooga, which became their base. These regiments were the 14th
USCT, 16th USCT, 18th USCT, 42nd USCT, and 44th
USCT. Not long after they all arrived,
the five were gathered into the Department of the Cumberland’s First Colored
Brigade.
Far from
being used solely for “fatigue duty” (manual labor) and other routine garrison
duty, all the units did see combat. The
14th USCT fought in the First Battle of Dalton, 14-15 August 1863,
while the 44th USCT fought against the vanguard of the Confederate
Army of Tennessee in the Second Battle of Dalton on 13 October 1864. The 14th USCT saw action again at
the Battle of Decatur, 27-30 October 1864.
The 14th, 16th, 18th, and 44th
USCT’s all fought in the Battle of Nashville, 15-16 December 1864, which put
the final nails in the coffin of the above-mentioned Army of Tennessee as an
effective field unit.
True, the
42nd USCT served as the primary garrison troops in Chattanooga,
headquarters to the Department of the Cumberland, and a large part of their
duties was to maintain fortifications there, build roads, construct
Chattanooga’s first bridge, etc.
However, its soldiers were the primary anti-guerrilla force for the immediate
region, particularly in North Georgia, though its sister regiments also
provided such support on occasion.
In August
1865, the Department of the Cumberland ceased to be and its First Colored
Brigade became 2nd Brigade, 4th Division, Department of
the Tennessee, in which they were joined by the 1st United States
Colored Heavy Artillery. All five
regiments demobilized in Chattanooga on various dates in the spring of
1866. There, most joined the large
population of former slaves who had migrated there in the wake of Sherman’s
Atlanta Campaign and March to the Sea and concentrated at Camp Contraband north
the Tennessee River.
(For more
on African-American troops in the Chattanooga area during the Civil War, see
Raymond Evans’ “Contributions of United States Colored Troops” in the local
history section of the Chattanooga-Hamilton County Bicentennial Library.)
With the
Union occupation of the city after the end of the Chattanooga Campaign, two
men, one a former slave who had earned enough money as a blacksmith to free
both him and his family and the other his free-born nephew, spearheaded the
business development among African-Americans.
“Uncle Bill” Lewis made himself wealthy by the end of the war, and his
nephew, John S. Lovell, was well on his way.
Bill
Lewis’ primary business after the war was real estate, primarily for the former
slaves who poured into the area in Sherman’s wake or migrated to Chattanooga
afterwards. Though he later joined his
uncle business ventures, John S. Lovell’s wealth sprang initially from his
grand Mahogany Hall, which occupied the block where Miller Park now sits. Three stories tall, the establishment had a
hotel, restaurants, saloons, casino, dancehall, and brothel. Lovell chose that site specifically because it had previous been the site of the slave auctionhouse, which drew many customers from as far away as the Deep South.
Reconstruction
in the State of Tennessee lasted only as long as the Parson Brownlow
administration in Nashville, which ended in 1869. Brownlow’s successor, Dewitt Senter,
immediately removed all the legal disabilities against former Confederate
soldiers and officials placed by the preceding administration and began rolling
back of rights won by the freedmen.
The
postwar population of Chattanooga was two-thirds African-American, and so was
its city police force and its fire department.
In addition to the former Camp Contraband, which eventually became Hill
City, Chattanooga black citizens occupied primarily its Fourth Ward in the
years after the war.
Lewis and
Lovell’s business and real estate ventures helped spur the growth of the black
neighborhood along East 9th Street past the former Irish Hill
area. Along the north side of the
street, the neighborhood that grew up came to be called Tadetown, while along
its south side the neighborhood was known as Scruggstown. Naturally, the avenue that ran betwixt the
two communities became the focus of commercial and cultural life from an early
stage.
In 1867,
Congregational minister the Rev. Ewing O. Tade founded the first public school
in Chattanooga, which also included its first public high school, Howard Free
School, to serve the black community. As
such, Rev. Tade became the county’s first Superintendent of Education as well
as being headmaster of Howard Free School, where his wife was one of the teachers.
In 1886,
Bell Washington became the first and first female graduate of Howard School in
a class of one. The first male graduate,
Augustus Wickliff, followed her the next year in a class of one.
Public
schools for white children were finally established in Chattanooga in 1873,
with the beginning of four district primary schools. Superintendent Tade was summarily deposed,
and his congregation sent him to California, where he served as pastor to the
First Congregational Church of Ferndale.
Chattanooga High School opened in 1874 on East 8th Street as
the second public high school in Chattanooga and Hamilton County.
Several
African-Americans served the region in various positions of city, county,
state, and federal government.
