Robert H. Zieger
Department of History
POB 117320
University of Florida
Gainesville, FL 32611
zieger@ufl.edu
April 1, 2008
Historians have rightly viewed the decade of the Great War as a time of repression, disappointment, and racially motivated violence directed at African Americans, but it was also a time of surprisingly positive developments. (1) The logic of wartime mobilization, along with the Fourteenth Amendment's still-operative provisions for the rights of national citizenship and the presence in the government of liberal voices, resulted in key changes in the practical status and circumstances of African Americans even during the period of the most racist national administration of the 20th century. Developments in diverse arenas, from the Supreme Court to wartime agencies, combined with the mass migration into northern industrial centers, helped to make this turbulent decade an important period in the struggle of African Americans for full citizenship. Whereas in the wake of war European colonial powers intensified subordination of their African subjects, in the United States the reaffirmation of national citizenship and the right of free movement helped pave the way for eventual civil rights breakthroughs.
Focusing attention on
the possibilities and achievements of the Great War era contributes
to a growing historical literature on continuities in African
Americans' struggles to achieve equal
rights. Indeed, the Great War era invites us to stretch the concept of
the "long civil rights
movement" both chronologically and institutionally. Civil rights
historians have been not so
much reinterpreting the chronology of the Movement as reminding us of
the struggles, both in the
streets and in legal arenas, that predated and provided the impetus for
the heroic public saga of
civil rights, stretching from Brown to Memphis. Thus far,
this reconsideration has focused on the
period from the New Deal forward, stressing depression-era activism,
the impact of anti-colonial
struggles of the 1930s and 1940s, and the activism associated with the
Double V and fair
employment movements of World War II. (2)
But there is no reason
why the notion of a "long
civil rights movement" should not be extended to embrace the 1910s. As
Chad Williams, Steven
Reich, Theodore Kornweibel, Jr., and others remind us, the war itself
incubated militant
activism. Migration northward brought at least a modicum of political
influence and helped
foster cultural assertiveness. (3) Wartime economic change
and military mobilization both revivified ongoing traditions of
black resistance and triggered black activism. Thus, for example, Paul
Ortiz's Emancipation
Betrayed: The Hidden History of Black Organizing and White Violence in
Florida from
Reconstruction to the Bloody Election of 1920 (2005) chronicles
four decades of black resistance
to racial violence, segregation, and discrimination. His account of
black activism among labor
activists, fraternal order members, church women, and other African
Americans culminates in a
moving account of the 1920 election when "The Florida movement stood
poised at the brink of a
great victory against one-party rule in the South." Inspired in part by
the wartime rhetoric of
democracy and by the service of thousands of black Floridians in the
American Expeditionary
Force, African Americans throughout the state mobilized to register to
vote and thus to overcome
the legal and extra-legal obstacles that denied them the suffrage. "Men
must register and pay
their poll tax. . . .Now is the time when the ballot is mightier than
the bayonet. . .," declared
Jacksonville editor W.I. Lewis in February, 1920. Through the spring of
that year, African
Americans all over Florida, led-pace Lewis's outdated gender
reference by newly franchised
black women-flocked to the registration offices. In the end, of course,
a lethal combination of
official obstruction and massive violence thwarted Florida's promising
experiment in bi-racial
democracy, but, Ortiz reminds us, this bid for democratic citizenship
linked both to prewar
struggles and ongoing assertions of civil rights.
(4) The role of the federal
government with respect to race in the Great War era also bears
scrutiny. Throughout U.S. history, civil rights advance has inevitably
involved governmental
action, whether through constitutional amendment, legislation,
executive orders, or
administrative action. The racial injustices of the Woodrow Wilson
administration are well-known, as is the gross mistreatment of African
Americans in the United States Army. (5)
But the
logic of world war, even before U.S. belligerency, required federal
authorities, whatever their
reluctance to challenge the existing racial order, to "bend toward
justice." Thus, in its reaction to
the Great Migration itself, to the demands of wartime manpower
allocation, and to the military
and industrial requirements of mobilization, the Wilson administration
found itself adopting
measures and implementing policies that offered a brief glimpse of how
federal power might be
used, however "grudgingly, unwillingly, almost insultingly." (6) Few if any of the actions of the
U.S. Department of Labor, including the establishment in 1917 of the
Division of Negro
Economics, were motivated by altruism or egalitarian sentiments.
