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STORY OF THE RIOT

PUBLISHED BY

THE CITIZENS'
PROTECTIVE LEAGUE

PRICE, 25 CENTS




COPY OF AN APPEAL TO THE MAYOR.


NEW YORK, _September 12, 1900_.

_TO HIS HONOR, ROBERT A. VAN WYCK,
MAYOR, NEW YORK CITY._

DEAR SIR:

Your communication of the 7th inst. in reply to my letter received.
We appreciate the consideration shown and interest manifested, but
earnestly petition your Honor for a fair and impartial investigation.
We condemn in unqualified terms lawlessness among our people, and by no
means condone the crime of Harris, nor his associates; but this crime,
as black as it may be, does not justify the policemen in their savage
and indiscriminate attack upon innocent and helpless people.

We ask for no money consideration, and our counsel, Hon. Frank
Moss, has been so advised. We are not responsible for what private
individuals may do--the rights of citizenship we value above money.

We ask for the conviction, and removal from the force of those officers
whom we are able to prove guilty.

We appeal to you, sir, as chief magistrate of this city, to give this
matter special personal attention.

If the guilty are shielded it will encourage the mob to repeat the
same offense, the officers to commit the same deeds, and our people to
prepare for self-defense in spite of law or gospel. This can have no
other termination than bloodshed and butchery.

This, I believe, may all be avoided by a course of simple justice.
The color of a man's skin must not be made the index of his character
or ability. From the many ugly threatening letters I have received I
feel that my own life is not safe, but I am unwilling to purchase it
by silence at the expense of my unfortunate race. We feel keenly our
position, and again appeal to you for common justice.

I am, dear sir,

Yours,

W. H. BROOKS.




PERSECUTION OF NEGROES

BY

Roughs and Policemen, in the City of New York, August, 1900.

STATEMENT AND PROOFS WRITTEN AND COMPILED BY FRANK MOSS AND ISSUED BY
THE CITIZENS' PROTECTIVE LEAGUE.


STATEMENT OF THE PERSECUTION.

The riots and persecutions described in this pamphlet occurred mainly
in the 20th Police Precinct, which is under the command of Acting
Captain John Cooney, and within the jurisdiction of Inspector Walter
L. Thompson. Chief William S. Devery resides in the precinct, near the
scene of the disorder.

The district has a large colored population, and mixed with it are many
dissolute and lawless white persons.

On August the 12th last a Negro named Arthur Harris was with his wife
at 41st Street and 8th Avenue. He says that he left her to buy a cigar,
and when he returned he found her in the grasp of a man in citizen's
dress. This man was a police officer, named Robert J. Thorpe, who had
arrested her, as he claimed, for "soliciting." Harris says that he did
not know Thorpe was an officer, and that he attempted to rescue his
wife. The policeman struck Harris with his club, and Harris retaliated
with his penknife, inflicting a mortal wound, and then ran away.

Thorpe was attached to the 20th Precinct, and was much liked by his
comrades. Policemen thronged his home, and his funeral, on August 16th,
was attended by Chief Devery, Inspector Thompson, and other officials.

Harris, the murderer, had disappeared, and many policemen who were
interested in Thorpe were seized with a desire of vengeance on Negroes
generally. During the day of the funeral there were rumors of coming
trouble, and those colored people who have illicit dealings with the
police--keepers of gambling, disorderly, and badger houses--seeing
the signs of coming trouble, closed their places and kept off the
streets. Several officers told informants of mine that they were
going to punish the Negroes that night. There are numerous gangs of
rowdies in the district who are hostile to Negroes and friendly with
the unofficial powers that are now potent in police affairs. There was
an understanding between the forces that night that resulted in the
holding of the streets for hours by crowds of roughs who raced up and
down Broadway, 7th and 8th Avenues, and the side streets from 34th to
42nd Streets in pursuit of Negroes, and were not attacked by the police
except in one or two cases where they invaded Broadway hotels hunting
for colored men.

The unanimous testimony of the newspaper reports was that the mobs
could have been broken and destroyed immediately and with little
difficulty. In many instances of brutality by the mob policemen stood
by and made no effort to protect the Negroes who were assailed. They
ran with the crowds in pursuit of their prey; they took defenseless men
who ran to them for protection and threw them to the rioters, and in
many cases they beat and clubbed men and women more brutally than the
mob did. They were absolutely unrestrained by their superior officers.
It was the night sticks of the police that sent a stream of bleeding
colored men to the hospital, and that made the station house in West
37th Street look like a field hospital in the midst of battle. Men who
were taken to the station house by officers and men in the station
house were beaten by policemen without mercy, and their cries of
distress made sleep impossible for those who lived in the rear of the
station house.

Colored men being denied official protection, many of them obtained
weapons, and if they were found armed, or if revolvers were found in
their houses, then official brutality was redoubled.

The tumult of August 15th was repeated on a smaller scale on the night
of the 16th, but public attention had been directed to the shameful
conduct of our "guardians of the peace," and the precinct swarmed with
reporters and sightseers. Then the dilatory officials speedily quelled
the riot and ended the punishment of the Negroes.

In the courts many false charges were made by policemen; and although
some Negroes were discharged by the magistrates, others were convicted
and punished on the false testimony of their accusers. One magistrate
commented severely on the comparatively small number of white men that
were arraigned before him for rioting.

Had a force of regular soldiers been sent to quell such a disturbance,
and had it failed so utterly and so long as did the police, and had the
soldiers abandoned their duty, and vied with the roughs in beating the
men whom they should have protected, undoubtedly some guilty privates
would have been punished--but the severest penalty would have fallen on
their incompetent or derelict commanders. The commanders in this case
were Acting Captain Cooney, Inspector Thompson, and Chief Devery.

The newspapers told of the shocking outrage, and printed many specific
cases of cruelty, giving the addresses of the victims and the
circumstances of their persecution. By this and other means the Police
Commissioners and the Mayor were fully apprised of the facts. There
was no suspicion of politics in the universal demand that went up for
a prompt and efficient investigation and for the severe punishment
of the offenders. This request was unheeded, until the acting Mayor
called on the Police Commissioners to investigate the conduct of their
subordinates. The Commissioners delayed, knowing full well how such
cases deteriorate by delay, and after several weeks announced that they
would investigate.

The colored people of the city, realizing their unexpected danger
as a race, and discovering the surprising unwillingness of the city
authorities to punish their assailants and to protect them in the
future, formed "The Citizens' Protective League." This society and
the Society for the Prevention of Crime and the City Vigilance League
communicated with the Mayor in writing and urged him to hold an
investigation or to direct the Commissioner of Accounts to hold one for
him. His answer was that the whole matter was in the hands of the Board
of Police. A number of Negroes who had been injured retained Israel
Ludlow, Esq., to bring suits against the city for damages inflicted on
them by the mob. He filed with the Police Commissioners the affidavit
of William J. Elliott, who had been clubbed in the station house. The
Police Board began its "investigation" by calling Elliott and his
witnesses on the 7th of September. The examination of witnesses was
conducted by the President of the Board, Bernard J. York, and, with the
approval of the Board, he refused to give subpoenas to Mr. Ludlow, and
refused to allow him or any other lawyer to examine or cross-examine
any witnesses, or to suggest any step to be taken. Elliott and all
other colored witnesses were examined by the President as hostile
parties, and their testimony was controverted by the policemen who
were called at once and were carefully nursed and led by him. Glaring
discrepancies and disagreements in their testimony were passed over in
spite of specific protests by Mr. Ludlow. The writer appeared on behalf
of the societies that had memorialized the Mayor, and filed a complaint
of inefficiency and neglect of duty against the Captain, the Inspector,
and the Chief of Police, and announced that he had much testimony to
offer on the specifications, but insisted on his right to examine
his own witnesses and to cross-examine the police witnesses. These
rights were emphatically denied, and the complaint was disdainfully
pigeonholed.

The Protective League separately asked the Mayor for justice; he
responded that the whole matter was with the Police Board, and he
made the same response to Mr. Ludlow, who complained to him of the
farce that was being enacted at Police Headquarters. The hearing was
continued several days. Witnesses were examined superficially in eight
cases of cruelty by policemen, and were controverted by double the
number of policemen, and it was suddenly announced that the hearings
were closed. Claims of sixteen Negroes against the city were then on
file in the Comptroller's office, the names and addresses of many
more victims had appeared in the newspapers, and the writer had
announced that he had in his possession over forty affidavits of police
brutality. The "investigation" was a palpable sham.

At this date not a single complaint has been preferred by the Chief,
the Inspector, the Captain, or the Commissioners against any police
officer for brutality or neglect of duty during the riots.

On September 12th a great meeting was held at Carnegie Hall to protest
against the brutality and against the failure of the city authorities
to act, and to take measures for the prevention of such outbreaks in
the future. Fully thirty-five hundred people attended, and listened to
addresses by Rev. R. S. MacArthur, D.D., Rev. D. W. Cook, D.D., Rev. C.
T. Walker, D.D., Rev. W. H. Brooks, D.D., Rev. Bishop W. B. Derrick,
D.D., Miss M. R. Lyons, Hon. D. M. Webster.

A subscription was started, and measures were taken to make the
Citizens' Protective League a permanent and a vital institution.

The League and its representatives are using every possible lawful
measure to secure justice to its people, and to vindicate their right
to live in peace. They are having a difficult task to get a hearing.
Several cases have been brought by it in the Magistrates' Court,
but they are difficult to carry in the face of a solid and lusty
swearing lot of policemen, and they cannot show the crime in its mass,
and cannot reveal the responsibility of the higher officials for
the outbreak and for the failure to discover and punish the guilty
policemen and their commanders.

The Mayor has abundant authority to hear the matter, but he has washed
his hands of it, and the Police Board has not hesitated to write
another page of its damning history. There is no other way open for
a full and connected presentation of the case to the public except
by legal process through the Mayor and the Commissioners. A Grand
Jury investigation was had, and resulted in no indictment. Such an
investigation is necessarily held behind closed doors, and the sole
question is whether there is sufficient evidence to warrant the
indictment of a specific individual for a specific act, unrelated to
other acts, and with a reasonable probability of conviction.

I have advised the Citizens' Protective League of the great barriers
to be overcome in securing the conviction of even a patrolman, and of
the inadequacy of a criminal proceeding in an attempted presentation of
the great wrong that the Negroes have suffered. They need the sympathy
and support of the good people of New York to secure a vindication, and
to prevent a recurrence of the outbreak. Under my advice the appended
affidavits have been secured, and are now printed, so that they may
be read and considered in their relation to each other. I may say
that with hardly an exception the affiants have shown themselves to
be respectable, hard-working men and women. The dissolute Negroes who
are so often seen lounging about the "Tenderloin" and its neighborhood
are not to be found among the witnesses. They are the friends of the
police, contributing very largely to their comfort and happiness, and
it is quite clear that they had their warning and kept out of the way.

With this simple introduction, I present the affidavits, confident
that they will speak for themselves, and that they will lead to the
condemnation of the high official criminals, and contribute to the
overthrow of the infernal system that they represent.

Brutality and insolence of policemen have increased greatly, and the
Police Commissioners seldom, if ever, convict officers for these
offenses. Humble citizens of all races to-day are in more danger from
policemen's clubs than they are from the assaults of criminals. The
inaction of the Commissioners in the cases of the Negroes is entirely
consistent with their general conduct in all citizens' complaints.

FRANK MOSS.

Dated October 1, 1900.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

P. A. Johnson, M.D., being duly sworn, deposes and says: I reside at
203 West 33rd Street, and am engaged in the active practice of my
profession at that address. On Thursday morning, August 16th, 1900,
about ten A. M., I heard a noise in the street, and going to
the window I saw a colored man trying to get into one of the flats
on the opposite side of the street. He failed, and went east to the
corner saloon, kept by a man Gallagher, and entered. After he went in
I noticed three policemen in the saloon. Almost immediately a mob came
down 7th Avenue. At the saloon they commenced to shout, "Bring him out,
we'll lynch him!" Several of the rioters went into the saloon, and in a
few minutes they came out again and formed in a semicircle, evidently
waiting for something. The police officers appeared with the colored
man, clubbing him unmercifully. They then shoved him into the mob. He
managed to get through them and ran down the street, and I heard him
shortly shouting for mercy, saying, "For God's sake don't kill me, I
have a wife and children." Deponent has been informed that two of the
officers ran down the street after him and knocked him senseless.

P. A. JOHNSON.

Sworn to before me this 10th day of September, 1900.

GEO. P. HAMMOND, JR., Notary Public (164), N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

Stephen Small, being duly sworn, deposes and says: I reside at the
northwest corner of 7th Avenue and 34th Street. On Wednesday evening,
August 15th, 1900, I went to the home of a sick brother on Lexington
Avenue, and started then to go to my lodge on 29th Street near 7th
Avenue, and had reached 8th Avenue and 41st Street, opposite Driggs'
saloon, when two officers jumped on the car. One hit me on the head
with his club, and the other struck me in the eye with his club. A
white man interfered, and the police desisted. I stayed on the car,
and when we had gone a little further the mob boarded it and attacked
me. The car had quite a number of women in it, who began to scream,
and some of them told me to get under the seat, which I did, and it
proceeded down the avenue. I reached the neighborhood of Hudson Street
House of Relief, where the white gentleman who interfered in the first
instance took me, and where I had my head bandaged. I could not get
home that evening, and I remained in a cellar in 30th Street between
6th and 7th Avenues. The next morning I started to get home, and had
reached the corner of 32nd Street and 7th Avenue, when I was stopped by
an officer who wanted to know where I was going, and what weapon I had
on me. I told him I had nothing on me. He said, "You look as if you had
been in the scrap. They ought to have killed you; get out of here." As
he said this he struck me across the back with his club, and I yet am
unable to lay flat on my back without suffering extreme pain. Deponent
further states that he was perfectly sober and was not creating any
disturbance, and that the assault by the police officers was entirely
unjustified and an outrage.

STEPHEN x SMALL.
     his mark

Sworn to before me this 11th day of September, 1900.

GEO. P. HAMMOND, JR., Notary Public (164), N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

Oscar Slaughter, being duly sworn, deposes and says: I reside at 225
West 32nd Street. On Wednesday, August 15th, 1900, I boarded an 8th
Avenue car at 32nd Street, starting to go to my sister's in West 62nd
Street. I had got as far as 36th Street and 8th Avenue, when a mob
led by three or four police officers surrounded the car and jumped on
it. The police officers immediately commenced to club me. One of the
rioters shouted, "Pull him off and kill him!" The officers pulled me
off of the car and commenced to club me. They hit me on the head and
pulled me to the street. I was kicked and beaten while I lay there,
and after the mob had gone and I recovered somewhat I dragged myself
to 42nd Street and 6th Avenue, and from there I went to 32nd Street
between 6th and 7th Avenues. On my way there I attempted to go down
34th Street, but a white man met me and said, "Don't go down there,
you'll get killed." I then tried to go down 33rd Street, but a white
gentleman advised me not to go that way, as I would be killed, and
said that even if he went down there and did not join in he would be
jumped on. I then went to 32nd Street, where a number of colored men
had taken refuge in a hallway, and where I was advised to stay all
night. I stayed there a while and then took a chance in getting to my
home down the block, which I succeeded in doing. Deponent is informed
that an officer went into the aforesaid hallway after deponent had
left, and clubbed and beat a man who lived in the house, and took him
to the station house. Deponent declares that he was perfectly sober,
and was creating no disturbance whatever, and that the said assault was
entirely unjustified and an outrage.

OSCAR SLAUGHTER.

Sworn to before me this 11th day of September, 1900.

GEO. P. HAMMOND, JR., Notary Public (164), N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_State of New York, City and County of New York, ss._:

Joseph Frasier, being duly sworn, deposes and says: I live at 331 West
37th Street, New York City. On August 15th, at quarter past eleven in
the night, I was on my way to work on an 8th Avenue car going downtown.
A crowd rushed towards the car and yelled, "Lynch the nigger!" A
policeman who jumped on the car hit me on the head with his club and
knocked out a tooth and beat me on the arms, back, and body until I
was nearly senseless. The policeman asked me whether I wanted to go
to the station or to the hospital. I said I wanted to go to my work,
though the blood was running over my face so that I could hardly see.
A passenger helped me until I recovered slightly, and helped me on
another car and into a drug store, where I received aid. The street
was filled with a rough crowd, patrol wagon, and ambulance. The people
cried out from the windows, protesting against the beating, and called
out "Shame!" I was laid up for weeks, and am hardly able to walk now,
as I am still lame and sore. I work for Davenport, 94 Park Place, and
it was my duty to get to the stable about eleven o'clock to go to New
Jersey for produce.

JOSEPH FRASIER.

Sworn to before me this 11th day of September, 1900.

STEPHEN B. BRAGUE, Notary Public (125), N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

Adolphus Cooks, being duly sworn, deposes and says: I reside at No.
243 West 32nd Street, and work for the Anchor Steamship Company, foot
of West 24th Street, as a longshoreman. On Tuesday morning, August
14th, 1900, I went to work for the said company, worked all that
day, all that night, and until Wednesday night at 10:30 P. M.--39½
consecutive hours. At the said hour I left the pier at the foot of
West 24th Street, and walked east on 24th Street, and when I reached
the northwest corner of 8th Avenue and 24th Street a white gentleman
advised me not to go up 8th Avenue, as there was a riot up there and
they were fighting "like he did not know what." I continued east on
24th Street until I reached the northwest corner of 7th Avenue and
24th Street, when I met another white man who advised me not to go
up 7th Avenue, as there was a riot in progress, and that they were
fighting at that time in the neighborhood of 41st Street and 37th
Street, but, thinking that I could get home in 32nd Street before the
riot could get down to that street, I started uptown on the west side
of 7th Avenue, and had reached the northwest corner of 7th Avenue and
28th Street, when I saw three officers coming down 7th Avenue. In the
meantime three other colored men, whom I did not know, had caught up
with me, and were walking behind me. I had gone about one hundred feet
north of the aforesaid corner when I saw the three officers break into
a run in our direction. I was grabbed by one of them, while the other
two chased the three men who had come behind us and overtook them and
clubbed them; the officer who had me immediately, without saying a
word, struck me on the body with his club; then between the blows he
said, "Get out of here, you black son of a b----!" One of the blows he
aimed at my head, but I threw up my arm and received the blow on it.
It was such a severe blow that I was lame in it for quite some days. I
escaped from him as soon as I could, and ran to 28th Street, and down
28th Street to No. 211. I ran into the hallway and out into the back
yard, where I stayed all night in fear of my life. The officer followed
me, and when I ran into the hallway he clubbed the colored people who
were on the front stoop, and drove them into the house. During the
heavy rainstorm Wednesday night and early Thursday morning I took
refuge in a small place that led into the cellar of the said house.
Thursday morning about six o'clock I ventured out and went towards the
dock at the foot of West 24th Street, where I intended to go to work
again, and had reached 8th Avenue between 25th and 26th Streets, when
I saw two police officers on the opposite side of the street, one of
whom started to run towards me, but his companion stopped him, and drew
him back. Deponent states further that if he had not been interfered
with and clubbed by the police officer he could have reached his home
in safety, and that he saw no signs of a disturbance, such as a large
crowd of people, as far as he could see up the avenue; that deponent
was watching for such signs by reason of his having been warned twice.
Deponent also declares that he can identify the officer who clubbed
him; that he knows him by sight, and that, about a month before the
said clubbing, the same officer had come to him at his home, where
he lived at that time, in West 28th Street, and had told him that
the roundsman had got him, and that he had given him as an excuse
that he was at the house where deponent then lived and was quelling a
disturbance there, and asked deponent to verify that statement if the
roundsman asked him. Deponent promised so to do, notwithstanding the
fact that nothing of the kind had occurred there, and promised to do
so simply to get the officer out of trouble. That the officer's first
name is "Joe," and that he is attached to the 20th Precinct. Deponent
further declares that he was perfectly sober, and that the assault by
the officer was unwarranted and an outrage upon a peaceable citizen.