Until 1900,
the City of Chattanooga had a unicameral Board of Aldermen elected by ward, or
which there were five. African-Americans
who served as Aldermen during Reconstruction, Redemption, and Jim Crow included
Commodore P. Letcher (1868), M. Shields (1869), Clem Shaw (1870 & 1873),
David Medlow (1871 & 1875), George Sewell (1871), R.P. McCronklin (1872), Robert
Marsh (1873-1875), William C. Hodge ( 1878-1884), Hiram Tyree (1888-1902),
George Shaw (dates unknown), and Charles Grigsby (dates unknown).
In 1900,
Chattanooga adopted a bicameral form of government with the introduction of a
City Council as its lower house. Due to
the way in which boundaries for elections were now drawn, it was nearly
impossible for a black man to be elected as Alderman. Three black men served as City Council before
the city’s adoption of a commission form of government with members elected
at-large prevented any more black men from being elected for years. They were Eugene Reid (1900-1902), Hiram
Tyree (1904-1911), and Charles Grigsby (1904-1911).
In 1911,
the city ordinance mandating the commission form of government went into
effect, only being overturned by the case of Brown v. City of Chattanooga in 1989.
Five black
men served the Hamilton County Court before Jim Crow brought its hammer down,
four as Justice of the Peace: Alexander P.
Flowers (elected 1867), George Sewell, G.L. Nelson, and B.F. Whiteside (who
served 1904-1910); and one as Circuit Court Clerk: John J. Irvine, who won
election by 1400 votes over white candidates from both parties. Hiram Tyree also served the county as School
Commissioner for 10 years, as did Dr. Daniel Trigg Edingburg from 1904 to 1908.
Hamilton
County sent two African-Americans to the Tennessee General Assembly during
these years: William C. Hodge, who
served 1885-1886, and Styles Hutchins, who served 1887-1888 and was successful
in repealing the poll tax for Chattanooga.
In
addition to his stints as Alderman and Justice of the Peace, George Sewell, was
the Federal Court Cryer in Hamilton County for 20 years. Another black man, Henry C. Smith, served the
county as its Federal Clerk, and he was a Democrat where most black men were
Republicans.
Other
African-Americans who served in various official capacities included Jim Hodge,
Larkin Fralix, Marion Keith, Charles Bird, William Richardson, Isaac Allen,
Woodson Weaver, Andy Thompson, and J.R. Franklin.
Of all
these elected and appointed officials, unquestionably the most influential and
longest-lasting was Hiram Tyree, who was boss of the Fourth Ward until being
dethroned by Walter C. Robinson in 1928.
Styles
Hutchins was one of three of the last African-Americans to serve in the
Tennessee State Legislature until the civil rights movement of the mid-2oth
century.
Until the
beginning of the Jim Crow era (around 1890), segregation laws were largely
local, such as the Chattanooga ordinance requiring segregated seating in its
streetcars in the 1880’s (then horse-drawn).
These laws did not meet without protest.
On 7 September 1885, Chattanooga experienced its first documented
lynching in its jailhouse after Charlie
Williams shot a street car driver who tried to enforce Chattanooga’s
segregated seating ordinance.
Twelve years earlier on 7 October 1873, Elridge Merrill, living near St. Elmo (probably in Gambletown), then outside the city limits, was brutally beaten, whipped, tortured, and lynched by a mob of white men angered over his cohabitation with a white woman named "Dink" Norris.
Twelve years earlier on 7 October 1873, Elridge Merrill, living near St. Elmo (probably in Gambletown), then outside the city limits, was brutally beaten, whipped, tortured, and lynched by a mob of white men angered over his cohabitation with a white woman named "Dink" Norris.
As Jim
Crow raised its ugly head across the South in the form of state laws mandating
segregation in public accommodations and transportation along with introducing
such voter restriction measures as poll taxes and literacy tests, Alfred Blount
has dragged from the Hamilton County Jail and hanged from the Walnut Street
Bridge 14 February 1893. He was accused
of sexually assaulting a white woman.
At the
beginning of the 20th century, African-Americans in Chattanooga were
concentrated in the neighborhoods of Tadetown and Scruggstown along E 9th
Street, in parts of East Side, the area from Georgia Avenue to East End (later
Central) Avenue. On the West Side,
between Cameron and Academy Hills and the river, they lived in the shantytowns
of Blue Goose Hollow (north of West 6th, later West 9th,
Street) and Tannery Flats (south of the same street).
In the
suburbs, African-Americans lived in Citico City (aka Lincoln Park, between Wiehl Street and
the railroad tracks, north of E. 3rd St.), Bushtown (the first all-black municipality in Tennessee),
Churchville, Stanleyville (southeast section of what would otherwise be Churchville), Rosstown (behind and including what is now Parkridge Hospital), Fort Cheatham (between
Ridgedale and East Lake), the Gamble Town section of Saint Elmo, Hill City (north of the river between Manning Street, Stringer’s
Ridge, and Forest Avenue), Bozentown (between Amnicola Highway and
Riverside Drive), and in central East Chattanooga, right next to the public park.