Rulings of the United States
Railroad Administration and the National War Labor Board that upheld
black workers' claims
stemmed from concerns about insuring full mobilization and production,
not from principled
commitment to equal treatment. In 1917, when the U.S. Supreme Court
struck down a local
ordinance that would have legally barred blacks (and whites) from
residing in designated areas, it
did so out of concern for property rights and not in furtherance of
racial justice. But when are
political and administrative leaders not responsive to
economic and national security
considerations? When do the courts not privilege property
rights? To be sure, these benign
federal gestures were more than matched by the growth of the
government's surveillance and
repressive apparatus, which singled out African Americans as
particularly needful of suspicion
and scrutiny. (7) But the apprehensions
of southern whites about the war's likelihood of spurring
racial change and their seemingly atavistic fears that expanding
federal authority would
inevitably threaten the national consensus about black subordination
were not entirely misplaced. "War," Randolph Bourne famously declared,
"is the life of the state." It also offered, at least
briefly, a different vision of how race might be negotiated in 20th
century America.
\ The era of the Great
War was a time of hope, hardship, and bitter disappointment for
African Americans. Indeed, historian John Higham has singled out World
War I as being alone
among major US conflicts in the lack of progress associated with it,
declaring that it "fails
completely to fit the general pattern." World War I, he charges, "made
race relations worse
rather than better. . . ." (8) Yet from
another angle of vision, the World War I decade was a hinge
on which eventual civil rights advances turned. The 1910s were in fact
an important gestation
period in the modern struggle for equality. Despite the spate of
outrages immediately following
the war itself, in the generation following the Armistice the public
status and political influence
of African Americans expanded decisively. (9)
A comparison of the
U.S. experience vis-a-vis race in the 20th century's two
world wars is
instructive. We highlight the Second World War as laying the basis for
subsequent civil rights
advance. (10) The establishment of the
Fair Employment Practices Committee and several landmark
Supreme Court decisions; Truman's Commission on Civil Rights in 1947;
the civil rights
platform planks of the Democratic party in 1948; and state
anti-discrimination laws all provide
support for the theme of the Good War's positive impact. Yet it was not
until 1964, 19 years
after Hiroshima, that Congress passed a comprehensive Civil Rights Act.
Interestingly, the
period from the establishment in 1918 of the Division of Negro
Economics-the first federal body
since the Civil War-era Freedmen's Bureau to express a friendly
interest in the economic
circumstances of black citizens-to the adoption in 1941 FEPC is 23
years, exactly the span
elapsed between promulgation of the FEPC and adoption of Title VII of
the 1964 Civil Rights
Act. (11) Like the FEPC, the DNE was
abandoned after the war emergency; like the FEPC,
however, the DNE played a role in placing the concerns of African
American workers on the
national agenda. The dismal racial
record of the Wilson administration and of the United States Army
hardly needs reiteration here. (12)
Even so, however, the logic of wartime mobilization, as well as
the proclivities of some key members of the Woodrow Wilson
administration, did at least briefly
allow a glimpse of what a more racially egalitarian order might look
like. Administration
officials' response to complaints about the migration of large numbers
of African Americans
northward indicated the extent to which manpower needs and industrial
mobilization, along with
the Fourteenth Amendment's race-blind assertion of national citizenship, could challenge the
existing racial order. Moreover, wartime legislation designed to
provide support for the female
and juvenile dependents of conscripted soldiers provided further
evidence of the unintended but
difficult to circumvent egalitarian thrust of both federal initiative
and the logic of manpower
mobilization. Thus in the fall of 1917, Congress provided an
across-the-board allotment of
$30.00 a month for all married conscripts. With allowances for
children, the monthly stipend
could reach $65.00. Designed to keep intact male breadwinning status
during the war
emergency, the measure did not-nor could it-take need or race into
account. At a time when
southern agricultural workers often earned less than a dollar a day,
these federal allotments and
allowances, distribution of which entirely bypassed the local power
structure, spelled a powerful
disincentive for African American women to continue to work in the
fields or as domestic
servants, adding to the South's perceived manpower (or in this case,
womanpower) crisis. (13) Both the Great
Migration and the perceived affects of the allotment program created
consternation among important Democratic constituencies. The mass movement of blacks
northward, along with fears of the effects of family allotments on
local labor markets, alarmed
planters and politicians, accustomed to a plentitude of cheap labor. Complained a Louisiana
congressman in July, 1917, "The negroes have been leaving in bunches of
twenty five to fifty
every Saturday night for the last three months."