ADOLPHUS x COOKS.
      his mark

Sworn to before me this 4th day of September, 1900.

GEO. P. HAMMOND, JR., Notary Public (164), N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

Eugene Porter, being duly sworn, deposes and says: I reside at 202
West 49th Street. On Wednesday, August 15th, 1900, between the hours
of nine and ten P. M., I was walking uptown on the west side
of 7th Avenue, on my way home. Everything about the neighborhood was
quiet. There were no signs of a disturbance, and I had not heard of
any trouble between the colored people and the white folks. I had
reached a point about one hundred feet north of 37th Street on 7th
Avenue, when I met a group of policemen, about six or eight in number.
One of them said to me, "What are you doing here, you black son of
a b----?" and without waiting for an answer struck me over the head
with his club, felling me to the sidewalk, and continued to strike me
about the body. I struggled to my feet, and implored the officers to
spare my life, but they continued to club me and left me unconscious
on the sidewalk. When I came to I arose to my feet and crawled home.
After I reached home I got my young son to accompany me to the New
York Hospital, where my wounds were dressed by Dr. Kenyon, of the
Hospital Staff, who put fourteen stitches in my head. Deponent states
further that he is troubled to this day with his head, as a result of
the injuries received at the hands of the police, and he fears that it
may yet seriously interfere with his following his business. Deponent
states further that he is engaged in the business of horse and dog
clipping, and that he can refer to the following-named persons for whom
he has done work at various times: E. S. Odell, proprietor of the
Saratoga Stables, 690 Madison Avenue, who has known him from infancy.
Dr. H. D. Gill, Veterinary Surgeon, 57th Street and 2nd Avenue. G. W.
Lynch, Morton Boarding Stables, Morton and Washington Streets. Joseph
Hartshorn, 168 East 68th Street.

EUGENE PORTER.

Sworn to before me this 4th day of September, 1900.

GEO. P. HAMMOND, JR., Notary Public (164), N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

Richard C. Creech, being duly sworn, deposes and says that he resides
at No. 137 West 53rd Street. That on Wednesday morning, August 15th,
1900, he had been to visit a friend at No. 312 West 45th Street, and
left there at about 10:45 P. M. and walked to 8th Avenue,
and had reached the corner of 8th Avenue and 45th Street, when he was
set upon by a gang of rioters, and assaulted by them. That he shouted
"Police!" and seeing two officers on the east side of the avenue,
corner of 45th Street, he ran towards them when he saw them coming
towards him and slackened his pace, thinking that they were coming to
his assistance. When they came up to him, without saying a word, they
commenced clubbing him, and knocked him unconscious on the sidewalk.
He lay there unconscious for some time, he does not know exactly how
long, but when he came to he found one of the policeman standing over
him, and when he scrambled to his feet the policeman said, "Well, you
black son of a b----, I guess you will be good now, won't you? Get
out of here as quick as you can!" He then went towards Broadway, and
on Broadway between 45th and 46th Streets engaged a cab to take him
home, and when he arrived home found that his pocketbook, containing
thirty-six dollars in money and a pawnticket for a watch, was gone.
He also lost his hat and an umbrella. He sent for his physician, Dr.
Robert L. Cooper, 156 West 53rd Street, who took three stitches in his
scalp and dressed other wounds on his arm and hand, the result of the
clubbing.

RICHARD C. CREECH.

Sworn to before me this 1st day of September, 1900.

GEO. P. HAMMOND, JR., Notary Public (164), N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

Duncan James, of No. 238 West 40th Street, engaged in business at 84
and 86 Greene Street, care of G. Blum & Brother, being duly sworn,
says: On Wednesday, August 15th, I left the store and went to my tutor
at West 124th Street. I left there at ten P. M., and when I
reached 43rd Street and 8th Avenue three men jumped on the car and
struck me in the face. Passengers advised me not to get off at 40th
Street. When I arrived at 34th Street men saw me on the car, and when
it reached 33rd Street the car stopped suddenly and everybody jumped
off. The car was surrounded by a mob. I had no weapon or protection
but a cane. I kept them off the best I could. About twelve officers
came and took me from the mob. They took me about one hundred and fifty
feet from 8th Avenue in 33rd Street West, and as they turned me loose
the officers pounded me severely with clubs over my head, arms, and
shoulders, telling me to run. I had then lost my hat, cane, and books.
I went back to my teacher's house and stayed all night. I was the only
negro man there. In West 33rd Street a man gave me a hat. I could find
him. I begged the officers to lock me up for protection, and they would
not. Dr. Swinburne treated me.

DUNCAN JAMES.

Sworn to before me this 31st day of August, 1900.

FRANK MOSS, Notary Public, N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

Mack Thomas, being duly sworn, deposes and says:

I reside at 238 West 40th Street. On Wednesday, August 15th, 1900, I
attended the St. Paul Baptist Church in West 43rd Street, and at about
ten P. M. left for home. Knowing that the rioters were at
work, I decided, instead of taking my usual route home, to go to 9th
Avenue and transfer to 34th Street, to 7th Avenue, and thence back to
40th Street, thinking by that means to be able to avoid the rioters and
reach home in safety. I boarded a 9th Avenue car at 43rd Street and
transferred at 9th Avenue, and had reached the corner of 8th Avenue
and 34th Street, when I saw a mob on the corner, and heard them shout,
"There's two on the car; go after them, get them; lynch the niggers!" I
stayed on the car until the mob boarded the car, when I jumped off and
ran east on 34th Street pursued by the mob, several members of which
struck me with their fists, but with no serious result. I had got so
far as the middle of the block when I met four or five officers, one
of whom stepped in front of me and struck me a blow with his club on
the head, cutting it open. When he did so he said, "Who hit you?" I
said nothing; then he said, "Get on the car, you black son of a b----,
and get home out of here!" I got on the car and reached home without
any further interference. Deponent declares it to be his belief that
if he had not been stopped by the police, and struck by them, he would
have reached his home without any serious injury; not mentioning the
fact that the police made no attempt whatever to interfere with the
mob. Deponent further declares that he would prefer to have taken
his chances with the mob than to have met the said police officers.
Deponent further declares that he was perfectly sober, was proceeding
quietly on his way home, and was taking extraordinary measures to reach
his home in safety and without violence.

MACK THOMAS.

Sworn to before me this 5th day of September, 1900.

GEO. P. HAMMOND, JR., Notary Public (164), N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

Miss Belle Johnson, being duly sworn, deposes and says:

I reside at 275 West 39th Street. On Wednesday evening, August 15th,
1900, between nine and ten o'clock, I heard a disturbance in the
street, and going to my window on 8th Avenue I saw a crowd of people on
the sidewalk, and saw them rush toward a Negro boy who was standing on
the corner (northeast corner 39th Street and 8th Avenue) and beat him.
He rushed into a delicatessen store on 8th Avenue, but was thrust out
by the proprietor. When he reached the sidewalk two officers grabbed
him and clubbed him and then pushed him into the crowd, saying with an
oath, "Run now, for your life!" He then ran to 39th Street and east on
39th Street with fully one hundred people after him. Right after this
occurrence a colored man came along, and after being attacked by the
mob was knocked over towards four police officers who were standing
on the corner, one of whom was Officer 6312. All four of the officers
then rushed for this man and clubbed him unmercifully about the head
and body. I could not stand the sight any longer and shouted to the
officers that it was a shame when police officers, who were supposed
to be protecting peaceable citizens, assaulted them in such a brutal
manner. About this time they ceased clubbing the man and thrust him
out into the crowd of rioters. This sort of thing continued during the
entire night, and until the next day, as at nine A. M., when
I went out on an errand, I saw a colored man, who was carrying a small
sign, beaten by a crowd of roughs. I saw a number of colored persons
struck who were riding on the cars, and at least six colored men
clubbed by the police during this time.

BELLE JOHNSON.

Sworn to before me this 5th day of September, 1900.

_Geo. P. Hammond, Jr._, Notary Public (164), N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

Mrs. Fannie Lewis, being duly sworn, deposes and says:

She has read the foregoing affidavit of Miss Belle Johnson, and that
she knows of her own knowledge that the facts therein stated are true.

FANNIE LEWIS.

Sworn to before me this 5th day of September, 1900.

GEO. P. HAMMOND, JR., Notary Public (164), N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

Chester Smith, being duly sworn, deposes and says:

I reside at No. 320 West 37th Street. I am employed in Flannery's drug
store, at No. 103 West 42nd Street, and have been so employed for the
last ten months. On August 15th, 1900, at about ten o'clock P.
M., while going to my home, walking on the west side of 8th Avenue
between 38th and 39th Streets, I saw a crowd of people, composed mostly
of police officers and children. Some one in the crowd said, "There is
a nigger!" pointing at me. One of the policemen ran towards me, and
seeing that I was in physical danger I ran away from the place, going
north to 39th Street on 8th Avenue. Somebody threw a brick at me, which
struck me in the back, and then one of the policemen came up to me
and struck me in the left eye with his club. My eye and my forehead
are still lacerated and discolored. I then ran into the saloon at the
southeast corner of 39th Street and 8th Avenue. One of the policemen
ran in after me, and told me to go outside and run towards Broadway;
that the mob had dispersed. I started toward the door, and as I reached
it I saw that they were still waiting outside. I said to the officer as
I started back into the saloon, "No, sir, I can't go out there; they'll
kill me." The policeman then lifted me from the ground and threw me
through the swinging door into the street. The glass in the door was
broken, and I fell on my hands and knees. The policemen and the mob
then began beating me, the policemen beating me with their clubs. They
did not disperse the crowd or protect me from it. I then started to
run towards Broadway; another policeman ran after me and struck me in
the back with his club. I staggered, made one or two jumps, and fell
in front of No. 236 West 39th Street. The lady of the house, a white
woman, came out, and I was taken into the house by some one, I don't
know whom. Two or three days after she told me that the officers soon
left the house, but that the mob tried to break in, and that she told
them that if they would not leave she would kill them. The lady rang
for a messenger boy and sent word to my employer to call. He came and
brought some bandages, etc., and bandaged my head. He then called two
police officers and asked them to take me to the station house. They
refused. He insisted, and they finally yielded and took me to the
station house. I was treated there by a police surgeon. My employer
remained with me until three o'clock the next morning. I did not work
for three days after this. I saw one man treated very harshly at the
station house, being clubbed by police officers, and I believe he would
have been treated still worse if it had not been for the presence of
reporters. I did nothing whatever to justify this brutal treatment on
the part of the police officers. I believe that had it not been for the
presence of my employer I would have been beaten still more. There were
over twenty-five policemen in the crowd. I was unconscious part of the
time. I have never been arrested in my life.

CHESTER SMITH.

Sworn to before me this 5th day of September, 1900.

GEO. P. HAMMOND, JR., Notary Public (164), N. Y. County.

                                 ----

On September 13th, 1900, I visited the premises No. 236 West 39th
Street and found that the occupant thereof was the woman who rescued
Chester Smith from the hands of the mob, and that her name is Mrs.
Davenport. She stated that she did not want to make an affidavit or
statement of the occurrence, but volunteered the information that she
had sheltered two or three Negroes during the night of August 15th
and the morning of the 16th, also that several police officers who
attempted to get into her house, at the time that she rescued the said
Smith, acted and spoke in an insulting manner, one of them saying,
"What kind of a woman are you, to be harboring niggers?"

GEORGE P. HAMMOND, JR.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

Harry L. Craig, being duly sworn, deposes and says:

I reside at No. 226 West 28th Street. I am employed as a hall boy at
the apartment houses Nos. 102 and 104 East 26th Street. On August
15th, 1900, I left the apartment house a little after twelve o'clock,
that being the time I usually go home. I walked on 26th Street to
6th Avenue, then turned into 6th Avenue and walked to 27th Street; I
then walked on 27th Street to 8th Avenue, turned into 8th Avenue, and
went into the saloon at 8th Avenue and 28th Street, southwest corner,
where I had a drink, and left about 12:20, going home on 28th Street.
As I neared M. Groh's Son's Brewery on that block some one hit me
on the head with a club; I turned around and saw three policemen in
uniform, and behind them was a mob of at least fifty men. The street
was very dark. I started to run home, but one of the officers tripped
me, and I fell. I was then clubbed by the police and the mob into
unconsciousness. When I recovered I found that the police and the mob
had left. I picked up my hat and got up, and started to walk to our
house, which was only a few feet away, but I staggered and fell several
times. When I reached home the lady I live with, Mrs. Wisham, washed my
face with witch-hazel; my jaw was so sore that I could hardly open my
mouth. For a few days after this I felt sore all over my body, from the
effects of this clubbing. I was clubbed by three officers. The officers
led the crowd, and did not interfere when others were beating me.
They made no attempt to disperse the crowd. I did nothing whatever to
justify this brutal assault upon me by the police. I was never arrested
in my life. I was not in the neighborhood while the riots were going on
in the early part of the evening. The police did not give any reason
for acting as they did, and when I fell unconscious they left me alone
in the dark street.

HARRY S. CRAIG.

Sworn to before me this 13th day of September, 1900.

FRANK MOSS, Notary Public, N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

John L. Newman, being duly sworn, deposes and says:

I reside at No. 351 West 37th Street, in the rear house. On August
15th, 1900, I went to the restaurant which is in the front building,
for supper. This was about 10:30 P. M. After I had been there
a few minutes some one told me that the mob was coming. I had seen
them beat colored people during the evening, without any cause, so
I walked out of the restaurant into my apartments, which are in the
rear, only a few steps away; I live in the basement floor. I did this
so as to avoid any trouble. As I reached the front door and walked in
I closed it, and proceeded to go into my apartments. Four officers
immediately came, and one of them said, "Stop!" and kicked open the
door. Then one of them grabbed me and said, "Here is a d----d nigger;
kill him!" The four officers then beat me with their clubs until I
became unconscious. They then carried me to the station house. I was
unconscious during all this time, but my friends tell me that the
police were beating me all the way to the station house. It is located
one block west from where I live. At the station house I recovered my
consciousness. I was arraigned before the sergeant, and the officer
who struck me first made the complaint against me. At the sergeant's
desk I felt very weak, bleeding from my head and eye, and I held on
to the railing for support. One of the officers struck me in the ribs
with a night stick, and said, "God d--n you, stand up there!" I fell
forward on the sergeant's desk, and I said, "For God's sake, take a
gun and blow out my brains! If you have got to take a life, take mine,
and don't murder me this way!" The sergeant then said very gruffly to
the officer, "Take him away!" While all this was going on Chief of
Police Devery was in the station house standing about ten feet away,
talking to somebody whom I did not know. He saw all this, but did not
interfere, conversing with the man all the time, as if nothing unusual
was going on. I have known Chief Devery for three or four years, and
have spoken with him in a friendly way many times. When I was brought
into the muster room, in the rear of the station house, I saw several
colored people being treated for their wounds. I was bleeding from
my head and eye, and could not see well, and I sat down in the wrong
chair. Two policemen then came over to me, pulled me out of the chair,
and were raising their clubs to strike me when some one said, "Don't
hit this man any more," and they obeyed. My wounds were then dressed,
and I was taken to a cell. About twelve o'clock, when the officer
who was making the prison rounds came to my cell, I asked him for
permission to see the sergeant. He asked why, and I told him that my
house was unlocked, and that I wished he would send an officer to lock
it. He said he would speak to the sergeant about it. In a few minutes
he returned and said, "The sergeant said, 'D--n him,' and that 'he had
no business with the house,'" and he did not send anyone to lock it and
protect my property. While I was in the station house I saw a colored
man, John Haines, struck by several officers with their clubs. He was
naked, only wearing a little undershirt. The officers were striking all
the colored men in the station house, and without any interference.
In court, the next morning, I was arraigned before Judge Cornell. The
officer swore that I was causing a riot in the street, I denied this.
I did not have any witnesses in court, because I did not have any
opportunity to produce them. The Judge did not ask me whether I wanted
an examination or not, and expressed his doubts as to my guilt, and
said the case was "very curious." But the officers were persistent in
their false statements, aforesaid, and the magistrate put me under $100
bonds to keep the peace. Not being able to furnish this, I was sent to
the Penitentiary, where I was for thirty days. I was treated at the
Penitentiary by Dr. Thomas Higgins, who told me that my head would
never be right as long as I lived. I have been sick ever since. Dr.
Higgins told me that he would testify for me in any proceeding which
I might institute. I am employed by the Metropolitan Street Railway
Company as a rockman, but am unable to work at present. I have lived in
New York City for over forty-three years, and have never been arrested
before in my life. I did not participate in the riots, was not on the
street, and did nothing whatever to justify this conduct on the part of
the police. I can recognize the officer who made the charge against me;
he was the first to strike me.

JOHN L. NEWMAN.

Sworn to before me this 19th day of September, 1900.

JOHN F. MACCOLGAN, Notary Public (4), N. Y. County.

(The officer in the case was Holland.)

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

Mrs. Martha A. Brown, being duly sworn, deposes and says:

I reside at No. 351 West 37th Street. On Wednesday, August 15th, 1900,
about 10:15 P. M., while on my way upstairs I saw John Newman,
who lives in the rear house at the above number, come in the front door
and close it; he had almost reached the rear of the hall when the front
door was opened by a policeman who had his club raised, and who ran up
to the said Newman, struck him over the head with his club, felling
him to the floor; he then dragged Newman to the street, clubbing him
meanwhile, and at the front door he was joined by four other officers,
who assisted him to drag Newman out into the street, where they threw
him into the midst of the mob which had congregated outside, and some
of whom jumped on Newman, stamping on his stomach with their feet.
Newman was then again taken by the officers and dragged to the station
house on the next block. Deponent states further that Newman did not
appear to be trying to get away from anyone, when he entered the front
door, and further when he was struck first he was struck from behind.

MARTHA A. BROWN.

Sworn to before me this 24th day of September, 1900.

GEO. P. HAMMOND, JR., Notary Public (164), N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

Mrs. Betty Green, being duly sworn, deposes and says:

I reside at No. 353 West 37th Street, Manhattan Borough, New York City.
On Wednesday, August 15th, 1900, about eleven P. M., I saw
John Newman coming out of the restaurant next door, No. 351, and spoke
a few words to him, and saw him go into the hall door of the house
in the rear of which he lived. Almost immediately I saw two officers
in uniform, and about three others in citizens' clothes. The two in
uniform ran into the hallway after the said John Newman, some of the
officers saying, "Get the black son of a b----, and kill him!" Shortly
afterward I saw the two men in uniform drag Newman out onto the stoop,
clubbing him meanwhile. He sank to the stoop and lay there for some
time. While he lay there a patrol wagon went by, and the officers tried
to get it to stop; but it went on. They then took Newman and led him on
down towards the station house. All the way to 9th Avenue every officer
they met took a crack at him. Deponent states that Newman was perfectly
sober, and had done nothing from the time that he left the restaurant
till the officers ran after him into the hallway. She saw him make no
resistance after the officers got him and clubbed him.

BETTY GREEN.

Sworn to before me this 27th day of September, 1900.

GEO. P. HAMMOND, JR., Notary Public (164), N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

Miss Albertha L. Clark, being duly sworn, deposes and says:

I reside at No. 351 West 37th Street. On Wednesday, August 15th, 1900,
between eleven and ten o'clock P. M., while looking out of the
front window of my home, I saw an officer strike a colored man over the
head with his club, and the man ran down towards my home, in front of
which another officer hit him over the head with his club, and still
another officer kicked him; then two officers took him to the station
house. While this was going on I heard a noise in the hall, and in a
few minutes I saw a colored man dragged from the hallway of my home,
whom I recognized as John Newman, who lived in the rear house; the
officers threw him into the mob, whereupon I left the window to see
what had become of my folks, and when I returned to the window the
officers were dragging Newman to the station house. After the above
occurrence officers came through 37th Street from 8th Avenue, and
ordered people who were sitting at the windows to go away from there,
and without giving them sufficient time to do so drew their revolvers
and fired them at the occupants of the windows.

