Hard Scrabble and Snow Town
Hard Scrabble (Addison Hollow) and Snow Town were two African American neighborhoods located in Providence, Rhode Island in the nineteenth century. They were also the sites of race riots in which working-class Irish-Americans[1] destroyed multiple black homes in 1824 and 1831, respectively.[2][3]
Hard Scrabble | |
|---|---|
Former neighborhood | |
Broadside ridiculing victims of the 1824 Hard Scrabble riot and promising similar treatment to other African Americans settling in the city | |
Hard Scrabble | |
| Coordinates: 41.8325°N 71.4111°W | |
| Country | United States |
| State | Rhode Island |
| City | Providence |
| Established | circa 1800 |
Hard Scrabble
Hard Scrabble was a predominantly black neighborhood in northwestern Providence in the early 19th century. Away from the town center, its inexpensive rents attracted working class free blacks, poor people of all races and marginalized businesses such as saloons and houses of prostitution. It was perceived by many white neighbors as a blight the town. Tensions developed between the residents of Hard Scrabble and other residents of Providence.[2][4] Hard Scrabble was one of several similar neighborhoods in urban centers in the Northeast where free blacks gathered to further themselves socially and economically. Other African American communities created in cities with growing job markets in the same time period include the northern slope of Boston’s Beacon Hill, Little Liberia in Bridgeport, Connecticut and Sandy Ground on New York’s Staten Island.[5]
On October 18th 1824, a brawl started in the neighborhood after a black man refused to get off the sidewalk when approached by some whites. The following evening a mob of white residents attacked the homes and businesses of Black residents while many more looked on. Eyewitness accounts describe between 40 and 60 people actively tearing apart homes, some armed with axes and clubs. In total approximately 20 buildings were destroyed by the rioters. The Violence lasted from between 7pm and around 2 or 3am when the rioters voted to adjourn.[2][4][6]
Trial of the Rioters
The Trial took place in September 1824 under the direction of Chief Justice Thomas Mann. Of the at least 40 rioters present only 8 were identified charged for the crime: Oliver Cummins, Joseph Butler, Jr. Nathaniel G. Metcalf, Amos Chaffee, John Sherman, Gilbert Humes, Arthur Farrier, James Gibbs, Ezra Hubbard, and William Taylor. Sherman and Taylor were not apprehended, not having been found by the Sheriff. Council for the Defense was Welcome A. Burges and Joseph L. Tillinghast. They argued that witness testimony was unreliable, that the defendants could not be tied to the scene of the crime, that the common law definition of a riot had been superseded by a stricture Rhode Island statute and thus did not apply, and that the destruction of Hard Scrabble had been a just and necessary endeavor. In his closing arguments for the defense of Oliver Cummins, Tillinghast compared the riots to the destruction of Babylon in the Bible. Of the 8 defendants only Metcalf and Farrier were found guilty, though these verdicts were swiftly overturned.[2]
Snow Town
After the Hard Scrabble riot, the Snow Town neighborhood rose in roughly the same area. It was another interracial neighborhood where free blacks and poor whites lived among crime and marginal businesses. In 1831 more riots took place in Snow Town, one triggered by the shooting death of a sailor. Once again, the mob destroyed many homes, targeting black homes even though the people living in them had no apparent ties to the shooting, spilling over into nearby Olney Street. This time, the militia was called out, and it killed four white rioters.[3][7]
Political fallout
The Hardscrabble Riot had engendered little media sympathy for its victims. But by the time of the Snow Town riot, leading citizens and journalists took the problem far more seriously.[8] After the Snow Town riot, written opinion approved of suppressing rioters to maintain order, and Providence voters approved a charter for a city government containing strong police powers.[7]
Location and Memorialization
The exact location of the Hard Scrabble and Snow Town neighborhoods within northwestern Providence has been a matter of some dispute, which complicated efforts to memorialize Hard Scrabble. Richard Lobban, professor at Rhode Island College and the Naval War College, believed the riot took place on what is now the State House lawn while Ted Sanderson, executive director of the Rhode Island Historical Preservation and Heritage Commission said his research showed that the Hard Scrabble neighborhood was located around the base of Olney Street. In 2006, a memorial plaque was installed in a grass-covered traffic island at the corner of North Main and Canal Streets near the State House.[6] A memorial for the Snow Town riot is located nearby at the Roger Williams National Memorial.[7]
See also
References
- Narrating the Slave Trade, Theorizing Community by Raphaël Lambert pg. 47
- Hard-Scrabble Calendar: Report of the Trials... Providence RI, For the Purchaser, 1824. Accessed 24 June 2024.
- History of the Providence Riots, from Sept. 21 to Sept. 24 1831. Providence Committee of Riots, 1831. Accessed 24 June 2024.
- John Wood Sweet (2006). Bodies Politic: Negotiating Race in the American North, 1730-1830. University of Pennsylvania Press. pp. 353ff. ISBN 978-0-8122-1978-4.
- Stephanie Reitz (2009-11-23). "Group tries to preserve 2 historic Conn. homes". Associated Press. Boston Globe. Retrieved 2010-08-02.
- Erica Sagrans (2006-05-31). "Memorializing the 1824 hardscrabble race riot takes a long route/". Boston Phoenix. Archived from the original on 2012-10-15. Retrieved 2010-08-02.
- Edward Fitzpatrick (2009-07-07). "Obscure marker recalls shameful 1800s episode". Providence Journal. Retrieved 2010-08-03.
- Crouch, "Providence Newspapers and the Racist Riots of 1824 and 1831" https://navigator.rihs.org/rhode-island-a-bibliography-of-its-history/providence-newspapers-and-the-racist-riots-of-1824-and-1831/ Retrieved 2024-6-21
Further reading
- Jones, Jacqueline (2013). A Dreadful Deceit: The Myth of Race from the Colonial Era to Obama's America. New York: Basic Books. ISBN 978-0465036707.
External links
- "African American Providence". Brown University. Archived from the original on 2011-07-17. Retrieved 2010-08-01.