(14)
Reflecting complaints by whites that allotment
checks were drying up supplies of low wage domestic workers, the mayor
of Savannah,
complained that "the laborers find they can support themselves without
working full time. . . ." Encouraged by the US Army's Provost General,
southern cities and states adopted "work or
fight" ordinances, ostensibly as a means of compelling unpatriotic
"slackers" to contribute to the
war effort but in reality, in the southern racial context, a means of
forcing blacks to accept
substandard wages in their accustomed agricultural or domestic work. (15) Hardly less concerned
were labor unionists and political leaders in the host states and
cities. Thus, in the same month Minnesota governor John Lind wired
labor secretary Wilson that
"The government must stop the movement of Negros into this section at
once[.] I shudder to
think of the consequences if this is not done." And, assessing
responsibility for the savage racial
assaults in East Saint Louis, in June and July of 1917, a committee of
Illinois labor leaders
declared that "the riots were due to the excessive and abnormal number
of negroes . . . [pouring
into] East St. Louis." (16) The effects of the
migration and the implications of the allotment system triggered calls
for federal regulation of labor mobility. Both southern economic elites
and northern labor
interests urged the Department of Labor to act. Surely the wartime
emergency would enable the
Department of Labor to stop the flow of labor northward and provide
federal support for local
"work or fight" measures. To be sure, there was
no constitutional basis for the restriction of citizens movements.
Calls for the administration to "do something" about the black exodus
rarely acknowledged the
difficulty of restricting U.S. citizens' free movement across state
lines. Presumably, those calling
on the government to block black migration northward were implicitly
urging such a policy as an
emergency war measure of some sort. Here, however, they ran into
difficulties, for, with the
virtual cessation of European immigration that the outbreak of the war
had caused, industrial
employers were equally adamant in asserting their desperate need for
black labor in northern
munitions works. Southern white
employers nonetheless fought hard to retain their entitlement to
geographically restricted, low wage black labor privilege. In the
1910s, southern states routinely
passed legislation designed to impede or halt outside labor
recruitment. State and local
ordinances typically imposed prohibitive licensing charges on
recruiters. Southern mailmen
confiscated copies of newspapers such as the Chicago Defender
that encouraged the exodus and
contained practical information for would-be sojourners. Southern state
and local officials also
sabotaged the federal government's efforts to recruit workers for
military construction. In May,
1918, for example, the director of the United States Employment Service
(USES), an arm of the
Department of Labor, complained that "Florida has arrested numerous of
these labor agents and
now has in jail at Gainesville two officers of our Service who have
been recruiting common labor
for the Army projects at Norfolk." State officials told USES officers
that "Florida absolutely
forbids recruiting labor from the state." (17) It is true that federal
agents sometimes collaborated in white southerners' efforts to retain
the benefits of cheap, captive labor. For example, in the summer of
1918, one southern saw mill
operator complained that contractors building the government's great
munitions complex at
Muscle Shoals, Alabama, were "offering my niggers . . . $3.80 and $4.00
a day, while I am
paying them $2." USES Director John Densmore sympathized with this
dilemma, thus
reflexively endorsing southern white employers' sense of entitlement to
low-wage black labor. While duly pointing out that it would not be
legal for his agency openly to dissuade the
movement of black labor toward more remunerative opportunities,
Densmore pledged that "if the
$2 fellow in the sawmill down there is satisfied with his $2-and he is
or he would not be working
there-we, as part of the Government, are not going to . . . lay before
him newspapers showing
what they do at Muscle Shoals to get him to move away from there. We
will let him alone. . . .'"