ALBERTHA L. CLARK.

Sworn to before me this 24th day of September, 1900.

GEO. P. HAMMOND, JR., Notary Public (164), N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

Mrs. Lucinda Thomson, being duly sworn, deposes and says:

I reside at No. 351 West 37th Street. On Wednesday, August 15th, 1900,
I was at home and in my rooms between the hours of ten and eleven
P. M. I have heard the statements given by my two daughters,
namely, Albertha L. Clark and Mrs. Martha A. Brown, and have heard read
the affidavits made and subscribed to by them, and I know of my own
knowledge that all the facts therein stated are true.

MRS. LUCINDA x THOMSON.
          her mark

Sworn to before me this 24th day of September, 1900.

GEO. P. HAMMOND, JR., Notary Public (164), N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

Mrs. Elizabeth Brown, being duly sworn, deposes and says:

I reside at No. 458 Seventh Avenue, New York City. On Saturday, August
18th, 1900, my brother, Charles A. Mitchell, twenty-seven years of age,
and employed as a waiter, had heard of the riots and was on his way
to see me, and had reached the corner of 34th Street and 7th Avenue,
when he saw a mob of about five hundred people, led by eight or nine
officers, who upon seeing him attacked and clubbed him, hitting him
on the head and shoulders. He managed to reach the front door of my
home and run into it, where I aided him and put him on a lounge; this
was about ten o'clock on Saturday evening. His wife came to see him
about 10:30 and took him home about one o'clock Sunday morning, where
he stayed until about two A. M., when he became violent, and
it became necessary to send him to the insane pavilion of Bellevue
Hospital. All the time he was shouting in his delirium, "Devery did
it! Devery did it! Here they come!" Deponent declares that while in
the insane pavilion of Bellevue Hospital her brother, the said Charles
A. Mitchell, was beaten and maltreated by the attendants thereat, he
having a gash in his head about three inches long, and similar cuts on
his wrist and two on his leg. He stayed at Bellevue from Sunday, the
19th of August, 1900, to Thursday, the 23rd of August, 1900, when he
was removed to Ward's Island Insane Asylum. Deponent states further
that her brother is of very slight build, being only five feet six
inches in height and weighing about one hundred and twelve pounds, and
that she witnessed the clubbing of her brother by the police as she was
looking out of the front window at the time, and that the said clubbing
was unjustifiable and brutal, and wholly without cause.

MRS. ELIZABETH BROWN.

Sworn to before me this 20th day of September, 1900.

GEO. P. HAMMOND, JR., Notary Public (164), N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

Mrs. Elizabeth Brown, being duly sworn, deposes and says:

On Saturday, August 18th, 1900, I saw the mob going towards 37th
Street, and while watching them I saw a colored man come up from a
house somewhere on 7th Avenue between 36th and 37th Streets and run
toward 35th Street. Some of the officers saw him and ran after him,
catching him and clubbing him, leaving him lying on the car track
for dead. He was picked up by some men and taken to a saloon on the
northeast corner of 36th Street and 7th Avenue.

MRS. ELIZABETH BROWN.

Sworn to before me this 20th day of September, 1900.

GEO. P. HAMMOND, JR., Notary Public (164), N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

Willis King, being duly sworn, deposes and says:

I reside at 346 West 41st Street, New York City. On Wednesday. August
15th, 1900, while passing through 34th Street, about 11:30 P.
M., I was joined by a crowd of men and boys. I crossed over to the
north side of the street, to where about a dozen officers stood, on the
northeast corner, in front of a saloon. I was grabbed by three of them
as soon as I got near them, and without saying a word they started me
up 8th Avenue towards the station house. On the way up 8th Avenue the
officer who was behind me, and who was feeling my clothes and pockets
for weapons, said, "He has nothing." Whereupon the officer on my right
suggested that they go down a dark street, which was done by turning
west on 35th Street. We had gone about one third of the way down the
block, on the south side of the street, when all three officers turned
on me and beat me with their clubs over the head and body. I was felled
to the sidewalk. When they stopped one of them remarked. "I guess that
will do him for a while," whereupon all three of them walked off,
leaving me lying upon the sidewalk. I managed to get to No. 327 West
35th Street, when a lady by the name of Mrs. Smith, who lives on the
second floor, and who had seen the officers clubbing some one, was
standing on the front stoop of her home; she asked me when she saw me
whether it was I that had been clubbed, and I told her that it was.
She then took me into Mrs. Conner's apartments on the first floor and
dressed the cuts in my head. Deponent declares that he did not know
anything about a disturbance, that he did not resist arrest, and that
he was perfectly sober and on his way home from visiting a friend on
East 27th Street.

WILLIS KING.

Sworn to before me this 27th day of September, 1900.

GEO. P. HAMMOND, JR., Notary Public (164). N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

Isaiah O. Ferguson, being duly sworn, deposes and says:

I reside at 165 East 97th Street, New York City. On Wednesday evening,
August 15th, 1900, I started to go downtown on the West Side, and had
reached the neighborhood of 8th Avenue and 43rd Street, riding on an
8th Avenue car, which was of the combination type, and I was in the
closed part, when I reached the aforementioned place. I noticed a large
crowd of people, and patrol wagons and ambulances. I inquired from a
gentleman who sat next to me what was the matter, and he replied that
he did not know. We proceeded downtown and had reached the neighborhood
of 36th Street, when suddenly the car, which had been proceeding very
slowly, came to a dead stop. The motorman and the conductor both folded
their arms and looked at me. The next I knew a number of men jumped on
the car, some coming through the windows, and commenced beating me,
and continued to beat me until I was insensible. When I came to, the
car had started and was going slowly. I was bewildered and dazed, and
I rushed from the car and downtown, several people on the way trying
to stop me, but I was crazed with pain and fled on, until I was met by
a lady friend, who stopped me on seeing my condition, and took me to
her home, on 17th Street near 9th Avenue, where she bathed my head and
dressed my wounds, and where I stayed until the next morning, when I
went to Washington, D. C., where a physician attended to me. Deponent
further states as the car stopped he noticed four police officers on
the east side of the avenue, and that they made no attempt whatever to
interfere with the mob: further, that he was proceeding on his journey
in a quiet manner, and had not heard of any trouble, and that he had
given absolutely no cause for the attack.

I. O. FERGUSON.

Sworn to before me this 21st day of September, 1900.

GEO. P. HAMMOND, JR., Notary Public (164), N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

Headly Johnson, being duly sworn, deposes and says: I reside at 330
West 53rd Street. I am employed as a Pullman car porter, on the cars
running out of the West Shore depot, Weehawken, N. J. I arrived on my
train at the said depot on Thursday, August 16th, 1900, at 2:25 P.
M. I arrived in New York about 5:30 P. M. the same day,
and, having heard of the riots, I had prepared to protect myself from
the mob by carrying home with me a revolver. I boarded a car at the
West Shore ferry at the foot of West 42nd Street and transferred to
an 8th Avenue car at 34th Street, and had proceeded as far as 40th
Street, when the car was assailed by a mob shouting, "There's another
nigger! Kill him! lynch him!" I stood up and was ready to defend
myself, when a passenger on the car asked me to sit down, saying that
if the mob got on the car he would help me defend myself. I sat down as
requested, and happening to look over my shoulder I saw three police
officers in uniform running after the car. They boarded the car, and,
seizing me, one of the officers put his hand in my pocket and took
the revolver from me, then pulled me off the car, saying, "Come off
of here, you black son of a b----!" When they had pulled me off the
car they immediately commenced clubbing me, and continued to do so all
the way to the station house. While in the station house I saw several
colored men beaten by police officers. The sergeant at the desk, when
I was sent to a cell, shouted to the police officers, "Don't hit this
man!" repeating the same several times. I was taken to the police court
the next day, where I was discharged. Deponent states further that the
officer who arrested him and appeared against him in the police court
is the one who did the most of the clubbing; in fact, all of it except
one blow. Deponent declares further that he was proceeding quietly to
his home, where he was determined to go, and was not molesting anyone,
and that when the officers signified their intention to arrest him
he made no show of resistance, and that therefore the clubbing was
unjustifiable and an outrage.

HEADLY JOHNSON.

Sworn to before me this 8th day of September, 1900.

GEO. P. HAMMOND, JR., Notary Public (164), N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

Benjamin McCoy, being duly sworn, deposes and says: I reside at 226
West 40th Street. On Thursday, August 16th, 1900, about five A.
M., I arose to go to my work. I went to Dobbins' restaurant, on
8th Avenue between 40th and 41st Streets, and had breakfast, after
finishing which I went to the corner of 41st Street to board an 8th
Avenue car, to reach my place of business. As I was standing waiting
for the car I saw two officers walking on the east side of the street,
and a colored man came running along with blood streaming from his
head, and said to me, "Don't stand there; go away, or those policemen
will club you to death; they just clubbed me." The car came along just
then, and I walked out to get on board, and had put my hand on the
rail, when one of the officers who had been on the other side of the
street came suddenly around from behind the car, and struck me on the
shin of my left leg, and struck me several times on the upper part of
the leg, saying, "Get in there, get in there! What are you standing
around here whistling for?" Deponent declares that he was not creating
any disturbance at the time, and that there were not over four or
five persons, outside of the police officers, on the street in the
immediate neighborhood, and that the assault was entirely unwarranted
and unjustifiable and a flagrant outrage, perpetrated, by one by whom
deponent would expect, and had a right to expect, to be protected.

BENJAMIN MCCOY.

Sworn to before me this 7th day of September, 1900.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

Albert Saunders, being duly sworn, deposes and says: I live at 440 West
45th Street. I work at 118 West 27th Street. On August 15th I left
my work at night and walked up 8th Avenue toward my home. About 38th
Street a crowd ran at me, somebody struck me, and I staggered, and then
I received another blow that cut open my head and made me speechless.
I found myself in the hands of an officer, who took me to the station
house, where my wound was dressed. I stayed there till about four
A. M. A number of colored men were brought in by officers,
some of them cut and bleeding, like myself. I remember a colored man
who was brought in bleeding, and naked except for a merino shirt. When
he was taken back to the cells the policeman who had him clubbed his
legs. Another man who had a cut head was advised by the jailer to put
his head under the hydrant, but the man said he was afraid the officer
who had him would strike him again if he got his head down, so the
jailer got a pail and washed it. I was not in a position where I could
see clearly all that happened, but I saw several other colored men
struck and abused by policemen. I am an English subject, was born in
St. Kitts, and suppose that my speech showed that I was not an American
and protected me.

ALBERT SAUNDERS.

Sworn to before me this 5th day of September, 1900.

FRANK MOSS, Notary Public, N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

George White, of 145 West 32nd Street, being duly sworn, deposes and
says that on Wednesday, August 15th, 1900, at half past ten P.
M., while riding on a 34th Street car, going east, he saw and
heard a crowd of boys and young men running and yelling at the car that
he was on, and that immediately after he saw three police officers
board the said car, and upon seeing deponent they grabbed him by the
arm and clubbed him over the head and arms, pulled him off the car,
and continued to club him. They then took him to the West 37th Street
station house, where his wounds were dressed by a surgeon from one of
the hospitals, who was there. Deponent further states that he is not
addicted to the use of liquor, had not been drinking on the said day,
and that he was not intoxicated at the time of the clubbing; that he
was not placed under arrest, and that he remained in the station house
until after the storm came up, or as near as he can remember about
three o'clock A. M. the next morning, by reason of being told
that there was a mob outside waiting to beat all Negroes that they
could catch. Further, that by reason of the suddenness of the attack he
did not look closely at the assailants, so as to be able to identify
them.

GEORGE x WHITE.
    his mark

Sworn to before me this 28th day of August, 1900.

GEO. P. HAMMOND, JR., Notary Public (164), N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

Charles Bennett, being duly sworn, deposes and says:

I reside at No. 309 West 37th Street. On August 15th, 1900, I was
working for a man named Mr. O'Connor, who keeps a saloon at Coney
Island. I quit work at one o'clock A. M. the next day (August
16th), and started for home with a man named Wilson. We boarded an 8th
Avenue car at Warren Street and Broadway, which was going north; just
before we reached the street whereon I reside the conductor of the car
upon which we were riding told us that there had been a riot, that it
was because of the death of the police officer, and that they were
attacking every colored man that they caught. I then said that we had
better get off; the conductor then said that it was "pretty quiet" when
he came down. We got off the car at 8th Avenue and 37th Street, and at
3:30 A. M. had almost reached the front door of my home when
several police officers from among a group of about a dozen called to
me asking me where I was going. I told them, "Home here." I was then
in front of my door, and immediately after making my reply an officer
hit me with his club, knocking me down. I struggled to my feet and
endeavored to run towards 8th Avenue, but was pursued by the officers
and knocked down again at the corner of 8th Avenue and 36th Street. It
was raining very hard at the time, and they threw me into the gutter,
which was full of rain water; they kept my head in the water until I
strangled, when they let up, jumped on me, and pushed me back again
into the gutter. After a while they called a patrol wagon, into which
they threw me, and beat me all the way to the station house in 37th
Street. Upon my arrival there my head had been cut open; I was covered
with blood and bruises from the beating and clubbing I had received.
While in the station house I told Captain Cooney that I had been
clubbed by policemen. I remained in the station house for about half
an hour, and while there I heard a man who was dressed in citizen's
clothes say to the officers present, "Club every d----d nigger you see;
kill them; shoot them; be brave, the same as I was." The man answered,
"All right; will you stick to us?" He answered, "Yes, I'll stand by
you." I heard this man called Thompson by some of the officers. He
went among the colored men who were present and who were in almost as
bad condition as I was, asking their names, where they had lived, and
what they had been doing. After receiving their answers he said to each
of them, "Get ter h--l home out of here; they'd ought ter have killed
yer!" When he came to me he said, "What's your name?" I told him; then
he said, "What were you doing?" I said, "I just come from work at Coney
Island." He exclaimed, "Coney Island, eh! That's a d----d nice place to
be working. Where do you live?" I told him, when he said, "Another nice
place right in my district, the worst block in the whole district." He
did not tell me to get out, but I was shortly after taken to Roosevelt
Hospital and from there to Bellevue Hospital, where I remained a week,
when I was taken to 54th Street Court, where I had a hearing and was
discharged on August 28th, 1900. While I was being clubbed in the
street one of the officers said, "Search him," whereupon they stopped
the clubbing long enough to search my pockets and take fourteen dollars
in bills from me, which I had in my hip pocket of my trousers. I have
never had the said money returned to me. While I was in the station
house Captain Cooney was there, but not in uniform, and the aforesaid
man whom they called Thompson was giving orders to the men, in the
presence of Captain Cooney. At the time that I had reached my home on
the said night there was no disturbance in the neighborhood, and there
was but one man in sight, and he was chased away by the officers.
Everything was quiet in the neighborhood, and on the way uptown on the
car I saw no signs of a disturbance, and would not have known anything
about there having been anything of the kind if I had not been informed
by the car conductor. I can identify two of the officers who took part
in the clubbing, one of whom was dressed in citizen's clothes, and who,
I think, was one of the wardmen attached to that precinct. (The witness
subsequently identified Officer Herman Ohm.) Deponent further states
that he has resided in the City of New York for the past fifteen years,
and has never been arrested before in his life, and has always been a
quiet, law-abiding citizen.

CHARLES x BENNETT.
     his mark

Sworn to before me this 31st day of August, 1900.

GEO. P. HAMMOND, JR., Notary Public (164), N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

James Joseph Lockett, being duly sworn, deposes and says:

I reside at No. 323 West 37th Street, in the Borough of Manhattan. I
am a cigar maker, and am employed by Gahio & Roverie, on East 37th
Street. On Wednesday, August 15th, 1900, at about eight P. M.,
accompanied by my wife, I called at the residence of Thomas H. McGuire,
a friend of mine who resides at No. 410 West 36th Street, where we
remained until about 11:15 P. M. We walked east on 36th Street
to 8th Avenue, where we met four police officers in uniform on the
northwest corner. We passed them and turned into 8th Avenue, walking on
the west side of the avenue, towards 37th Street. We had not gone over
fifty feet when the officers ran after us and beat us with their clubs.
One of the officers said to me. "You black son of a b----, you have a
knife!" and struck me on the head with a club several times, and then
led us to the station house. There we were searched by the officer, who
took eleven dollars in money--two two-dollar bills, one five-dollar
bill, and two one-dollar bills--one rent receipt for thirteen dollars
and fifty cents for August, signed by Herbert Peck & Co., none of
which has been returned to me. The sergeant, in uniform, was behind
the desk, and the roundsman made the entry. I was charged with being
drunk and carrying a knife. My head was bleeding profusely from the
wounds inflicted by the police officers, and the police surgeon at the
station house had to dress them. After this I was placed in a cell. The
next morning I was arraigned in the Magistrates' Court on West 54th
Street. The officer swore that I was drunk and disorderly and carried
a knife. The magistrate held me in $500 bail, and I was bailed by Mr.
Garner. I was not drunk on the occasion in question. I had drunk three,
and positively not more than four, glasses of beer at Mr. McGuire's
house. I did nothing which would justify this conduct on the part of
the police officers. On August 23rd an officer called at my house. He
said he was generally known as "Bootsey," and was sent by the Captain
to obtain a statement from me, which I gave him. He was in citizen's
clothes. He called again on August 24th, and said that Captain Cooney
wanted to see me at the station house. I did not go to see him.

JAMES JOSEPH LOCKETT.

Sworn to before me this 28th day of August, 1900.

STEPHEN B. BRAGUE, Notary Public (125), N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

Lavinia Lockett, being duly sworn, deposes and says:

That she is the wife of James Joseph Lockett, and resides at 323 West
37th Street, in the Borough of Manhattan. That on August 15th, 1900,
at about eight o'clock in the evening, she with her husband visited
Mr. Thomas H. McGuire, a friend of ours, where we remained until about
11:15 P. M. Walking easterly to 8th Avenue, we met four police
officers in uniform on the northwest corner. We had gone about fifty
feet, when the officers ran after us and struck my husband with a
club and said, "You black son of a b----, you have a knife," and when
deponent screamed she was struck in the mouth and chest with a club by
one of the officers. We were taken to the station and locked in cells;
my husband was charged with being drunk and disorderly, and we were
held in bail in the sum of $500. Neither my husband nor myself was
intoxicated, and saw no crowd or any row and no excitement on our way
home until we were assaulted.

LAVINIA LOCKETT.

Sworn to before me this 28th day of August, 1900.

STEPHEN B. BRAGUE, Notary Public (125), N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

William Hamer, of No. 494 7th Avenue, being duly sworn, deposes and
says:

I am a musician. I am employed at "The Fair," kept by Mr. Samuels, on
14th Street between 3rd and 4th Avenues. My wife is employed there
also. On August 15th I finished my work about 11:30 P. M. I
took the crosstown 14th Street car and changed to the 7th Avenue horse
cars. I had not heard anything of the riot. The car stopped between
36th and 37th Streets, and my wife and I were dragged from the car by a
crowd of men and lads armed with sticks and stones. I ran into a stable
at 37th Street and 7th Avenue, and they beat me in there and left me
for dead. A stone or something hit me in the stomach, and I fell into a
water trough. My wife and I were separated, and she did not find me. I
crawled out of the stable into a lumber yard and lay there in my blood
until three A. M. I have been in the doctor's care ever since,
and am out to-day for the first time. My doctor is Dr. Yarnell, of Park
Avenue near 84th Street. When I was pulled out of the car I noticed
a colored man lying unconscious on the ground. There were at least a
dozen policemen standing around. They did nothing, and made no effort
to protect me.