From at least 1904 to 1925, two years after its annexation by the city, Bushtown hosted Abraham Lincoln High School for black students living in the East Side and the suburbs east of the city. It was part of the Hamilton County school system. Bushtown, along with Churchville and Stanleyville, were annexed in 1923. After 1925, Lincoln became a junior high school, and some of the high school students of those communities went to Howard High; most, however, preferred Booker T. Washington School in the county in the community of Shot Hollow. Abraham Lincoln Junior High School closed its doors in 1936, and the building was torn down in 1948.
From at least 1904 to 1925, two years after its annexation by the city, Bushtown hosted Abraham Lincoln High School for black students living in the East Side and the suburbs east of the city. It was part of the Hamilton County school system. Bushtown, along with Churchville and Stanleyville, were annexed in 1923. After 1925, Lincoln became a junior high school, and some of the high school students of those communities went to Howard High; most, however, preferred Booker T. Washington School in the county in the community of Shot Hollow. Abraham Lincoln Junior High School closed its doors in 1936, and the building was torn down in 1948.
In the
wider Hamilton County, African-Americans occupied the communities of
Chickamauga (Shepherd), Shot Hollow, Turkey Foot (an organized municipality),
Hawkinsville, Black Belt (south of Harrison), Black Ankle (south of Ooltewah),
Summit, and Bakewell (between Soddy and Sale Creek).
The black
community in Chattanooga and Hamilton County did not take its subjugation lying
down. African-Americans here chose
nonviolent resistance. In a
foreshadowing of the later Montgomery bus boycott, blacks in Chattanooga and
its suburbs boycotted the segregated streetcars of the three trolley companies
in the city in July 1905.
In place
of these, enterprising individuals ran “hack lines”, horse-drawn trolleys from
such suburbs as Churchville, Tannery Flats, St. Elmo, and Fort Cheatham. The leaders of the boycott were Alderman
Tyree and Randolph Miller, editor of The
Chattanooga Blade, which was a nationally-syndicated publication.
In 1906, a
black man in St. Elmo, Ed Johnson, was accused, arrested, and convicted on
faulty evidence of sexually assaulting a female resident of that suburb. Two black lawyers, the former Assemblyman
Styles Hutchins and Noah Parden, approached former judge Lewis Shepherd to help
them with Johnson’s appeal and in the meantime to get a stay of execution.
Their
attempt for a stay was successful. It
was the first time in the history of the Supreme Court that it had intervened
directly in a state criminal case.
However, on 19 March 1906, a crowd stormed the jail, overwhelming the
single guard present who tried to resist, dragged Johnson out to Walnut Street
Bridge, hanged him, and shot him several times.
Sheriff Shipp and others were indicted for violating Johnson’s civil
rights. Judge Shepherd defended them;
they were convicted but given light sentences.
The next
year, Shepherd successfully won acquittal of a black man, Floyd Westfield, who
had shot the local white constable, Lon Rains, on Christmas Eve 1905. Rains at the time was attempting to invade
the home of the old woman with whom he (Westfield) was staying near, armed with
a pistol and by testimony of his companions intent on using it. The events were the result of Rains having
been disturbed at a Christmas party at Walnut Grove School (on South Gunbarrel
Road) by firecrackers and Roman candles shot off by guests at the house.
Shepherd
also worked on the writ of habeus corpus in the Leo Frank case in Atlanta.
Once the
commission form of government and at-large elections were in place in
Chattanooga in 1911, no black man had a chance of being elected to office. The next significant attempt by a black man
to be elected to office was in 1930, when Mark Coad of the Communist Party ran
for city judge.
In 1915,
the municipality of North Chattanooga took the ultimate step in
segregation. The town and its neighbor
to the immediate east, Hill City, were separated by Forest Avenue. North Chattanooga’s main street was Tremont
Street, while Hill City’s was Spears Avenue.
North Chattanooga’s town council passed an ordinance that forbade any
African-Americans not already residing within its borders from living
there.
They also
changed the name of Forest Avenue to Forrest Avenue in honor of former
Confederate general Nathan Bedford Forrest.
You may
remember that year, 1915, as the one in which D.W. Griffith’s movie “The Birth
of a Nation” premiered across the U.S. and became the first film ever screened
in the White House, at the request of then-President Woodrow Wilson. It was also the year that Indiana native
William J. Simmons, inspired by the movie, inaugurated the Knights of the Ku
Klux Klan in the Georgia town of Stone Mountain.