Representatives of the Department of Agriculture, most notably southern
county agents, always
sensitive to local white constituencies in the South, were more
aggressive in aiding planters and
other employers to discourage blacks from migrating, demanding higher
wages, or even changing
jobs. Since the United States Supreme Court had in the past sanctioned
certain kinds of
restrictions on geographical mobility-approving, for example, state
laws imposing heavy
licensing fees on labor agents, the clear intent of which were to
impede black agricultural
workers' freedom of movement-there was no guarantee that in the
perfervid atmosphere of
wartime emergency that the Woodrow Wilson administration could not have
found ways of
acceding to the demands of these important constituencies. (18) Overall, however,
Secretary of Labor Wilson resisted these pressures. He did
acknowledge that "The migration of negroes from the South . . . in
larger numbers than can be
assimilated in the North has caused a great deal of anxiety to the
Department of Labor, both
because of the fear of friction in the North and the shortage of labor
in the South." And the
Department of Labor's agencies most intimately involved with manpower
mobilization, notably
the USES and the DNE, did at times advise potential migrants of the
perils of relocation, even as
they counseled southern employers that improved wages and conditions of
employment would
help to keep black workers on the farms. Nonetheless, Wilson repeatedly
pointed out to
advocates of governmental restriction that no agency of the government,
even during wartime,
had any authority to impede the free movement of people across state
lines. Moreover, the
secretary and his aides resisted the "work or fight" movement that
peaked in the summer of 1918,
despite pressure from potent southern political sources and the
military itself. In the end, though
politically disfranchised and socially reviled, African Americans
simply could not, finally and
generally, be treated as other than US citizens when it came to the
fundamental right of free
transit. (19) Under William B.
Wilson, the main response of the government, though the Department
of Labor, was a joint program of detailed study and on-site exhortation
and negotiation. Alert
even before the entry of the US into the war to the vast dimensions of
the black migration, in
1916 Wilson borrowed two black investigators from the Department of
Commerce to conduct a
preliminary survey of the scope and impact of the migration and then
recruited academic and
social investigator James H. Dillard to oversee a more ambitious
analysis. Spurred in part by
concern "expressed over the probable loss . . . of southern crops
through the departure. . . of
Negro workers in appalling numbers," Dillard's report provided a wealth
of information about
conditions both North and South but made no specific recommendations
for governmental
action. (20) The declaration of war
in April, 1917, further spurred blacks' search for industrial
opportunity and the numbers leaving southern plantations and cities
swelled. At the urging of
black leaders, in May of 1918, Secretary Wilson created a new body in
the Department of Labor,
the Division of Negro Economics. To head it, he tapped Dr. George
Edmond Haynes, a
distinguished African American social scientist and a founder of the
National Urban League. The DNE, which operated without a separate
budget line and functioned in the field in close
association with the United States Employment Service, had two primary
tasks. One was to
monitor and analyze the scope and effects of the migration. The other
was to spur wartime
production by easing the so-called "labor shortage" in the South while
promoting amity and
accord between white and black workers in newly biracial northern
settings. (21) Throughout its two-year
existence, the DNE and its director walked a tightrope. On the
one hand, Haynes's brief was to subordinate all considerations to
prosecution of the war effort. Yet southern commercial and agricultural
elites were determined to cling to their sources of
cheap and, so they thought, docile labor. But it was black leaders who
pushed for the creation of
the Bureau and militants in the National Association for the
Advancement of Colored People
(NAACP) could be relied upon to criticize any concessions to southern
interests. Moreover,
southern blacks themselves proved deeply suspicious of any official
efforts to discourage
migration: reported one of Dillard's white investigators, "all the
advice about staying in the
South that we shower on the Negro, he reads backward." (22) Moreover, Haynes was
convinced that the migrations constituted a magnificent
opportunity for members of his race to gain a foothold in industry,
improve their living standards,
gain access to educational opportunities, and generally promote black
betterment. Creating a
structure of state committees in both the chief departure and host
states, working deferentially
through the existing white power structure in the former, and
dissociating himself and the
government generally from the currents of race radicalism that the war
fostered, Haynes and his
state directors and field agents worked assiduously to ease the
economic transitions, North and
South, involved in the migration. Able investigators in Illinois,