WILLIAM HAMER.

Sworn to before me this 31st day of August, 1900.

FRANK MOSS, Notary Public, N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

Mrs. Annie Hamer, being duly sworn, deposes and says that she resides
at 494 7th Avenue; that she is employed as a musician at "The Fair," in
East 14th Street; that on Wednesday, August 15th, 1900, about midnight
thereof, she in company with her husband arrived at 7th Avenue between
36th and 37th Streets on a 7th Avenue car; that when she alighted from
the car she found herself surrounded by a mob, and almost instantly was
struck in the mouth with a brick, thrown by some one whom she does
not know. She became separated from her husband, and did not know what
became of him until three A. M. the next morning, when he
came home all covered with blood. Deponent states further that she has
read the affidavit of her husband, hereto attached, and knows of her
own knowledge that the facts therein stated are true. Deponent further
states that she has been informed by her mother that the "captain"
stationed officers at the door of her residence, and told them to "not
let anyone in or out, and if anyone attempted it to shoot them."

ANNIE HAMER.

Sworn to before me this 6th day of September, 1900.

GEO. P. HAMMOND, JR., Notary Public (164), N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

William Lemoine, residing at 68 West 43rd Street, being duly sworn,
deposes and says that on Wednesday, August 15th, 1900, he started at
7:55 P. M. to attend a meeting of Odd Fellows being held at
29th Street between 6th and 7th Avenues, and had reached 7th Avenue
between 35th and 36th Streets, when he met two white men, who said
to him, "You had better not go down that way, you will get mobbed."
I said, "Mobbed! for what?" They said, "Why, they are having a riot
down there." I continued on, however, until I reached 34th and 35th
Streets on 7th Avenue, where I met two white women, who said to me,
"Do you want to get killed? If you don't you had better go on back."
I thereupon went no further in that direction, but turned back up 7th
Avenue, and went as far as 483 7th Avenue, and saw a crowd coming down
7th Avenue from about 41st Street, and another from about 34th Street.
Both of the crowds were composed of boys and young men who were in
the lead shouting and yelling, while in the midst of them were two or
three police officers. The boys would stir up a colored man and begin
yelling, "There he goes! There is one of them!" and the boys would
immediately run after them, and the police follow. I saw them overtake
two colored men, and saw the police take them down 37th Street towards
8th Avenue. While I was standing in front of 483 7th Avenue a friend of
mine, Mrs. Harriet Ann Bruna, who now resides at 152 West 27th Street,
called to me from her window, and told me to come upstairs, which I
did. She then said that I had better go into the hall bedroom and stay
there overnight, as I might get hurt if I stayed outside or attempted
to get home. This was about 8:30 P. M. I then went into the
hall bedroom aforementioned, and remained there looking out of the
window for about one hour and a half, during which time the blinds
were closed or turned down; I then undressed and went to bed, and was
in bed about an hour and three quarters, or until about 11:45 P.
M., when I heard a crash at the front door downstairs and heard
some one coming upstairs; when they reached my door they knocked at it
with their clubs, and broke in the central panel of the door, when I
said, "Don't break in the door, gentlemen; I'll open it," which I did.
Four officers in uniform and two men in citizens' clothes came in, and
exclaimed, "Here is the d----d nigger; kill him!" One in citizen's
clothes came over to me (I had fallen on the bed) and, striking me
on the hip with his club, said, "Come, get up out of there, where is
that gun?" I said, "I have no gun; there's my clothes; search them and
the room. I have done nothing; I have been asleep." The officers then
searched the room, my clothes, and myself, and found nothing. The one
in citizen's clothes then said, "He has no gun; we can't do anything."
The women in the house commenced to scream, and the officers then
broke in the door of Mrs. Elizabeth Mitchell, on the second floor,
frightening her so that she has been unable to leave her bed ever
since. I was hipshodden for a couple of days, and I rubbed it with
liniment for a couple of days until the misery got out of it. Deponent
further says that he has resided in San Francisco for the past eight
years, and had just arrived in the city the day before the riot, and
did not create any disturbance at that or any other time; and further,
that he did not fire any shot from any firearm on that evening; and
furthermore, never owned a gun, and never carried one.

WILLIAM LEMOINE.

Sworn to before me this 30th day of August, 1900.

GEO. P. HAMMOND, JR., Notary Public (164), N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

Walter W. Coulter (white), 481 7th Avenue, being duly sworn, deposes
and says that on Wednesday evening, August 15th, 1900, there was quite
a disturbance around his place of business, and at about 11:30 P.
M. he saw a number of officers and men in citizens' clothes go
into the houses 481 and 483, and he, thinking they were part of the
crowd of roughs, stepped up to a police officer, who was quite tall and
stout and of reddish complexion, and said to him, "Why do you allow
those rowdies to go up into that house; there is no one except a lot
of respectable women and children in there, and possibly one man."
The police officer replied as follows: "You go on and mind your own
respectability, and you will have enough to do; they just shied a brick
at us." Deponent further states that no brick had been thrown; that,
in fact, they could not get a brick, as he was looking for one a short
while before that to do some repairing with, and could not find one;
that the only apparent reason for their going into the house was the
fact that a large, tall man, whom he can identify if he sees him again,
came along 7th Avenue, and seeing this colored man in the window called
out, "There's a big nigger; get him!" and immediately there was a rush
made for the house. Deponent states further that the police knew there
were none but respectable people in that house, as deponent had gone
to a great deal of trouble to get rid of a lot of dissolute people who
were in the house about a year ago, and in his endeavors to get rid of
them had called upon the police to aid him, so that they were perfectly
cognizant of the facts in the case.

WALTER W. COULTER.

Sworn to before me this 31st day of August, 1900.

GEO. P. HAMMOND, JR., Notary Public (164), N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

Mrs. Elizabeth Mitchell, being duly sworn, deposes and says that she
resides at 481 7th Avenue; that on Wednesday evening, August 15th,
1900, about 11:30 P. M., two police officers in citizens'
clothes and one in citizen's dress broke in the door of her apartments
claiming to be looking for "the man that threw the bottle." She
answered and said that "no bottle was thrown," and that it was a shame
for them to break in the door of respectable people; that her sister,
Mrs. Kate Jackson, became frightened at the uproar, and thinking that
the life of her children and herself was in danger, jumped out of the
window with her three-year-old child in her arms, thereby endangering
the life of herself and child, and in consequence is now confined to
her bed with shock, fright, and bruises. That at six A. M. the
next morning she saw a colored man and woman assaulted on the corner of
36th Street and 7th Avenue. Also at 52nd Street and 7th Avenue, between
eleven and twelve A. M., she saw a colored man assaulted by
a white man, and when the officer attempted to interfere and arrest
the white man the motormen around the stables refused to allow him
to arrest him. She states further that one of the officers' first
name was "Jim," as she heard him so addressed by the man in citizen's
clothes.

MRS. ELIZABETH MITCHELL.

Sworn to before me this 31st day of August, 1900.

GEO. P. HAMMOND, JR., Notary Public (164), N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

Mrs. Kate Jackson, being duly sworn, deposes and says that she resides
at 481 7th Avenue, and that on Wednesday evening, August 15th, 1900,
she heard a great commotion in the hallway and almost immediately a
loud knocking on her door, and loud demands to open the door. She
thought by the sound that the mob that she had heard and seen about
the house was endeavoring to get into her rooms, and do her and her
children bodily harm, and possibly murder. She caught up her youngest
child (three years old) in her arms, and in her frenzy and fright
jumped out the window on to a shed and thence to the yard, the child
still in her arms, receiving bruises during her descent which have
made her lame and unable to walk, and has suffered so from shock that
she is now in bed and unable to leave it, and is under the care of her
physician, Dr. William Hartley, 335 West 34th Street.

MRS. KATIE JACKSON.

Sworn to before me this 31st day of August, 1900.

GEO. P. HAMMOND, JR., Notary Public (164), N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

William L. Hall, being duly sworn, deposes and says that he resides
at 202 West 49th Street; that he is employed as an elevator conductor
by R. H. Macy & Co., on West 14th Street; that on August 15th, 1900,
he was on his way to visit a friend at 410 West 36th Street, and had
reached 36th Street and 9th Avenue, when a crowd of young men and
boys, from about sixteen to nineteen years of age, got around him
and commenced yelling, jeering, hooting, and striking him with their
fists, and with sticks, pieces of pipe, and one in particular struck
him in the side with a weapon made of a long piece of wire, with a
hammer head fastened to it. He ran away from the crowd, and succeeded
in reaching a house in 36th Street between 8th and 9th Avenues, and
succeeded in defending himself there for about an hour and a half, and
finally managed to get out and home. Deponent states further that at
the time of the assault, and at the commencement of it, four officers
in full uniform were in the midst of the crowd of rioters, and were
with them while they (the rioters) were attacking the house with
stones, and that at that time, and at no time during the assault by
the rioters, did these officers make any attempt to protect deponent,
or to stop the assault by the rioters, but on the contrary, by reason
of their presence and inaction on their part, they encouraged the said
rioters to greater deeds of violence; that the deponent is a peaceable,
law-abiding citizen and a member of St. Mark's M. E. Church, on West
53rd Street, and that on the said evening he was molesting no one, and
was walking quietly along with Joseph Cæser, of 121 West 46th Street,
and John Hansborough, of 329 West 53rd Street, who also were attacked
by the rioters.

WILLIAM L. HALL.

Sworn to before me this 1st day of September, 1900.

GEO. P. HAMMOND, JR., Notary Public (164), N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

William E. Johnson, being duly sworn, deposes and says:

I reside at 332 West 37th Street. On Wednesday, August 15th, 1900,
fearing that there might be trouble over the killing of Officer
Thorpe, I remained in the house all day and did not go out until about
eleven P. M., when I went across the street to get my mail
from 331 West 37th Street, where I have a letter box, because where
I live at present the letter boxes are easily rifled, and this box
is more secure. Upon returning to the house, which I did about five
or ten minutes after leaving it, I found a police officer standing
in the front of the house, ordering the tenants who were sitting on
the front stoop to go inside, and saying that if he found them there
when he came back he would club every one of them that he found there.
The people then jumped up and ran inside, and the officer immediately
followed them, striking at them, and struck one woman across the face.
As the people got inside the vestibule door the said door closed, and
I, thinking that the officer would not go inside, opened the door and
stepped inside, whereupon the officer rushed into the hall, and struck
me a blow on the head, felling me to my knees. I said, "Officer, I have
done nothing; why do you strike me?" The officer said nothing, but
jumped over me, chasing some of the tenants who had not succeeded in
getting upstairs. While he was doing that I went out into the street,
holding my head, which had been cut open by the blow, when the officer
came out of the house and, grabbing me, pushed me into the street and
commenced to club me again. I ran across the street to the tailor shop
of I. Cohn, at 337 West 37th Street, and into the back room of his
place, and fell on the sofa, where the officer, who had followed me in,
renewed the clubbing and dragged me out into the street and to the 37th
Street station house; and on the corner of 9th Avenue and 37th Street
they met an officer who was in citizen's clothes. The said officer drew
his billy from his pocket, and struck me a blow across the neck, and
put his billy back into his pocket. When I reached the station house I
did not answer any questions, and the sergeant who was behind the desk
knew my last name and entered it on the blotter as Albert Johnson, not
knowing my first name. I was put in a cell, and after I was put in a
cell two more were put in with me, and once or twice while I was there
an officer came through, and going to each cell called the occupant to
the door, asked them their names, etc., and would then take his billy
and push it through the bars into their faces. In one case he struck
one man in the face, knocking out two of his front teeth; this man was
sent to the island the next day, and I believe is now there. On the
Tuesday following Acting Captain Cooney called and brought me down to
the station house, and asked me who the officer was that assaulted
me. Deponent then described the officer to him, and after consulting
the blotter he handed me a slip of paper whereon was written the name
"Herman Ohm" saying that was the name of the officer who had assaulted
me. Captain Cooney expressed surprise that any of the officers should
have beaten me, as I was known to a great many of them. The officer
charged me with having a gun, and of giving him a fight in the hallway,
but did not produce the gun and was given until the next day to
produce it, when he produced a revolver and a bread knife of peculiar
shape, claiming that was what I had in my possession at the time of my
arrest. Deponent denied then and now that he had ever had a revolver
and knife in his possession, and that the only thing that was found on
him and taken from him was fifty cents in money and a small penknife.
Notwithstanding the denial of the ownership of the revolver and knife
by the deponent, and also that the officer brought no witnesses as
to his taking the said articles from him, deponent was fined fifteen
dollars, which was paid.

W. E. JOHNSON.

Sworn to before me this 4th day of September. 1900.

GEO. P. HAMMOND. JR., Notary Public (164), N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

Edwin H. Broadard, being duly sworn, deposes and says that he resides
at 332 West 37th Street; that he witnessed the action of the officer
mentioned in the above affidavit of W. E. Johnson, and also the
subsequent clubbing of Johnson by the said officer, and that deponent
was one of the tenants who was chased off the stoop by the said
officer; that the assault on the tenants by the said officer was
unwarranted and without justification.

EDWIN H. BROADARD.

Sworn to before me this 4th day of September, 1900.

GEO. P. HAMMOND, JR., Notary Public (164), N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

Mrs. Rosa Lewis, being duly sworn, deposes and says:

I reside at 332 West 37th Street. On Wednesday, August 15th, 1900,
about eleven P. M., I in company with my husband and a number
of other tenants were sitting on the front stoop of our home, when an
officer approached and ordered us to "get inside out of that," adding
that if we didn't he'd club us. All of the tenants immediately obeyed
and passed on into the hallway, and I had reached the foot of the
stairs leading up to my rooms when the officer, who had rushed into the
hallway, struck me over the back with his club; I was lame in my back
and suffered pain from it for a number of days. Deponent states further
that the staircase is in the center of the house and about fifteen feet
from the main entrance; that she was using every endeavor to comply
with the command of the officer, which was given in an insulting and
ill-natured manner.

ROSA LEWIS.

Sworn to before me this 13th day of September, 1900.

GEO. P. HAMMOND, JR., Notary Public (164), N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

Maria Williams, of No. 206 West 27th Street, and Carrie Wells, of No.
239 West 29th Street, in the Borough of Manhattan, being severally duly
sworn, depose and say:

On Wednesday, August 15th, 1900, we were sitting on the stoop of No.
239 West 29th Street, talking; we had been sitting there since 9:30
P. M. We had there learned of the assaults on the Negroes in
this section, and heard the noise of the crowds and the stopping of
the cars on 8th Avenue. There was no crowd in the street at this time.
There were white and colored folks sitting on nearly all the stoops,
the same as occurs on any ordinary warm night. About 11:30 several
officers came through the street from 8th Avenue and walked towards
7th Avenue, three on the north side and four on the south side. No
one in the street had been molested by anyone. These officers walked
up the stoops, and without any warning ordered us into our houses,
at the same time striking at us. Mrs. Wells, the mother of deponent
Carrie Wells, was on the stoop one step from the bottom with three of
her children, aged respectively fourteen, thirteen, and twelve years.
An officer who is called "Joe," and whom we know, stepped up to Mrs.
Wells, and said, "Get in there, you black son of a b----," and struck
her viciously across the right hip, when she ran in with her children,
the officers still following, striking at her until he reached the top
step, looked around, and threatened to strike us if we came out again,
and he then went away. Deponent Williams looked out of her window and
saw these officers go through the same procedure wherever colored
folks were sitting. Nothing was said or done to any white people. We
see this officer every day. At about 2:15 in the morning some officers
came through the block and clubbed colored people wherever they saw
them, men as well as women. Deponent Wells lives at home with her
mother, and helps her keep house; deponent Williams keeps house for
herself and husband. Deponent Wells is a member of the Church of the
Transfiguration, at 29th Street and 5th Avenue, where I have attended
for years. Mr. and Mrs. Miller, of West 29th Street, know of us; Mrs.
McGurk, of No. 225 West 29th Street, Mrs. Kloze, of 223 West 29th
Street, all can vouch for our character.

CARRIE WELLS.

MARIA x WILLIAMS.
   her mark

Sworn to before me this 4th day of September. 1900.

SAMUEL MARCUS, Notary Public. N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

Mrs. Irene Wells, being duly sworn, deposes and says that she resides
at No. 239 West 29th Street; that on Wednesday evening, about nine
o'clock P. M., she visited a sick friend, named Mrs. Twine
(who has since died), at No. 216 West 29th Street, and while there,
and at about eleven o'clock P. M., hearing of the riot, she
rushed out of said 216 West 29th Street to look for her children and
get them safely at home--she having five children, and, motherlike,
was anxious to get them out of danger. That while gathering her
children together she noticed six police officers on each side of the
street, and had succeeded in getting her children up the stoop and
into the hallway of her home, and was on the second step of her stoop
going upstairs, when Police Officer 1065 came along, and, striking
her across the right hip with his club, said, "Get in out of here!"
and made several passes at her, and pursued her up two or three steps
of the stoop, but she rushed on up the stoop, driving her children
before her, and escaped him and his blows. Deponent further says that
she is a widow, and the sole support of her five children, by doing
general housework, ironing, and washing, etc., and has done so for the
past seven years; that she is a thoroughly respectable woman, and is
peaceful and quiet at all times, and deems this assault by the police
officer aforementioned an outrage, and without cause or provocation.
There were three children on the stoop with her.

IRENE WELLS.

Sworn to before me this 31st day of August, 1900.

GEO. P. HAMMOND. JR., Notary Public (164), N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

William H. Ross, being duly sworn, says:

I reside at 475 7th Avenue, near 36th Street, New York City. I had
lived a short time at 225 West 32nd Street. I have lived for five years
in New York. I have been a messenger for General Daniel E. Sickles. At
about eleven o'clock on the evening of August 15th deponent was on his
way to his rooms, but was stopped at Zion's flat and advised to come in
and not cross the street, as there was a riot. I went in and went up
two pair of stairs until about four o'clock in the morning, and slept
on the stairs. My hour for going to work that morning was five o'clock,
at the Herald Building, where I was working for Marsell, who attends to
housecleaning and to the building. Another man, whose name I learned
was Hicks, took refuge in the building at the same time. At about half
past four o'clock on the morning of the 16th we heard a great commotion
in the house. Three policemen rushed upstairs; the first one said, "You
d----d black son of a b----, if you move I will shoot you like a dog!"
He then hit me on the head with his club, and cut my head open; the
other one then hit me on the head, and both beat me with their clubs
on the neck, back, shoulders, chest, and ribs until I was bloody and
sore and fell down, when one of the officers poked his pistol in my
face and said, "You black son of a b----, just move or say a word, and
I will shoot you like a cur." They also beat Hicks and broke his nose.
People whom I did not know, looking out of windows, cried out about
the brutality. They then had their fun with us, saying, "You d----d
niggers; get out of here." Then when we would start they would again
grab us, beat us, and threaten to shoot us. I would know one of these
policemen, as I saw him since on 7th Avenue, and also in September at
Broadway and 12th Street. I think that I would know the other fellow.
In taking us to court they swore to the most outrageous lies, without
any reason in fact. They stated we had been on the roof throwing
bottles on the street. I had never been in the house in my life, never
had been in a room and not above the second story, where they gave me
shelter. The policemen told other lies--that they arrested me before,
that he had warned me before on the street, that he had arrested me for
fighting a few days before. The judge asked if they had any witnesses;
they answered "Yes," and he gave them until three o'clock, when we were
discharged. I was never arrested before in my life. Two doctors gave me
certificates of character, which I had in court.

WILLIAM H. ROSS.

Sworn to before me this 4th day of September, 1900.

STEPHEN B. BRAGUE, Notary Public (125). N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

Robert Myrick, being duly sworn, deposes and says that he resides at
414 West 39th Street, and is employed by Bernard Brennan, saloon keeper
at 49th Street and Broadway; that on Thursday evening, August 16th, at
about eight P. M., he left his work at the said saloon and
walked to 8th Avenue between 47th and 48th Streets; that he entered
a restaurant on that block, and after eating a meal he asked the
proprietor whether there was any trouble downtown to-night. He replied,
"No, it is kind of quiet to-night, but I guess you had better take a
car and ride down, it will be safer." He replied. "I guess that will be
the best way," and then walked out onto the avenue and boarded a car
bound downtown, and had gone as far as 42nd Street when a mob of about
one hundred boys, none of whom apparently were over nineteen years of
age, began to throw stones at the car and yell, "There's a nigger in
the car; let's kill him!" Some woman on the car said, "Come over here,
mister; don't stand there and get killed." I went along the footboard
from the rear of the car, where I had been, and got under the seat,
where the mob could not see me; but the mob continued following the
car and stoned it until I reached 39th Street, where I wanted to get
off, but was advised there by three men (who were the only passengers
that had remained on the car) not to get off. I continued on until
the car reached 38th Street, when the car stopped and the mob caught
up with it. I then got off the east side of the car, and ran over to
the southeast corner of 8th Avenue, to where I saw five men standing,
and going up to one I said, "Officer, will you please see me home?"
He said, "Where do you live?" I told him. He then said, "What are you
doing on the street at this time of night?" I answered, "Going home
from work." He then asked me where I worked. I told him. He then said.
"Have you got a gun or a razor?" I said "I have neither." He then
proceeded to search me, when I remembered having a razor in a case in
my outside coat pocket, and I told the officer and showed him where it
was. He then took the razor out of my pocket, and, striking me across
the back of the neck with his club, said, "You black son of a b----!"
and then struck me several times on the head. I said to him, "I come
over to you for protection, and this is what I get." He then said,
"Shut up!" I was then taken to the 37th Street station house, and while
there I was kicked by the officers in the section room, and by the
doorman, and when I protested I was told to shut up. I was locked in
cell No. 13, and in the morning I was brought to the 54th Street police
court, where the judge turned me loose. While in my cell I got into
conversation with a colored man who is a porter for the N. Y. C. & H.
R. R., and he said that he was dragged from a street car and clubbed by
police officers. Deponent further states that he had the aforementioned
razor in his pocket by reason of the fact that it needed repairing, and
he had taken it to a barber to see if he could fix it, and finding that
he could not fix it he was taking it to his home to lay it away in its
place. Deponent says further that the time of the clubbing was about
8:30 P. M.

ROBERT MYRICK.

Sworn to before me this 1st day of September, 1900.

GEO. P. HAMMOND, JR., Notary Public (164), N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

Solomon Russell Wright, being duly sworn, deposes and says:

I reside at No. 129 West 27th Street; on Thursday, August 16th, 1900,
about 6:30 P. M., I left the house and walked to the corner of 7th
Avenue and 28th Street, where I met a friend of mine, with whom I
stood and chatted for about three quarters of an hour, when I left and
returned down 7th Avenue towards 27th Street, and had got within about
one hundred feet of 27th Street, when I was struck by a missile thrown
by an Italian boy. I naturally turned around and asked him what he had
done that for. I passed on, however, and had got about fifty feet east
of 7th Avenue, on 27th Street, when a police officer ran after me,
and seizing me commenced feeling around my clothes as if in search of
something. I had an ordinary pocket knife in the change pocket of my
coat, and the officer finding it said, "What are you doing with this?"
I answered, "Do you see me doing anything with it?" He then took me
to the 30th Street station house (19th Precinct), and while going up
the steps of the station house I stumbled, and the officer then hit
me on the back of the neck with his club. I was arraigned before the
sergeant, who took my pedigree, and at the close of that proceeding the
officer who had me in charge, and whose name is Kennedy, said to the
sergeant, "What will we do with this feller?" The sergeant replied,
"Kill the black son of a b----!" The said officer then brought me back,
and when we reached a flight of stairs leading down to the cells he
shoved me down the whole flight; when I reached the bottom some other
officers who were down there grabbed me and punched and beat me with
their fists. I was arraigned the next day and charged with carrying a
knife, and I was committed for ninety days. I served part of the time,
when I was released on bail. I was not intoxicated, and had never been
arrested before in my life. I never have and do not stand around the
corners of the neighborhood; and further, I am employed by the Standard
Oil Company as a porter.

SOLOMON R. WRIGHT.

Sworn to before me this 22nd day of September, 1900.

GEO. P. HAMMOND, JR., Notary Public (164). N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

Alfred Bradshaw, being duly sworn, deposes and says:

I reside at No. 210 West 27th Street with my wife and three children.
On August 16th, 1900, I bought a revolver on the Bowery, which I
intended to take home in the evening and leave there, as a protection
for my wife and children. There were numerous riots in the neighborhood
the evening before, and the rioters had broken into houses at all times
during the day and night, and I deemed it necessary for the protection
of my wife and children. I had been working at 96 Greene Street that
day. I am a general housecleaner, and work in all parts of the city. As
I was walking home on 7th Avenue, about four o'clock in the afternoon,
between 14th and 15th Streets, I saw a man run up to a police officer
and say something to him. The officer then came up to me and said,
"You've got a pistol; you give it up. I will arrest you." I handed him
the pistol, and he arrested me. I said as I handed it to him, "I bought
this pistol to protect my family at home. I heard of this rioting, and
I bought this pistol to protect my home." He said, "Why don't you call
to the officers for protection?" I said, "The officers can't protect
my home, because I don't know what time the riot might come in, and
we can't always find an officer on beat. I heard them break into some
houses and beat people unmercifully." I was taken to the 30th Street
station house. While there I saw Solomon Wright, who is at present in
the Penitentiary at Blackwell's Island, a Negro, being clubbed by a
policeman as he was being led from the sergeant's desk into the cell.
He was bleeding from his head, and his eye was discolored. I have been
in the city for twenty years, and have never been arrested before. I
did not show this pistol to anyone after I bought it, and intended to
leave it at the house, as a protection to my family.

ALFRED x BRADSHAW.
    his mark

Sworn to before me this 4th day of September, 1900.

STEPHEN B. BRAGUE. Notary Public (125), N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

John H. Kellum, being duly sworn, deposes and says:

I was on a Broadway car on the evening of Wednesday, August 15th, at
about 11:30 P. M. I boarded the car at the corner of 46th
Street and Broadway, and had reached a point a little north of 35th
Street, when I heard a mob run after the car and commence throwing
missiles at and into the car. Among other missiles was a little bottle,
which I caught, and with which I kept the rioters at bay. The car got
a short distance ahead of the mob, when it had passed 34th Street,
and I took advantage of that and jumped from the car and ran towards
three policemen in uniform, and two who were in citizens' clothes. One
of them said not to run any further, and one of the men in citizens'
clothes said, "Get on this car, and I'll get on with you." I did so
and rode to 32nd Street, and the said officer got on the rear platform
of the same car. I got off at 32nd Street and was not molested again.
Deponent further says that the officers made no attempt to disperse the
mob, though they were in plain sight. Deponent further says that he has
lived in the 19th Precinct for about eighteen years, and is well known
to a number of the officers of that precinct.

J. H. KELLUM.

Sworn to before me this 7th day of September, 1900.

GEO. P. HAMMOND, JR., Notary Public (164), N. Y. County.

(This was in the 19th, not the 20th Precinct.)

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

Samuel Isaiah Johnson, being duly sworn, deposes and says:

I reside at No. 125 West 27th Street, in the Borough of Manhattan,
and support myself by cleaning carpet, chimney sweeping, and other
jobs of a like nature. I have been employed by a Mr. Webb, an attorney
with an office near Jefferson Market; a Mr. Davis, proprietor of a
fish market there; Mr. Andrew Phillips, 15th Street and 6th Avenue. On
Wednesday. August 15th, 1900, the first night of the riots, I was on
an 8th Avenue car bound south. I had been up to see my brother-in-law,
Joseph W. Brown, of No. 85 West 104th Street. I had my banjo with me. I
left there shortly after nine. He was out. About ten o'clock, at about
41st Street and 8th Avenue, a crowd jumped on the car, grabbed me,
and tried to pull me out of the car. I was under the seat. They took
my banjo, hat, coat, and belt away, and beat me all over the body and
head, so that I was unable to move. The car was at a standstill while
I was being beaten, which lasted from about fifteen to twenty minutes.
Another colored man was being beaten at the same time. After about
twenty minutes of this a man, probably a detective, jumped on the car,
and the crowd allowed the car to proceed. He took me to the corner of
27th Street and 7th Avenue, and asked me whether I could get home, and
he left me. I proceeded to my house unmolested. The next day I went to
the hospital at 15th Street and 5th Avenue, and obtained some liniment
for my bruises. I am fifty-four years of age, small in stature, and
lame.

SAMUEL x ISAIAH JOHNSON.
    his mark

Sworn to before me this 6th day of September, 1900.

SAMUEL MARCUS, Notary Public, N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

Thomas Hughes (white), of No. 646 East 13th Street, New York City,
being duly sworn, deposes and says:

On August 15th, 1900 (the first day of the outbreak), about 8:45 P.
M., I was in 36th Street between 7th and 8th Avenues. I was on my
way home after having called on Rev. Leighton Williams, at 312 West
54th Street. There were quite a number of persons moving about in the
street, and half a dozen policemen moving about. I noticed a colored
man about five feet seven, smooth-faced, about twenty-eight or thirty
years old, standing in front of a doorway near a grocery store. He
wasn't doing anything, and wasn't talking to anybody. An officer with a
heavy reddish mustache rushed across the street at him and said, "You
black bastard, what are you doing here?" and at the same instant struck
him over the head with his club, felling the Negro to the street. The
Negro bled and lay unconscious. I tried to wipe the blood from him, and
the officer spoke roughly to me and ordered me away. Friends of the
Negro dragged him into the hallway. My journey was down 8th Avenue to
36th Street, and down 7th Avenue to 35th Street, and I saw a number of
police officers strike a number of persons with their clubs. All whom I
saw struck were colored persons, and I noticed that as a peculiar fact.
I was accompanied by William Shea, of 332 East 23rd Street.

THOMAS HUGHES.

Sworn to before me this 30th day of September, 1900.

FRANK MOSS, Notary Public, N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

William Shea, of 332 East 23rd Street, being duly sworn, deposes and
says:

I work for John P. Kane, foot of East 14th Street. On the first day of
the riot, August 15th, I was with Thomas Hughes. I had been with him to
see the Rev. Mr. Williams, in West 54th Street. We returned through 8th
Avenue and went through 36th Street. In 36th Street, between 7th and
8th Avenues, we saw a colored man standing. An officer rushed across
the street and hit the colored man on the head and felled him to the
sidewalk. The colored man was not doing anything. The officer was a
heavy man with large red mustache. My friend stopped to assist the man,
and the officer ordered him away. Some people from the house close
by pulled the colored man in. He was unconscious. I saw a number of
colored people struck by officers.

WILLIAM SHEA.

Sworn to before me this 30th day of August, 1900.

FRANK MOSS, Notary Public, N. Y. County.

                                 ----

Statement of Paul Leitenberger and Alfred E. Borman (white), of 105
East 22nd Street:

On August 15th we were on 28th Street, and were going home, walking up
7th Avenue, and at 29th Street a crowd was coming down about ten P.
M. We followed the crowd up 35th Street, and it went into the Dorê
(a dive), and yelled, "Give us a coon and we'll lynch him!" They then
went to Corbett's on Broadway. He has a colored man working for him.
Then the police came with their clubs and dispersed the crowd, which
went up Broadway. A cable car was coming downtown, and some one cried,
"There's a nigger; lynch him!" and several white men jumped on the car.
A colored man was standing in the car, and with a cane or umbrella
warded off the blows. The car went on with him; the gripman would not
stop it, though they called on him to stop. Some of the men were thrown
off of the car and nearly run over. There was a Negro on the second
car behind that, and the crowd pulled him off, and the man escaped by
running into the Marlborough Hotel, where he was sheltered. There were
no policemen present at these times, but some policemen appeared and
the mob moved up Broadway to about 41st Street, and tried to get into
the Vendome Hotel. Some got in, and one cried out, "Give us the coon!"
The police coming up, they moved on and went up as far as the Hotel
Cadillac at 43rd Street, and went in to get the colored hall man, and
an officer came up and clubbed right and left. Other officers came and
the crowd scattered. We waited a half hour, and the police kept the
people moving. We walked through 42nd Street to 8th Avenue, and saw
more of the rioters, and several policemen would not allow them to make
any disturbance, and the rioters spread, breaking up. The whole aim of
the rioters was to catch Negroes. We saw Devery the first night. We
didn't see him the second night. He was in command. We observed the
first night that the police generally made no effort to disperse the
crowds, but ran along with them. The only places where they attacked
the crowds were at Corbett's and the Cadillac. The disturbing element
were young fellows, such as frequent "Hell's Kitchen." We talked with
a ringleader at the northeast corner of 28th Street and 8th Avenue,
a few nights after. He said he had been a leader in the riots and
would do it again--that the "niggers" must be treated the same as down
South. At the Cadillac there was an officer who did splendid work in
dispersing the crowd. For a while he was alone, and he clubbed the
crowd indiscriminately; in a little while two other officers came and
helped him, and those three men ejected the mob from the hotel, and
when they were in the street other officers appeared and effectually
dispersed the crowd. This showed what could be done when they wanted
to. They protected the hotel in good shape, also Corbett's, when the
mob tried to get in.

PAUL LEITENBERGER.
ALFRED E. BORMAN.

Sworn to before me this 13th day of September, 1900.

FRANK MOSS, Notary Public, N. Y. County.

                                 ----

Statement of Frank H. Bertholf (white), 463 West 44th Street:

On the evening of August 16th, 1900, I saw several Negroes kicked and
cuffed unnecessarily. Not a white man was touched. All happened in five
or ten minutes. Not many Negroes appeared, but when one came in sight
he was pounced upon by the crowd, and the policemen made no effort to
take care of them, and when they got hold of them they treated them
roughly. I saw two Negroes struck by rioters while in the hands of
officers, and the officers made no effort to protect them. I saw an
officer aim a very vicious blow with his club at a colored man; it
seemed it would kill him, but the Negro dodged.

FRANK H. BERTHOLF.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

Miss Alice Lee, being duly sworn, deposes and says:

I reside at 433 West 36th Street (in the rear of the 37th Street
station house). On the night of Wednesday, August 15th, 1900, also
Thursday, the 16th, I heard people screaming and groaning, and shouts
of people pleading not to be clubbed any more. I saw one man lying on
the station house floor, apparently almost helpless. One man who was
pleading seemed to be between the main building and the out building
where the cells are located. An officer who was on one of the upper
floors leaned out of the window and threw a bottle down at the said
man, saying, "Kill the black son of a b----!" Deponent further declared
that it was impossible to sleep during both of the aforesaid nights on
account of the heartrending shrieks and groans coming from the station
house; and further, that she saw a number of colored men lying up in a
corner of the station house.

ALICE LEE.

Sworn to before me this 20th day of September, 1900.

GEO. P. HAMMOND, JR., Notary Public (164), N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

Cynthia Randolph, being duly sworn, deposes and says:

I reside at 433 West 36th Street, New York City, Manhattan Borough.
My home is directly in the rear of the 37th Street station house. On
the evening of Wednesday, August 15th, 1900, and the evening of August
16th, 1900, I heard cries and shrieks of people being beaten, coming
from the 37th Street station house--such groans as, "O Lord! O Lord!
don't hit me! don't hit me!" spoken in pleading tones. This continued
all of Wednesday night, with such frequency, and was so heartrending,
as to make it impossible to sleep. It was not quite so bad Thursday
evening. Deponent states further that it is a common thing to hear
coming from the 37th Street station house cries of people, as if they
were being beaten, except since last Labor Day; since which day it has
been exceptionally quiet.

CYNTHIA RANDOLPH.

Sworn to before me this 15th day of September, 1900.

GEO. P. HAMMOND. JR., Notary Public (164), N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

Mrs. Florence Randolph, being duly sworn, deposes and says:

I reside at 117 West 134th Street. On Wednesday, August 15th, 1900, I
resided at 433 West 36th Street. On the said 15th of August I was ill
in bed, and while I lay in bed I heard at different intervals during
the night, and until about three or half past three the next morning,
the screams and shouts as of persons in agony, and cries of "Why are
you hitting me? I haven't done anything!" Deponent states that these
cries and screams came from the 37th Street station house, the rear of
which abuts on the rear of the house in which deponent then resided.
Deponent states further that her husband was unable to reach his home
for four nights on account of the disorder in that neighborhood.
Further, that her husband works at 43rd Street and 5th Avenue.

FLORENCE RANDOLPH.

Sworn to before me this 12th day of September, 1900.

GEO. P. HAMMOND, JR., Notary Public (164), N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

Susie White, being duly sworn, deposes and says:

I reside at 444 7th Avenue, New York City. On Sunday morning, August
12th, 1900, about six A. M., two officers in full uniform
came upstairs and, pushing the door of my room open, said, "Did not a
man come up here just now?" I answered, "Yes." The officer then said,
"Where is he? Bring him out." I then started to call the man, but
before I got to the room the officer had preceded me, and he called the
man out (his name is Joe Netherland) and took hold of him, and rubbing
his hand over his head said, "Got a scar?" Netherland said, "No. Who
are you looking for--the man that cut the officer?" The officer said,
"Yes. We're going to make it hot for you niggers!" After making a
further examination they found two more men, and after making a close
examination of them they found that they were not the men they wanted.
After threatening to do up all the "niggers" for killing Officer Thorpe
they left.

SUSIE WHITE.

Sworn to before me this 10th day of September, 1900.

GEO. P. HAMMOND, JR., Notary Public (164), N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

John Hains, being duly sworn, deposes and says:

I reside at No. 341 West 36th Street. I am a laborer, and am at present
employed as a longshoreman at Pier 16, North River. On the evening of
August 15th, 1900, I went to bed as usual at 9:30 o'clock. About two
o'clock in the morning I was awakened by somebody beating me on the
back with a club. When I awoke I found six policemen in the room; they
had broken in the door. They asked me for the revolver with which they
said I had been shooting out of the window. I told them I did not have
a revolver. One of the officers said that he had seen me shoot out
of the window. Three officers then began to club me, while the other
three were searching the house. They found an old toy revolver, which
was broken and not loaded, and could not shoot if it had been loaded,
and said that that was the pistol I had used. I denied that, which was
the truth. They dragged me out of the house, and proceeded to take me
to the station house. I was only in my undershirt, being asleep at the
time they broke into the house, and begged them to allow me to put on
my trousers and my shoes. They only sneered at this, and one of the
officers said, "You'll be d----d lucky if you get there alive." Here
another of the officers pulled out a revolver and said, "Let's shoot
the d----d nigger," to which a third officer replied, "We can take the
black son of a b---- to the station house as he is." When I got to the
station house I was bleeding from my head and other parts of my body,
as a result of these clubbings. There were only two other persons in
our apartments that evening--William Seymour, from whom I rent my
apartments, and Walter Gregory. When they saw the officers running
into the house, acting as they did, they ran out of the house, leaving
me asleep. They did not shoot out of the window, and we never kept
any weapons in the house. Mrs. Lucy Jones, who lives next door to us,
saw the officers beat me. She was in the house during all this time,
and saw no firing from our windows. Her affidavit is hereto annexed.
When I arrived at the station house, after the entry had been made on
the blotter, I was placed in a cell. Before this I was struck by one
of the officers in the station house in front of the sergeant's desk,
and in his presence, without any interference on his part. After T was
placed in the cell somebody (I believe the police surgeon) bandaged my
head. The next morning the police loaned me a pair of old trousers, so
that I could be taken to the Police Court. Officer Ohm, one of the
officers who struck me and abused me, as aforesaid, made the charge
against me; he charged me with firing a pistol through the window. I
was brought before the magistrate and he asked me if this was so. I
told him it was not, and endeavored to explain matters to him, but he
would not listen to me and sent me to the Penitentiary for six months.
There were a great many similar cases before him that day, and he was
very impatient. I did not have a lawyer to represent me, and I was
given no opportunity to deny the false charges of the officer. While
I was being taken to the station house one of the officers said to
another officer who was clubbing me, "Club as hard as you can; this is
a d----d hard head." Another said, "I will teach you d----d niggers to
club white people. We will kill half of you." I have the sheet which
was on the bed on the night in question. It is full of blood stains. I
had six stitches put into my head by a surgeon at the building in which
the Magistrates' Court is located on 54th Street. This was before I
was taken to Blackwell's Island. After I had been there ten days I was
released. I do not know the reason why. Sentenced August 16th, released
August 25th, about eight A. M. The only one of the officers I
could recognize is Officer Ohm, who made the formal complaint in the
Magistrates' Court. I was almost beaten into insensibility that night,
and all of the officers were in uniform. Last summer I was employed for
the season as a butler by General O. O. Howard, at his summer home in
Burlington, Vermont, and I have a recommendation from him. I am not a
drinking man, and never was arrested before in my life.