Michigan, Ohio, and New Jersey
conducted a series of illuminating studies of the living, working,
religious, and leisure-time lives
of new northern workers. At the same time, their southern counterparts
worked to blunt the
impact of "work or fight" orders, to recruit local blacks for needed
war production, and to
promote the view that the key to retention of southern labor was the
improvement of wages and
working and living conditions on Dixie's farms and in her lumber camps
and construction sites. Although Bureau staff members were not able to
devise quantitative instruments for measuring
the effects of their work, their efforts, given considerable public
visibility by Secretary Wilson,
helped to blunt the call for repressive labor measures and for
curtailment of physical mobility. (23) It was Haynes's great
hope that the work of the BNE could continue into the postwar
period and that the Bureau could become a permanent agency. The
migration, he believed,
marked a decisive breakthrough in the struggles of African Americans. "'Mr. Opportunity,'" he
advised a Detroit audience, ". . . has taken hold of the Negro worker's
right hand and has led him
into the place of work. . . ." Nor was potential progress confined to
the North, for "One of the
striking things is that 'Mr. Opportunity' is concerning himself in the
South. . . as well as in the
North," since southern whites were being forced to improve conditions
so as to retain their labor
force. After the Armistice, Bureau agents continued to file detailed
reports of living and working
conditions in northern states, as the end of the war failed to stem the
flow of African Americans
northward. Although
Congress quickly cut funding for the USES, into whose budget DNE
allocations were folded, Haynes soldiered on into mid-1920 attempting
to keep alive what he and
his allies in the black community considered the most important federal
racial initiative since
Reconstruction. (24) Indeed, if progress was
to be steady and secure, blacks and whites needed the support of a
benign federal government. In Haynes's view, the racial balance in the
North was delicate, with
much friction between white and black workers. Militant race-conscious
elements were
capitalizing on the frustration and anger of migrants who too often
encountered poor housing and
hostility on the part of white fellow workers. Migrants' "discontent
growing out of previous
conditions and present maladjustment. . ., their desire for American
rights, their resentment
against unjust discriminations and other un-American practices. . .
make them a very ripe field
for unrest, friction and disturbances. . . ," he warned. In view of the kinds of racial
tensions that
erupted into deadly violence in Washington, Chicago, and elsewhere in
the summer of 1919, a
federal presence was desperately needed, perhaps more so than during
the war itself, for angry
transplanted blacks "will listen to counsel and guidance from Federal
agents as from no others." (25) Haynes's appeals,
however, were unavailing. By the fall of 1920 this promising
experiment in federal manpower and race relations management was a dead
letter. Neither the
southern-dominated outgoing 66th Congress nor the incoming 67th
regarded ongoing involvement
of the federal government in the monitoring or amelioration of social
conditions a necessary or
appropriate function. Stripped of his investigating staff and his
office help, Haynes returned to
his teaching post at Fisk University. There he continued to write as a
private citizen about the
migration, seeking to encourage the efforts of civic and religious bodies to provide moral and
practical support to the new black urban communities. Groups such as
the Urban League
attempted to fill the void left by federal departure but for the most
part the great migration
continued apace into the 1920s with little public oversight or
direction. (26) Other wartime agencies
also gave initial evidence of concern for the welfare of African
American workers, although none specifically targeted the problems of
black wage-earners. The
U.S. Railroad Administration, created in December, 1917, to take over
operation of the chaotic
transport system, promulgated a series of rulings that facilitated the
organization of some black
workers and even on occasion favored the interests of black employees
in opposition to the
demands of the powerful and thoroughly racist mainstream white railroad
brotherhoods. USRA
support for black workers, however, was at best episodic and ended
abruptly with the cessation
of the fighting as the white rail unions were quickly able to gain
governmental backing for the
exclusion of blacks from all "operating" positions.
(27) The record of another
wartime agency, the National War Labor Board, was better,
however. Established in the spring of 1918, the NWLB played a key role
in boosting union
membership and extending industrial democracy. Led by militant
progressive Frank Walsh, it
intervened in a number of racially pregnant labor disputes. In cases
involving streetcar operators
in New Orleans, laundresses in Arkansas, iron and steel workers in
Alabama, and phosphate
miners in Florida, NWLB investigators came down on the side of equal
pay for equal work and
the rights of workers to workplace representation, regardless of race.