JOHN HAINS.

Sworn to before me this 28th day of August, 1900.

GEO. P. HAMMOND, JR., Notary Public (164), N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

Walter Gregory, being duly sworn, deposes and says:

I reside at 107 Prince Street, Brooklyn. On August 15th, 1900, I was
boarding with Mr. Seymour at 341 West 36th Street. John Hains, Mr.
Seymour, and myself were sitting together at our home until about nine
o'clock that evening, when Hains went to bed. Mr. Seymour and I were
up until about one o'clock, when we went to bed. In the early part of
the evening there was a lot of shouting going on in 36th Street, but I
heard no shooting. About two o'clock in the morning we were awakened
by shooting in front of the house. Seymour and I walked to the window
and looked out to see what was the matter. I did not see any colored
people on the street at that time, and the shooting was evidently done
by white people. Just then I heard somebody break open the front door
of the house. There were several people; they were talking in a noisy
manner, but I could not hear what they said. As they reached our door
some one rapped on it, and said, "Open the door." I said, "I can't."
Mr. Seymour and I hurriedly ran to the fire escape undressed. As we
did so we passed Hains, who was fast asleep. I shook him and said,
"A big crowd is coming in the house." I do not think he heard what I
said, and he fell asleep again. Seymour and I went down the fire escape
and into the yard at 339, where we remained until matters had quieted
down a little. I could hear Hains say repeatedly, "Don't kill me!" The
people in the houses were screaming. About three or four o'clock, when
things were quiet again, we went back to our room. The bed in which
Hains slept was all bloody. Mrs. Jones, who lived next door, and whose
affidavit is hereto annexed, then told me what had happened--precisely
the same as in her affidavit hereto annexed. I did not know that the
people who broke into the house were policemen. I thought they were
the rioters. The pistol found in the apartments was an old broken toy
pistol, and could not shoot. We never had a razor or a pistol in the
house. While the shooting was going on Hains was fast asleep, and
there was no shooting from our windows. I am employed at present on
the steamer _Shinnecock_, of the Montauk Steamboat Company, as second
pantryman. I have never been arrested in my life. Since this riot we
have not lived at 341 West 36th Street, our home having been broken up
by it.

WALTER GREGORY.

Sworn to before me this 6th day of September, 1900.

SAMUEL MARCUS, Notary Public, N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

William H. Seymour, of 70 Vanderbilt Avenue, Brooklyn, being duly
sworn, deposes and says:

I am employed at Pier 16, E. R. I resided at 341 West 36th Street, New
York City, from September, 1899, until August 16th, 1900. At no time
during the period above mentioned were there any firearms in the house
other than an old broken revolver which was in two pieces, having no
cartridges and being entirely useless. Deponent further states that he
saw the sheet of bed upon which John Hains was lying and found same
to be stained with blood. This was about 4:30 on the morning of August
16th, 1900.

WM. H. SEYMOUR.

Sworn to before me this 6th day of September, 1900.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

Lucy A. Jones, being duly sworn, deposes and says:

I reside at 341 West 36th Street, on the fourth floor front, west
side. John Hains resides on the same floor on the east side. I have
read his affidavit, which is hereto annexed, and so far as it relates
to the occurrences at said address on the evening of August 15th it
is true. I had only returned to the city at six o'clock that evening,
having been in the country for two months. I had been in the house,
looking out of the window occasionally. I saw shooting in the street,
but this was all done by white people. There were no colored people
on the street. This shooting was done mostly by white people living
at 342 West 36th Street, which is a tenement, and is occupied by a
very low class of rowdies, who have constantly abused and insulted
the colored residents of the block. The police officers constantly go
in and out of this house. On the night in question I saw a great many
police officers enter this house and talk with its occupants. They were
shouting and using abusive language, and saying, "Kill every d----d one
of the niggers!" "Set the house afire!" etc., etc. About two o'clock
in the morning I heard somebody at the door of Mr. Seymour's flat next
door, saying, "G-- d-- you; open this door, or I'll kill every d----d
nigger in the house." Mr. Hains, who was the only one in the house just
then, was asleep, and he did not open the door. They broke the door
open, and I saw them club Hains and accuse him of firing a pistol out
of the window. He denied this. Then three of the officers beat him,
while the other three were searching the house. They did not find any
pistol there, so they came into my apartments, and one of them said to
me, "You G-- d-- black son of a b----, you know a lot about this d----d
shooting, and if you don't tell me I'll blow the brains out of you."
I told them that they could look through my flat, which they did, but
did not find anything. Then they went back to the Seymour flat, and I
heard one of the officers say, "I've got the revolver; let's kill the
G-- d-- son of a b----," and began to club him in the head and other
parts of his body unmercifully. He begged them to allow him to put on
his clothes, but the one who had the revolver said, "Shoot the d----d
nigger," and he was led to the station house only in his undershirt.
Another officer said, "You will be glad if you get there alive." At
one time during this fracas I attempted to look into the Seymour flat
to see what was going on, but one of the officers said to me, "You G--
d-- black b----, get back where you belong, or I'll club the brains out
of you." After they left I went into the room, and I found the pillows
and sheet on the bed full of blood stains. The people in 342 inspired
the policemen, telling them to "Burn the house!" "Lynch the d----d
niggers!" etc., etc. I am a widow. My daughter, who is about twenty-one
years of age, saw this clubbing, and heard the police use this vile
and abusive language. After they had arrested Hains I looked out of my
window to see how he was being led by the officers. One of the rowdies
in 342 said, "Look at the d----d nigger wench looking out of the
window. Shoot her! Shoot her!"

LUCY A. JONES.

Sworn to before me this 28th day of August, 1900.

STEPHEN B. BRAGUE, Notary Public (125), N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

Mrs. Louisa Francis, 341 West 36th Street, being duly sworn, deposes
and says:

I have been housekeeper of the said 341 West 36th Street for the past
eleven years. On Thursday, August 16th, 1900, at two o'clock A.
M., I heard a number of pistol shots in the street near my home,
and heard shouts of "Go into 341, break in the doors, kill the black
sons of b----s"--all the said shouts apparently coming from the
direction of 342 across the street. Almost immediately thereafter the
doors were broken in, the glass in said doors being smashed, and about
seven police officers rushed into the house and commenced shooting and
yelling, "Kill the black sons of b----s!" "Put your heads in there, or
we'll blow them off!" They went to the fourth floor, where John Hains
lived, and dragged him out by the shoulders, his feet dragging, and
in that condition he was dragged out into the street. I washed up the
blood down from the fourth floor down the staircase to and on each and
every landing and including the vestibule. The officers, after staying
some time in the house, and ordering Mrs. Freeman, Mrs. Mason, and Mrs.
Jones to open their doors, and after searching the same, crossed over
the roof to 339 and went through that house.

MRS. LOUISA FRANCIS.

Sworn to before me this 28th day of August, 1900.

GEO. P. HAMMOND, JR., Notary Public (164), N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

Josephine Bullock, being duly sworn, deposes and says:

I reside at 351 West 36th Street. On Wednesday, August 15th, 1900,
about 9:30 o'clock P. M., I saw a crowd chase a colored man and
beat him, on the corner of 9th Avenue and 36th Street. The said man
succeeded in breaking away from the mob, and ran towards my house. When
he reached the stoop some of the male tenants who were seated on the
stoop told him to come in there, adding that "if they kill one they
might as well kill all of them." All during the evening the rioting
continued, and from the rear of the house I heard screams and groans
coming from the houses facing on 37th Street. About two o'clock A.
M. I heard shooting in the street, and in a short while after I saw
two police officers dragging a colored man from 341 West 36th Street,
who had on no clothing except a gauze undershirt. The officers were
clubbing the colored man, and the man was begging them not to club him,
as he had done nothing. The only answer he got was more blows and a
reply from one of the officers as follows: "Shut up, you black son of a
b----, or I'll kill you." Deponent states further that she got no sleep
that night, as the screaming and rioting continued until about half
past two or three A. M., when a violent storm came up, and the noise
subsided somewhat.

JOSEPHINE x BULLOCK.
       her mark

Sworn to before me this 10th day of September, 1900.

GEO. P. HAMMOND, JR., Notary Public (164), N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

Mrs. Maggie Zeh, being duly sworn, deposes and says:

I reside at 351 West 36th Street. On Wednesday, August 15th, 1900, I
saw a colored man trying to get away from the mob, who were beating
him. He tried to get into No. 360, but could not. I then saw the
officers who had been standing on the corner of 9th Avenue and 36th
Street run towards this man and immediately commenced clubbing him.
They clubbed him so unmercifully that the man cried out, "For God's
sake kill me and be done with it; don't beat me in this manner," and
the last I saw of him they were taking him around into 9th Avenue
towards the station house. I also saw a mob coming from 9th Avenue,
with about ten or twelve officers in uniform in the lead. The officers
were shooting up towards the houses on the north side of the street.
Deponent declares that she heard no shooting until the officers came
into sight and commenced to shoot at the houses. Deponent further
states that between eleven or twelve o'clock she saw a colored man
and a woman come from a house on the west side of 9th Avenue. Before
this couple reached 9th Avenue she noticed two policemen, who had been
standing on the southeast corner of 9th Avenue and 36th Street, enter
the saloon on that corner. When the couple had passed the saloon some
men who were in citizens' clothes ran into the saloon, and immediately
came out again with the aforementioned officers, and pointed to the
couple going up the street, and said something to the officers. The
officers then followed the said couple up the street to 8th Avenue,
where I lost sight of them for about two minutes. At the expiration
of that time I looked towards 8th Avenue and I saw the same policemen
turning the corner, having in custody the aforementioned couple, and
when they reached the front of my house I saw that the man was bleeding
and was handcuffed. The woman attempted to speak, when she was ordered
with an oath to "shut up." While the officers who were previously
mentioned as doing the shooting in 36th Street, the officer who was
apparently in command and who wore a cap, and had all the appearance
of either a sergeant or a captain, shouted, "Get your heads in out of
there if you value your lives." Deponent further states that she has
read the affidavit of Josephine Bullock, which affidavit is hereto
attached, and she knows of her own knowledge that matters therein
stated are true.

MRS. MAGGIE ZEH.

Sworn to before me this 10th day of September, 1900.

GEO. P. HAMMOND, JR., Notary Public (164), N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

Richard A. Taylor, being duly sworn, deposes and says:

I reside at 339 West 36th Street; that on Wednesday, August 15th,
1900, I left my home at about 12:15 P. M. to go to my work,
as Pullman porter on West Shore R. R.; that when I left my home I
left on the shelf in the closet in the front room of my suite between
sixty and seventy dollars in bills, which money I was saving to pay
my tuition in college next winter; further, my wife did not know that
the money was there; that on my return Saturday, August 18th, 1900,
between five and six P. M., I was told by my wife of a visit
of police officers, about eight in number, each of whom had a revolver
in his hand, and who wanted to know if there was a man in the rooms.
They were told that there was, and were shown Floyd Wallace, whom they
took out with them. They also asked for any firearms, and when told
that there were none demanded that a light be made so that they could
search. While the light was being brought some of the officers went
into the front room and forced open the closet. After they were gone my
wife remembered having left her pocketbook in a small satchel on the
floor. She immediately ran to the front room, and opening the satchel
found that all the money had been taken from her pocketbook except some
silver. Deponent on hearing of this immediately went to look for his
money and found it gone.

RICHARD A. TAYLOR.

Sworn to before me this 6th day of September, 1900.

GEO. P. HAMMOND, JR., Notary Public (164), N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

Mrs. Margaret Taylor, being duly sworn, deposes and says:

I reside at 339 West 36th Street. On Thursday, August 16th, 1900,
about two A. M., while lying on a lounge in the front room of
my house, I was aroused by hearing a shot fired, followed by several
others. I went to the window, when some one in the street shouted with
a curse, "Get your head in there or I'll shoot it off." I withdrew my
head, and then realized that some of the shots had entered my windows.
One imbedded itself in the ceiling, and another passed through a glass
door leading into an inner room, and occupied by a lodger named Floyd
Wallace. I awoke the said Wallace, and told him that some one was
firing into the windows. Shortly after I heard sounds as of a number of
people coming down the stairs from the roof, past my door, and stopping
on the floor below me. In a very short while they returned, and without
asking to be let in broke open my door, and then I saw that they were
police officers in full uniform, six in number. They asked me if I
knew who fired the shots. I said I did not know. They then told me I
lied. Then they asked me if there were any guns in the house, and I
answered no; whereupon I was again told that I lied. I then said, "All
right, go ahead and search for them," which they proceeded to do. They
went from room to room, and broke into a closet in the front room,
which contained my husband's and my own clothes; they then opened a
small satchel in which was my pocketbook. In the said pocketbook I had
six dollars in bills and one dollar and seventy-five cents in silver.
While part of the men were making the search the others seized the
aforesaid Wallace and took him out into the hallway, where deponent
has been told they clubbed the said Wallace on the wrist and face.
When he came in, after the officers left, deponent saw that his face
and cheek were bruised and his wrist swollen. Deponent declares it to
be her belief that the bullets which were shot into her room (one of
which she has) could not have been fired from the street, but must have
come from the houses opposite. Further, that when the officers left
she remembered having left her pocketbook in the aforesaid satchel,
and immediately ran into the front room to see if it was safe; she
found that the six dollars in bills was gone, and declares it to be
her belief that the same was taken by the three officers who were in
the room making the search. Deponent further states that when her
husband returned on the following Saturday she told him of the visit
of the police officers. He then searched in the closet for some money,
amounting to about sixty dollars, which he stated to have left there
without my knowledge, and could not find it. Deponent declares it to
be her belief that this money was also taken by the police officers
aforementioned. Deponent further declares that there were no shots
fired from her apartments, and that no one therein had a firearm of any
sort.

MAGGIE TAYLOR.

Sworn to before me this 7th day of September, 1900.

GEO. P. HAMMOND, JR., Notary Public (164). N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

Floyd Wallace, being duly sworn, deposes and says:

I live at 339 West 36th Street. On Thursday, August 16th, 1900, at
about 2:30 A. M., I was awakened by Mrs. Taylor, who said that
they were shooting in the windows. I immediately arose and dressed,
and went into the kitchen. I heard some one screaming, "Don't hit me
like that!" and crying as if being beaten. A short while after I heard
some one coming over the roof from the house next door (No. 341), and
when they reached our door they without any ceremony, and without
asking to be let in, broke in the door. I then saw that they were
police officers in full uniform. They then asked if there was any man
in the house, and was told there was; upon hearing which I stepped to
the kitchen door and was immediately seized upon and taken out into the
hallway by two of the officers. They started downstairs with me, when
one of the officers said, "Wait a minute," and without first telling
me to stop they struck me over the arm and on the wrist. The rest of
the officers then searched through the rooms, and while they were
engaged one of the officers who was with me, without saying a word,
jabbed his stick in my face, just missing my eye, and striking me on
the cheek bone, under the eye, making a painful bruise. I was perfectly
sober, and was sleeping in bed from about 11:30 P. M. till
within about five minutes of the time of the visit of the police. I
made no resistance, said nothing to them, and showed by my actions a
willingness to do as they wished me to. After the officers had finished
their search they turned me loose.

FLOYD WALLACE.

Sworn to before me this 7th day of September, 1900.

GEO. P. HAMMOND, JR., Notary Public (164), N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

Lloyd Lee, being duly sworn, deposes and says:

I reside at 200 West 37th Street. On Wednesday, August 15th, 1900,
about ten o'clock P. M., I was up about West 41st Street near
7th Avenue, when I saw considerable rioting going on, and immediately
made an attempt to get to my home, going to 8th Avenue, thence to 38th
Street, and thence to 7th Avenue, and had got to within thirty yards
of my home when I heard footsteps in the gravel behind me; I turned
around and saw a man hatless and in citizen's clothes coming after me;
thinking he was a rioter, I jumped aside and asked him what was the
matter. He did not answer, but struck me over the head with his club,
and when I tried to run away he struck me again. Finding I could not
get away, I drew the only weapon I had, namely, a small pocketknife,
and cut at him with it. He then drew his revolver, and shot me in the
mouth and in the arm. I then run to any front door and slammed it
shut, and then opened the inner door, and saw no one around, but I saw
a revolver lying on the front steps. I picked it up and took it with
me to the roof. After reaching the roof I sank down and knew nothing
further until the next day, when I found myself in Bellevue Hospital.
I was taken to the 54th Street court and from there remanded to the
Tombs, where I remained until September 25th, 1900, when I was brought
to Part I, where I was discharged.

LLOYD LEE.

Sworn to before me this 1st day of October, 1900.

GEO. P. HAMMOND, JR., Notary Public (164), N. Y. County.

(The Grand Jury refused to indict Lloyd Lee.)

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

Mrs. Nettie Threewitts, being duly sworn, deposes and says that she
resides at No. 200 West 37th Street; that on Wednesday, August 15th,
1900, about half past ten, she was preparing to retire, when her
stepfather, Lloyd Lee, came to her door, and she asked him what was
the matter. He replied, "Nettie, I'm shot!" He then ran to the roof.
Almost immediately after she heard two men come into the hallway, and
one said, "Get your revolver out!" They then came up to the hallway
where I was standing, and I saw that one was an officer in uniform
and one in citizen's clothes, a stout man. I asked them, "What's the
matter?" They said, "Where's that man?" I answered, "I don't know."
They then said, "Who is the man?" I answered, "He's my stepfather." The
man in citizen's clothes then said, "She's got blood on her; take her;
she's a prisoner." I then said, "You are not going to take me without
any clothes on?" He answered, "You don't need any clothes." I was then
brought downstairs and kept on the stoop until the patrol wagon came,
where a number of officers who were standing there called me a "black
b----," and one of them struck me in the head with his fist, another
one deliberately spit in my face, and another took his helmet and
jabbed it into my eye. This officer's number was either No. 3062 or
3064. The latter occurred while I was on my way to the West 54th Street
police court. Among the other remarks which were made to me was, "They
ought to burn up all the nigger ranches;" "Shut up, you're a w----, the
same as the rest of them." I was kept in the station house without any
additional clothes for about two hours, when a woman who lives on 41st
Street gave me an underskirt, which I put on. I was then brought into
the room back of the main room, and from there was taken back into a
cell. I was arraigned in the 54th Street police court and held in $500
bail for trial. Mr. R. T. Varnum went on my bond.

NETTIE THREEWITTS.

Sworn to before me this 19th day of September, 1900.

GEO. P. HAMMOND, JR., Notary Public (164), N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

William Devan, being duly sworn, deposes and says:

I reside at 403 West 29th Street. On Wednesday, August 15th, 1900,
about half past ten, while walking on 8th Avenue, between 28th and 29th
Streets, I was attacked by a mob and shoved through a glass show case,
cutting my head severely. I managed to get away from the mob and run
towards 8th Avenue and 28th Street, where I was stopped by a policeman,
who grabbed me, and the mob coming up at that moment some of them
shouted, "Arrest him; he has just broken a show case." I replied that I
did not, but that I had been shoved through it. The officer said, "Shut
up, or I'll shove this stick down your throat." He then took me to the
station house in West 37th Street, where I was detained from 10:30 P. M.
till four A. M. the next day. While in the station house I saw a man
brought in who had nothing on but an undershirt, and who was bleeding
from wounds in his head. I also saw Lee brought in, and saw the surgeon
administer an injection, and put him into the ambulance, saying, "This
fellow is almost gone," and rushed him off to the hospital. I also saw
Miss Lee, the aforementioned man's daughter, who was brought to the
station house with nothing but her nightgown on, and one of the women
in the station house loaned her a dress to put on.

WILLIAM DEVAN.

Sworn to before me this 11th day of September, 1900.

GEO. P. HAMMOND, JR., Notary Public (164), N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

William Hopson, being duly sworn, deposes and says:

I reside at 229 West 60th Street. I am engaged in the jewelry business,
and am night engineer at the Scarborough Apartment House, 221 West
57th Street. On Sunday, August 26th, 1900, in the afternoon, I was
standing a little way from my door, about ten yards, and saw Officer
4600 walking on 60th Street from 10th to 11th Avenue. After he passed
me he met a platoon of policemen who were coming from 11th Avenue
towards 10th Avenue, and turned back with them. Opposite 225 West
60th Street there were two colored men sitting in front of the door.
Officer 4600 came over and without warning struck one of them. As he
did so the other one ran into the house. The man he was beating also
attempted to run in, but he ran after him striking him on the head with
his fist. (This was James A. Scott, 225 West 60th Street.) He then came
over to me, struck me on the side of the head, and said, "What are
you doing here?" I said, "I am looking on," and attempted to go into
my apartments. He followed me and struck me with his clenched hand on
my head. This was within five feet of my door. Here he was joined by
two other officers, one of whom struck me a blow with his club, full
force on the head and eye, and I was unable to see anything with that
eye for some time after; it is bloodshot still. I held on to the iron
railing in front of 231, to protect myself in that way if I could. As
I did so two more officers came. Three of them were clubbing me, and
4600 was striking me with his fist. The officer who struck me in the
eye with his club was about 6 feet 2 inches tall. They tore my coat and
broke my hat. Some one attempted to hand me my hat as they knocked it
off, but one of the officers knocked it out of the person's hand with
his club, and said, "Never mind the hat." This was as I was being led
to the station house. When we reached No. 227 Officer 4600, who had me
in charge, saw Mr. Myers, the janitor of 227, standing in front of the
door with his wife and several other persons. Mr. Myers is a colored
man. Officer 4600 turned me over to another officer and said, "Take my
prisoner to the station house." The officer replied, "No, don't take
him there." 4600 insisted, and the officer obeyed. When Officer 4600
went over to Myers he wanted to strike him. Myers is a sick man and
just got out of the hospital. His wife pleaded with the officer not to
strike him, whereupon the officer turned Myers loose and raised his
club to strike his wife. One of the other officers told 4600 not to
strike that woman. Then five or six officers jumped on Myers with their
clubs. There were about ten policemen altogether. 4600 struck him with
his fist. One officer broke his club into pieces on Myers' head. Myers
was taken to Roosevelt Hospital. He told me in court the next day that
as he was passing 60th Street and 10th Avenue they saw a colored man
having his shoes shined. 4600 said to him, "See that black nigger? If
I didn't have you I would drag him out and lay his head open the same
as yours." Myers told me that the doctor at the hospital recognized
him and asked him what was the matter. The officer told Myers to "shut
up," and said to the doctor, "That is my prisoner." I was taken to
the station house, where the officer who brought me there made the
complaint against me for Officer 4600. He told the sergeant I "showed
fight." I was not told what the formal charge against me was. The
sergeant asked me nothing but the usual questions, what my name was,
etc. I was bleeding from my eye. The colored people and the whites on
this street have always been very friendly, and are so even now. There
never was any trouble until these officers raised the disturbance on
that day. Officer 4600 started the thing. Some of the tenants of Nos.
227, 229, and 231 saw this outrageous treatment on the part of the
policemen. We were discharged in court the next day, after 4600 had
made his complaint to the magistrate. I have been in New York for over
eight years, and have never been arrested before in my life. I was
employed in Harris & Flippin's sporting goods store in Richmond, Va.,
for two years; I was employed by Oscar Miller, 154 Chambers Street,
coffee and spice dealer, for ten months at his residence in Sing Sing;
I was employed by C. E. Vedder, druggist, at 116th Street and Madison
Avenue, for three years; I was employed by Andrew Lester, of 56th
Street and 8th Avenue, at the Washington Apartments, for ten months;
I was employed by the Goldsoll Diamond Palace, 14th Street, about two
years; W. P. Unger, dealer in essence oils, 18 Cedar Street, for ten
months; Van Boskerck & Wilson, 132 West 21st Street, dressmakers, for
ten months. I am now employed by Mr. Condit, of the firm of Acker,
Merrill & Condit, at the Scarborough Apartment House, 221 West 57th
Street. I have been so employed for about two years. I did nothing
which justified my arrest or this action on the part of the police.

WILLIAM HOPSON.

Sworn to before me this 31st day of August, 1900.

GEO. P. HAMMOND. JR., Notary Public (164), N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

George L. Myers, being duly sworn, deposes and says that he resides
at 227 West 60th Street, Manhattan Borough, New York City; that on
Sunday, August 26th, 1900, at about half past one, he went downstairs,
hearing a noise, and being janitor of No. 225 as well as 227, naturally
he wanted to see everything was all right on the premises. He was
standing in the doorway of No. 227 when the officers approached and
said to him, "What are you doing here?" He answered, "Nothing." One of
the officers then said, "I'll place you under arrest." "All right,"
he answered, "take me along." The said officer then struck him with
his fist under the left jaw, and then grabbed him and struck him over
the head with his club, knocking him insensible. When he recovered
consciousness he was on the corner of Amsterdam Avenue and 60th Street,
and in charge of Officer John J. Cleary, who took him to the Roosevelt
Hospital. While on the way there said Officer Cleary continued to
strike deponent with his clinched fist, saying, "There's one for luck,"
and "If I had got you first I would not have struck you with my fist.
I would have used my club on your head and killed you." Deponent was
taken to the station house, where he was charged with "interfering with
an officer in the discharge of his duty," and "attempting to rescue
a prisoner." The same charge was made the next morning in the Police
Court, where he was discharged. Deponent declares that he was perfectly
sober, and was downstairs by reason of his being janitor of the
aforementioned houses, and it was his duty to be where he was and at
that time; that he has never been arrested in his life before, and that
he did not attempt to rescue anyone from the custody of an officer, and
that the assault was entirely unjustified and an outrage.

GEO. L. MYERS.

Sworn to before me this 5th day of September, 1900.

GEO. P. HAMMOND, JR., Notary Public (164), N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

Mrs. Frances C. Myers, being duly sworn, deposes and says that she is
the wife of George L. Myers, and that she resides at 227 West 60th
Street; that she has read the affidavit of the said George L. Myers,
her husband, and that she knows the facts therein stated to be true
of her own knowledge and belief. Deponent further states that while
her husband was being clubbed she implored and begged the officers not
to strike her husband, as he was a cripple, and had done nothing, but
they continued to strike him, and one of the officers drew off as if
to strike her with his fist, and another as if to strike her with his
billy, but she got out of their way, and when she saw an officer break
his billy over her husband's head she thought they had killed him, and
she then went on upstairs. The officers refused to even allow her to
pick up his hat.

FRANCES C. MYERS.

Sworn to before me this 5th day of September, 1900.

GEO. P. HAMMOND, JR., Notary Public (164), N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

James A. Scott, being duly sworn, deposes and says:

I reside at 225 West 60th Street. On Sunday afternoon, August 26th,
some officers went down the street towards 11th Avenue. They were
pursuing bad boys who had made a disturbance in the morning. I saw them
from my window, and after they reached 11th Avenue I went down to the
door, and stood there looking towards 11th Avenue, where there was a
crowd. There were only two persons near me, nearly all of the persons
who were on the street having gone down to the avenue; one was a boy
named Smith, and another young man who has moved away. An officer whom
I have since learned is John J. Cleary, came from 10th Avenue towards
me. He spoke to me before I saw him, saying, "Do you live here?" and I
turned to see who spoke to me, and as I turned towards him, before I
could reply he struck me a hard blow on my head with a hard substance,
which dazed me, and he followed it with a blow of his fist in the
mouth, and I went down in a heap. I began to bleed profusely from the
mouth. I was in my doorway when he struck me, so that I fell into my
hall. He did not attempt to arrest me. I went upstairs, and I heard a
woman's voice screaming, "Don't beat my husband." I looked out of the
window and saw the same policeman, Cleary, and other officers whom I
cannot identify, clubbing George L. Myers. The principal clubber was
the said Cleary. I saw him club the said Myers on the head until he
broke his club, and saw him pulling Myers up 60th Street, and punching
him with his fist. Myers was dreadfully beaten and was bleeding badly.

JAMES A. SCOTT.

Sworn to before me this 24th day of September, 1900.

FRANK MOSS, Notary Public, N. Y. County.

(The case of Hopson, Myers, and Scott is substantiated by fully twenty
witnesses.)

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

John Wolf, of No. 347 West 37th Street, being duly sworn, deposes and
says:

On Sunday, September 30, I was visiting a female friend, and two
officers came in with a woman I had known, and who claimed to be my
wife but was not. The officers ordered me to leave the house, and I
did so. I asked the officers, "Why?" and one of them said, "If I catch
you here again I will lock you up." I never had any experience in
court or in such matters before, and I went to the station house for
advice. I went to the sergeant at the desk, and told him that I was
in trouble, and without experience, and I wanted to be advised. He
said, "What is the matter with you?" I said, "Can a woman that I have
lived with have me arrested because I don't want to live with her any
more?" He answered, "What are you talking about? You get out of here!"
I was surprised, and didn't move quickly enough to suit him, and he
ordered an officer to arrest me. The officer stepped up to me in front
of the desk, pulled a billy from his pocket, and suddenly struck me a
hard blow on my right jaw, which broke it and caused my chin to fall
down. The officer hurried me back to a cell. I suffered terrible agony
and walked up and down my cell all night calling for relief. I paid
thirty-five cents to send out a message to Mr. Young, who was not at
home. His son came, but was not allowed to see me. I had no attention
at all, and in the morning was arraigned in court. The officer was on
the bridge close to the judge; I was down on the floor. I couldn't hear
what charge he made or what he said. My face was swelled and mouth
almost closed, and I could not make any statement. The justice fined
me three dollars on the officer's statement, and the police attendants
hustled me along. I had no money to pay my fine, and was sent back
to the court prison. I was in an awful condition. I lay down on some
boards, but couldn't stay still. I moaned, and cried for help, but
could not get anyone to notice my case. The night man who came on duty
on Monday night was a humane man, and asked what was my trouble, and I
told him as well as I could. He rang for an ambulance, and I was taken
to Bellevue Hospital. I reached there 9:30 P. M., Monday, and
was put to bed, and remained there till four P. M., Wednesday.
I was unable to take nourishment while there. When I was discharged I
went to the station house for my personal effects, and the officer then
in charge asked me my trouble (for my head was swathed in bandages),
and I told him, and he caused me to remain and identify the officer
who hit me. He scolded the officer, who answered nothing, and he sent
me to Police Headquarters to Inspector Thompson with a note, and ever
since that time they have been investigating my case, and I have gone
back and forth a good many times. Inspector Thompson, in my hearing,
complained bitterly of the ruffianly conduct of the officers in the
20th Precinct. He told of a case where one had beaten a colored woman
eighty-one years of age, and was afterwards found helplessly drunk in
a saloon; he said they were bringing disgrace on the police force. He
seemed to try to get the evidence in my case all right, but the trouble
is that six policemen and the sergeant swore that they were in the
room when I was arrested and that they did not see any blow struck,
but they could not account for my broken jaw. This perjury was awful.
I am feeling very badly--have just now come from the hospital. I go
there every day for treatment. My jaw is still loose, and will not hold
in position without the bandages that almost cover my face and head.
The doctor at the hospital says that the blow must have been a very
hard one, for the bone is crushed. I am poor, and cannot work now. I
suffered also in the riot on the 15th of August. I was going to my
home, which was then at 245 West 32nd Street, and was pulled off an
8th Avenue car by the mob, and was pelted with stones and beaten with
sticks. At first the police who were near by did not interfere, but
after I was severely hurt they came over, and as I was down on my hands
and knees, trying to get up, one of the officers struck me three blows
on my body with his club, and ordered me to get up and get out. I was
then quite near my home, and I ran over there, and was pulled in by my
friends. The mob and the police chased me. The police hurt me more than
the rioters. I had a friend with me, and the police clubbed him also.
He ran into my house with me, and stayed there. When the policemen
ordered me to get out I was surrounded by the mob that was beating me,
and they made no effort to interfere with them. I have always been a
hard-working man, and was never before arrested.

JOHN WOLF.

Sworn to before me this 11th day of October, 1900.

FRANK MOSS, Notary Public, N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

William J. Elliott, being duly sworn, says:

My name is William J. Elliott. I reside at 209 East 59th Street.
At the time of the riot, on August 15th, I lived at 327 West 35th
Street. I moved from that side of the town right at once on account
of the riot. I am twenty-six years of age and weigh about 130 pounds,
and am employed at the Hotel Imperial. I have been there nearly two
years. I finished my grammar school education in 1887. I entered the
Florida State Normal College in 1894; I was there for two sessions,
from '94 to '95. I left there and entered into a drug firm by the name
of Martinez & Co., Jacksonville, Florida, as an apprentice to study
pharmacy, and in less than a year my advancement was so good I was made
a prescriptionist. I then came to New York and entered a drug firm by
the name of C. K. Harris Beach Pharmacy at Atlantic City, N. J. I was
a trustworthy man there, generally useful; during one fall had entire
charge of one of two of Mr. Harris' drug stores in Atlantic City. Mr.
Harris sold out, and after that I sought other work, and I came here
to New York City. My intention has been to accumulate enough money to
take a pharmaceutical course. On the night of August 14th there came a
colored man to the Hotel Imperial and informed the front door man that
there were riots in the street and that there was no way of getting
home. This was between nine and ten o'clock in the evening. About 12:15
I was off duty, and left the hotel with John Chism, the front door
man; we went out to investigate and see if the boys could get home. We
had no sooner got to 6th Avenue and 31st Street than a fierce mob came
chasing down the street and in hot pursuit of a colored man, yelling,
"Kill the nigger! Lynch him!" We then ran towards Broadway, and were
met there by Mr. Murphy, a man who keeps a saloon at 31st Street and
6th Avenue. He advised us to go at once back to the hotel and to tell
the chief, Mr. Roberts, to keep all of his men in the hotel that night
or they would get killed. We went back, and I delivered the message to
Chief Roberts, and he advised and told all the men to stay in. Chism,
Travers, and myself came out to the front door again, and saw a Negro
running for his life by the Hotel Imperial through 32nd Street towards
5th Avenue, with a mad crowd behind him. Then we were made to come into
the hotel by the chief, as the hotel people were afraid that the mob
might attack the house. I remained in the hotel all night. Mr. Chism
and I tried to get a closed cab to drive three of us home, but the
cabman said he would not drive us home for $500. This was the night
of the riot in which so many were injured. At five o'clock the next
morning I left the Hotel Imperial to go home with Leon Vonce. I walked
as far as 36th Street and 8th Avenue with him, as I intended to go
to his home with him, as he was very anxious about his wife; he was
afraid she might have been attacked. When we got to the corner of 36th
Street and 8th Avenue I saw a big white man jump on one of two colored
boys, whom I know to be hotel boys going to their work. I got a little
uneasy at the sights I saw, and I saw some blood on the sidewalk, and
Leon Vonce said to me, "You had better turn around and go home," and I
did, and went to bed. At half past eleven I awoke and dressed myself
and got out of the house by a quarter to twelve noon, and got as far
as Rocky's drug store, corner 34th Street and 8th Avenue. A white boy
standing on the corner said to me, "You had better go away from around
here, or you will get killed." I then noticed groups of boys and men
running from 34th Street down 8th Avenue; they were right across the
street from me, and at sight of them I became afraid that they would
attack me and I ran home. I had, however, to get to my work, as I knew
the hotel people needed me, and I was afraid that some of the other men
would not be able to get back to the hotel; so after a little while I
made another attempt to go to the hotel. I went out of the house. I was
then addressed by a white man, who seemed to be much of a gentleman. He
says (this was when I reached 8th Avenue), "For God's sake, boy, you
had better go away from here. Go ahead, jump on that car; they just
near killed a colored man across the street." Then as he said that I
heard the crowd yell, "There's a nigger! there's a nigger! Catch him!"
Luckily for me, I jumped on a car and there was a colored boy on the
corner by Comford Brothers' saloon. The mob saw him and ran after him;
they caught the colored boy and the mob grabbed and gathered around
him. They were rough-looking fellows, and I could not see what they
did to the colored boy, for he was in the center of this mob. The car
I jumped on was a green car and went across 9th Avenue on 34th Street.
I jumped off at 9th Avenue, and just as I left the car there were four
big white fellows said, "There's a d----d nigger!" and they started
at me, and I ran home as hard as I could, and when I reached home I
was all out of breath. When I got home the folks at home asked me if I
had anything to protect myself. I told them no, I had nothing; I never
had any use for such things. There was a colored gentleman stopping
there, Mr. Miles. He said it was very dangerous for me to go out, but
if I intended going out at all he had a little gun upstairs, which
probably would be some protection from the mob. I thanked him very
much, and took the gun, a little .22 caliber revolver. I still felt it
necessary for me to go back to the hotel, and I thought I would get
back by going another way, and for an hour and a half I stood on my
stoop and in the house at times waiting for an opportunity to get by
the crowd on 8th Avenue and elsewhere; this was about half past two
or quarter to three in the afternoon. I started and went west towards
9th Avenue, thinking I could take a car going north to 42nd Street,
and then across 42nd Street and down Broadway to the Hotel Imperial
at 32nd Street and Broadway. Just as I got to 35th Street and turned
the corner on 9th Avenue there was a mob of three or four hundred men
and boys just below me coming up 9th Avenue, screaming and hollering
and following a car and yelling, "Take the nigger off the car!" "Catch
the nigger!" and "Kill the nigger!" and I turned then and I ran up 9th
Avenue as hard as I could from the mob, and I ran into a pawnbroker's
shop, Mr. Weaver's pawnshop. I stood behind the closed doors, and
through the small openings or blinds that the pawnbrokers have over
their doors I could see that part of the big crowd that stood in front
of the pawnbroker's shop, many of whom were lined up on the sidewalk
across the street. I could also see a policeman trying to disperse the
men with his club. He was hitting with his club right and left to clear
the sidewalk. I saw three guns hanging in the pawnbroker's window, and
I said to the pawnbroker, "Let me see those guns there." I had not any
intention of buying the guns, and did not buy them, but I thought it
would be a bluff to make the crowd think I had something. I told the
pawnbroker's clerk I did not want a gun at that time, I would come
back. While I was pricing the guns a great big white fellow opened the
door, put his head in, and looked suspiciously around the room. He
gave me one of those staring looks, and then shut the door. Then Mr.
Weaver, the owner of the pawnshop, said, "Don't you go out there; they
are waiting out there for you; they will beat you." After staying there
for over half an hour, listening to the hollering outside of "Kill the
nigger!" "Lynch the nigger!" and the crowd running about the street
chasing other negroes, a great many of whom lived in that locality, I
asked the clerk if I could go upstairs and hide, as I was afraid they
might come in after me; but he said, "No one dasen't come in here."
Shortly after this conversation I asked this clerk if it was safe to
go out. He said yes, the crowd was chased down the Avenue. I also asked
Mr. Weaver if it was safe to go out now. He said he thought everything
was over now. I went to the door and peeped out, and I only saw a few
people in groups and four boys standing right at the pawnbroker's door
a little to the left of me. I called to one of these white boys, and
asked him if it was safe for me to go out. He asked me where did I want
to go. I told his as far as 42nd Street. He said, "Go to one of those
cops and he will take you up." I saw some cops at 36th Street corner.
I started toward the cops to ask them to take me up to 42nd Street,
but I had not gone half a dozen steps towards where the cops were when
a man in citizen's clothes grabbed me. I learned afterwards he was an
officer, and he asked me where I was going. I told him I was trying
to get to my work. He asked me what I was doing in a pawnbroker's
shop. Before I could explain he said I had bought a gun, and commenced
to search me. At that time there were four policemen around me. The
little .22 caliber gun he found and took from my pocket. I offered
no resistance, and only asked him for protection from the mob, which
commenced to gather again, and were now yelling, "Kill the nigger!"
"Lynch the nigger!" This mob came up close behind me with sticks and
stones. One of the officers knocked on the sidewalk with his club, and
there were about half a dozen more officers ran to us to keep the mob
off me. The mob was kept off me, and the officer in citizen's clothes
and a policeman in uniform took hold of each of my shoulders and four
policemen followed behind me. The mob went along too, yelling and
screaming, "Kill the nigger!" "Lynch the nigger!" We went west on 37th
Street towards the 37th Street station, which is between 9th and 10th
Avenues, when we turned into 37th Street. Then the two officers in
charge of me and two more behind me took me to the 37th Street station
house. Up to this time I had not received a blow, and was not injured
in any way. They stood me before a man who sat behind a desk in the
station house. There were lots of people there. Some of the men were in
citizens' clothes. The man behind the desk said to the officer who had
me in charge, "What is the charge against this man?" and the officer
in citizen's clothes said, "Carrying a concealed weapon he bought out
of a pawnshop." I said, "I did not buy any weapon there," and the man
behind the desk said, "Don't dictate to us about what you did not do,"
and then I started to tell him about my reputation and not being a
rioter, and that I was only trying to get to my work. He said, "We
have got no time to look up your reputation. Lock him up." I was taken
by the jailer who is in the station house, and he said, "Come on," and
took hold of me. There were two doors leading from the office into the
muster room, and I went to get through the left-hand door. Right beside
the door in the station house was a policeman leaning against the
door. As I passed him he threw out his foot and tripped me. I stumbled
but did not fall. I did not see the jailer; he let go of my coat he
had hold of. I looked around at the man who tripped me. As I looked
around another policeman struck me on the jaw with his fist; then
another struck me in the back of the head with his club, and all the
policemen in the muster room jumped up and jumped on me, yelling, "Kill
him!" "Kill the nigger!" I still stood up and received many punches.
I begged for mercy, and did not weaken until an officer struck me in
the temple with his billy, and everything was dark around me. I fell
down, and I could still feel them kicking and beating me about. This
time the man behind the desk, who I believe is Captain Cooney, rushed
in and said, "Don't kill that man in here. The reporters are out here,
and there is going to be a charge made against you, and if another man
touches a prisoner in here I will take a hand in it myself;" and he
says, "Lock that man up." At that time I held my hands above my head
and was running around trying to find the doorway to the cells. I was
then taken and locked up. I am still sick and ill from the blows that
I received, and my right eye is affected. It quivers and is bloodshot,
and the right part of my head and temple is sore. I stayed in the
police station all night, and sent a telegram to the hotel people at
the Imperial, and the manager sent a detective over to get me out,
but the detective was afraid to take me out. The next morning I was
arraigned before Magistrate Cornell for carrying a concealed weapon.
Magistrate Cornell picked up the pistol and said, "Is this your gun?"
and laughed, and said that a man with a bad reputation would carry
no such gun as that; but he said, "We will have to charge you three
dollars for carrying a concealed weapon." I paid the fine and went
straight to Travers' house, where my head was bathed in hot water and
alcohol, and he rubbed my side and back. I remained there in bed all
day. I was unable to work for two days, and then I went back. Since I
went back Captain Cooney has sent for me twice, but I have been afraid
to go back there. I can bring more evidence to show that after I came
out of the police station my head was swollen half its size again,
and I could hardly open my mouth, and for two days I had difficulty in
eating. I cannot open my mouth right wide now.

WILLIAM J. ELLIOTT.

Sworn to before me this 24th day of August, 1900.

HERBERT PARSONS, Notary Public, N. Y. County.

                                 ----

(On the hearing before Commissioner York three newspaper reporters
corroborated Elliott, but a host of policemen contradicted him. Elliott
and his witnesses were badgered by Mr. York, and the policemen were led
and protected. Counsel was not permitted to take part.)

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

My name is Harry Reed. I reside at 346 West 41st Street, in the Borough
of Manhattan, City of New York. On August 15th, 1900, I was over in
Brooklyn and was coming home with four companions. About half-past
twelve I reached the corner of 34th Street and 8th Avenue. We five boys
were sitting on the seat of an open 8th Avenue car. When we got at the
corner of 37th Street and 8th Avenue we saw a mob, and the mob called
out, "There's some niggers; lynch them!" and they made a rush for the
car, and I jumped out. Then I ran up to the corner of 38th Street,
where there were four policemen. Of these four policemen three were
standing on the corner, and one ran into the street to stop me. When he
saw me coming I was running hard, fast as I could. When I reached this
policeman in the street, he hit me over the head with his club. He hit
me twice over the head, and I saw the other three policemen coming, and
I fell down. I thought if I fell down the others would not attack me,
but they did; they hit me over the legs and on my arm, when I raised
it up to protect my head, and they hit me in the back. The two cops
started to take me to the police station, but when they saw a patrol
wagon come around the corner of 38th Street into 8th Avenue they called
the patrol wagon, and both went with me in the patrol wagon to the
station house, where I stayed till about four o'clock in the morning.
There was no charge made against me in the station house. After my head
was bound up, and at about four o'clock in the morning, a man dressed
in citizen's clothes said, "Two at a time can go when they want to;
things are quieted down somewhat." I asked him if anybody was going
with us, and they said, "No, go by yourself." I went directly home,
where I stayed and went to bed. I got up at about half-past eight and
went to the Roosevelt Hospital the next morning. They told me at the
station house to go to the hospital. I have been up to the Roosevelt
Hospital three times, on the 16th, 17th, and 18th. I don't think I will
go any more, but still I have to wear a bandage and dress my head. The
scar that I have got on my head is about two inches long, and I was
also hit and a bump was raised on the back of my head, but the skin is
not broken. I bled a great deal from the wound on my head; my shirt,
collar, and tie were all blood-spotted. I am about fifteen years old;
one of my companions, who is about twenty-four years old, was knocked
down, kicked in the face, and thrown down a cellar by a mob. He is my
father's son-in-law; his name is Joe Walker, and he resides at 346
West 41st Street. My other companions did not get hurt at all. One of
them started to jump from the car, but a policeman told him to get
back, and he stayed on the car, and the mob left him there because they
were chasing me and the other fellow. This man was about nineteen or
twenty years old. Of my other companions, one was a white boy about
nineteen years old, and the mob did not touch him, and he stayed on
the car. The other colored boy, who is about fifteen years old, is
light-complexioned in color, and the mob did not touch him; he stayed
on the cars also. We were in the third seat from the front; we were all
sitting on the same seat. I was on the right hand and outside coming
up, and when I saw the mob coming along the street from the right I
clambered past the other fellows and jumped over the rail on the left,
and was the first fellow out. I ran uptown towards 38th Street, where
I saw these cops. I wanted to get protection, but instead the cops hit
me, as I have told. I did not resist arrest, and I did not struggle to
get away from the cops. I only wanted to get away from the mob. The
cops stopped me, and did not catch hold of me until I had got down and
the other cop had hit me, and one of them caught hold of me to make me
stand up. I did not even try to run away after I had been hit. I was
afraid to run, because I knew if I did they would hit me again.

HARRY REED.

Sworn to before me this 22nd day of August, 1900.

JOHN C. BARR, Notary Public, Kings County. Certificate filed
in N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

My name is Jesse Payne. I reside at 255 West 93rd Street. I work there
as a waiter in a boarding house. On the evening of August 15th I was
sent down to accompany a small boy, by the name of Allan Atkins, to his
home, 223 West 18th Street. He took an 8th Avenue car at 93rd Street,
and I rode alongside the car until I got to 59th Street. I told him I
would ride on, and I rode about a block in front of the car. We went
down this way until we approached 34th Street. Around the corner of
34th Street and 8th Avenue I saw a crowd standing. It stretched all
over the street and sidewalk. I thought that some one was hurt, and
that was the reason the crowd had collected, but when I got into the
crowd they did not seem to be standing around no one, and I did not
know what was the matter until I passed 34th Street, and was about
half way to 33rd Street. I was still on the west side of the car track
riding on the wheel, and about half a block in front of the car in
which the boy was, and about half a block behind another car, trying
to follow the pathway it made in the street. When I got to the middle
of the block a policeman ran out from the sidewalk from the west and
raised his club and hit me across the mouth, saying, "What the hell
are you riding here for?" This blow split my lip and broke off two of
my front teeth; it also knocked me off the wheel, but I scrambled up
and ran between the east side of 8th Avenue, dragging my wheel with
me, and away from the policeman. The policeman followed right upon me,
clubbing me, and the whole crowd was after me. I tried to get into a
store, and they shoved me back, and they would not let me in. While I
was going from where I was knocked off my wheel to the east side of the
street a policeman who struck me kept on clubbing me. The first blow
he gave me knocked me kind of foolish, but I hung on to my wheel. When
I got to the curb I fell, because I missed the step. After I got up
another policeman came up to me and said, "What the hell are you doing
here with that wheel?" I says, "I ain't done nothing to anybody, just
going on a message to take a boy home;" and he grabbed the wheel and
hit me over the hand with his club. That made me let go the wheel. It
was taken away from me and I have not seen it since. Then I ran away
about four doors from 8th Avenue, and a third officer told me to stop
and sit down, "If you don't they will kill you;" and he stood there
and protected me until he sent another officer for a patrol wagon and
took me to the station house, and I was there until four o'clock in
the morning. I have been employed by Mrs. McFarland, at 255 West 93rd
Street for about three months; before that with Annie Sterler, of 44
West 35th Street--this is a boarding house, and I was a waiter there
for two years; with Mrs. Gillies, of 18 West 9th Street, two and a
half years. I know Rev. Mr. Franklin, of Zion Church, corner 10th and
Bleecker Streets.

JESSE x PAYNE.
   his mark

Sworn to before me this 22nd day of August, 1900.

SAMUEL L. WOLFF, Notary Public (77), N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

My name is John B. Mallory. I reside at 206 West 62nd Street. While
coming home from the engineers' lectures my friend Gordon Jones and
myself came up to 7th Avenue through 29th Street where the colored
Engineers' Hall is. We turned into 39th Street and went west towards
8th Avenue. We saw a crowd of white men and boys coming around the
corner towards us. Before the gang reached us a policeman said to my
friend and myself, "Get out of here," and began clubbing me and my
friend; he struck my friend first, and my friend ran towards Broadway.
Then after being struck four or five times, and as soon as I could, I
ran up on a stoop. The policeman did not have a hold of me, but began
striking me, and kept up with me. When I got on top of the stoop he
ran after me, and caught hold of me and shoved me down. He said again,
"Get out of here." It made me fall down the stairs, and I was on my
hands and knees on the walk. Then the policeman left me at the mercy
of the mob, and he went across the street where he was at first. The
mob began punching me, hitting me with sticks, kicking and hitting me
with their fists, and split my lip open, cut my nose, and bruised my
forehead. Then I got up and put my hands on my face and head, and stood
up against the railing by the stoop of the house where I was shoved
down. Then another policeman came to me and said to me, "Have you sense
enough to go home?" I said "Yes." I got on an 8th Avenue car, in which
he got on, and began going uptown about fifteen or twenty feet, when
another policeman came up and got on the car from the left-hand side,
and shoved me out towards the right-hand side, where the mob was.
He said, "Get out of here." As I was pushed off a man at the side
struck at me, but I dodged him and jumped on the car again. The car
was moving when the policeman shoved me off of it. The policeman who
protected me made the motorman stop the car for me to get on, and I
got on the front of the car again. The policeman who protected me said
to the policeman who shoved me off, "Get off, and let him alone." He
got off then. The policeman who protected me stood on the car until I
got up one block out of the mob, and then he got off. I rode on this
8th Avenue car up to 59th Street, and I stood between two men. One of
them offered me his handkerchief to wipe the blood off my face, and
when I got to 59th Street they advised me to go to Roosevelt Hospital,
and I asked one of them to get a transfer for me. He did this, and I
went to Roosevelt Hospital, where I had three stitches put in my lip.
I am still going to the hospital, and am under treatment; my back and
both shoulders are injured, and I am generally bruised all over. I
have no bad habits. I do not smoke or drink, and I am a student at the
International Correspondence School, Scranton, Pa. I have been through
the public schools, and I am studying to be a mechanical engineer. I
also attend lectures at the Colored Engineers' Association, on 29th
Street between 6th and 7th Avenues. I know Mrs. S. E. Lodewick, of 800
Lexington Avenue; C. W. Phillips, 11 Broadway; L. P. Sawyer, Mrs. J. F.
Aitken, Mrs. Mary Baker, Mrs. E. R. Clark, and Mrs. A. Arnold, all of
153 Madison Avenue. I have known these people for about eight years,
and they can all testify to my good character.

JOHN B. MALLORY.

Sworn to before me this 22nd day of August, 1900.

SAMUEL L. WOLFF, Notary Public (77), N. Y. County.

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

Nicholas J. Sherman, being duly sworn, deposes and says:

My name is Nicholas J. Sherman. I reside at No. 134 West 33rd Street,
Borough of Manhattan, City of New York. On the 15th day of August I was
visiting some friends at 37th Street near 7th Avenue, in a boarding
house. As the clock struck ten I left the house. I walked east toward
7th Avenue. At the corner of 37th Street and 7th Avenue I saw several
policemen chasing a person eastward. I do not know whether the person
was colored or not. I am a messenger and mailing clerk on the _New
York Herald_, and I naturally was interested, as I thought it was a
news item, and I walked across the street. When I got within six feet
of the sidewalk, near the drug store, on the corner of 37th Street and
7th Avenue, a policeman stopped me, and asked me, "Where in hell do you
live?" I told him in 33rd Street, and then he said, "G-- d-- you, go
home!" and he hit me with his club on the left arm. There were about a
dozen policemen standing around there, and two or three within reach.
One of these struck me across the right shoulder, and when I turned to
run the same policeman, I think, who struck me on the left arm again
struck me across the small of my back with his club. Then I limped
from there towards the saloon on the southwest corner of 37th Street
and 7th Avenue, where a policeman was leaning against a lamppost. As I
limped past him he struck me with his club on the right arm. I was then
unable to get away from him on account of my injury, but I managed to
get across the street and stood in front of the saloon on the southeast
corner, and a man came out and asked me to go in. I went in and leaned
against a barrel, and he told the bartender that the police had just
beaten me. As soon as I was able to walk I started for the _New York
Herald_ office to tell the man whom I am employed under. I sat in the
chair at the _Herald_ office all night, because there was a great crowd
around the street and I was afraid to go home. I left there the next
morning about six o'clock, went to my room and changed my clothing, and
started for my breakfast. Then I went to the office and worked all day,
until about six o'clock that evening. Then I went to my room, and was
so lame I could not get out again until the following Tuesday morning,
five days after, not even being able, in the meantime, to sit in a
chair. I still feel the effects of the clubbing. The blow on the small
of my back made my left limb almost paralyzed.

NICHOLAS J. SHERMAN.

Sworn to before me this 24th day of August, 1900.

HERBERT PARSONS, Notary Public, N. Y. County.

                                 ----

Mr. Sherman states in addition that his chief in the newspaper office
directed him to report the matter to the police authorities, and that
he spoke to Chief Devery, who said to him substantially, "A negro
killed a policeman up there, and they can't be controlled."

                                 ----

_City and County of New York, ss._:

My name is W. H. Cooper. I reside at 340 West 41st Street. On the
morning of August 15th, about half past nine, I went from the house
to the post office station at the southwest corner of 41st Street and
8th Avenue. When I reached that corner I saw a group of white men and
boys standing at the corner. When I passed this group at this corner I
overheard one of them saying, "We are going to get back at the niggers
to-night." One of the others said, "Is that true? Is there going to
be a riot to-night?" and the reply was "Yes." When I heard this I
went around the corner. There was a bicycle pump there. I went behind
the bicycle pump like I was looking in the window. I could overhear
everything that was said. One of the fellows said, "Have they buried
Thorpe, yet?" "No, we expect to bury Thorpe to-day;" and he says, "We
expect to have a hot time to-day when the funeral starts." It was
rumored around that he was to be buried on the day of the riot, but he
was not buried, however, until the next day. One of the fellows said,
"Have they got the nigger Harris, yet?" "Yes," he said, "they caught
him down at Washington, and if we can get our hands on him we will tar
and feather the bastard;" and I went into the drug store and came out
again after mailing my letter. When I came out I stood on the corner
and filled my pipe, and I overheard them say, "Have they got the woman
yet?" and they said, "Yes, she is locked up;" and the other fellow
said, "Well, that is all to-night." I did not move on until one of
the fellows said, "There is a coon standing there now; you had better
hush." Then I went down home and told the boys at the shop about it.

W. H. COOPER.

Sworn to before me this 22nd day of August, 1900.

JOHN C. BARR, Notary Public, Kings County. Certificate filed
in N. Y. County.




The Citizens' Protective League was organized in St. Mark's Church,
West 53d Street and Eighth Avenue, on Monday morning, September 3,
1900. The object of the League is, first, to afford mutual protection;
and, secondly, to prosecute the guilty. The League now numbers about
5,000, with daily increase.

The following officers were elected:


OFFICERS.

Rev. W. H. BROOKS, D.D.,         President.
T. S. P. MILLER, M.D.,      Vice President.
Rev. H. P. MILLER,              Secretary.
JAMES E. GARNER,                Treasurer.


EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE.

T. T. FORTUNE, Chairman,
W. R. DAVIS, Secretary,
C. A. DORSEY,
Rev. P. B. TOMPKINS,
Rev. J. W. SCOTT,
D. M. WEBSTER,
Rev. C. T. WALKER, D.D.,
Rev. W. L. HUBBARD,
Rev. GEO. W. BAILEY,
L. H. LATIMER,
Rev. R. D. WYN,
J. F. THOMAS,
N. B. DODSON,
Rev. G. HUNT,
Rev. L. L. CUYLER,
Rev. H. C. BISHOP,
Rev. W. D. COOK, D.D.,
MELVIN J. CHISUM.