However, as soon as the
war ended, employers everywhere immediately withdrew even their
grudging cooperation with
the Board and refused to implement its awards even before the Board's
official termination in
May of 1919. (28) In the actions of
both the USRA and the NWLB, African American workers and
race spokesmen caught a glimpse of what might be possible from a
national government in its
dealings with black workers at the heart of the wartime economy. The
brevity of American
belligerency and the sharp postwar reaction against virtually all
evidences of war-begotten
federal activism, however, quickly ended these seemingly promising
experiments in de facto
workplace equality. (29) The brevity of the war
also truncated other, non-governmental initiatives that seemingly
had the potential for decisively shifting national perspectives on
race. The American labor
movement, long a bastion of racial exclusivism, at last showed signs of
responsiveness to the
concerns of black workers, for example. In 1919, the American
Federation of Labor established
a committee to investigate the possibilities of launching a major
organizing campaign among
black workers and its officers conferred regularly with civil rights
leaders who were eager for
progressive allies in a tense racial climate. Indeed, a number of
promising initiatives in bi-racial
unionism marked the wartime and immediate post-war period. In Chicago,
mass unions of
packinghouse workers brought blacks and whites together in a city
seething with racial tensions. In Little Rock, Birmingham, central
Florida, and backwoods Louisiana laundresses, metal
workers, phosphate miners, and wood products workers sought to take
advantage of wartime
labor shortages and a relatively benign federal disputes resolution
machinery to build bi-racial
unions. (30) War era developments
also triggered black political activism. As early as 1915, W. E. B.
Du Bois, then editor of the NAACP magazine The Crisis, had
brilliantly adumbrated the ways in
which the war raging in Europe opened opportunities for recognition and
leadership for African
Americans. In "The African Roots of the War," an essay published in the
prestigious Atlantic
Monthly, the fiery editor pointed to the role of imperial rivalry
in accounting for the outbreak of
the conflict. Prior to the 19th century, he held, European
elites could exploit their domestic
populations with relative impunity. But the rise of popular democracy,
organized labor, and
socialism had democratized material expectations. "It is," Du Bois
held, "no longer simply the
merchant prince, or the aristocratic monopoly, or even the employing
class, that is exploiting the
world: it is the nation; a new democratic nation composed of united
capital and labor."
For elites
to continue to exert political, economic, and cultural authority, they
had to find ways to extend
the benefits of material bounty to once-subordinated domestic
populations. The result was the
imperial scramble, wherein now-democratic European states sought access
to the resources and
cheap labor of the non-Western world, notably Africa, as a means of
meeting the demands of
formerly quiescent workers and peasants. In the resulting imperial
rivalry, particularly involving
Africa, lay the roots of the war, even as both sides recruited African
workers and soldiers to wage
it. The war, Du Bois
believed, must end in the awakening of colonial peoples and in
addressing their legitimate demands for self-government and
participation in the advantages that
modern regimes of production offered. To be sure, Africans and other
people of color, Du Bois
conceded, needed tutelage. A product himself of elite western
education, he shared the view that
people of color needed guidance from the West in entering the modern
world. And it was here,
in a version of the same American exceptionalism that animated Wilson,
that Du Bois saw a
distinctive role for African Americans. Victims of racism and imperial
outrage, African
Americans had nonetheless adapted to and were participating in the
modern world. They were in
a unique position to supply the leadership, born of their special
experience and their record of
social advance, to bring Africa into its rightful place in the new
world order. Thus, Du Bois,
while remaining a sharp critic of Woodrow Wilson's blinkered view of
colonialism and while
continuing to advance an astringent critique of western imperialism,
urged African Americans to
support the U.S. war effort as a means not only of strengthening claims
at home to equal rights
but also of assuming leadership roles in the post-colonial aftermath of
the conflict. (31) Other African American
activists drew more extreme lessons from the wartime
turbulence. Thus, in New York and Chicago for example radical black
organizations
proliferated, often invoking anti-war sentiments and linking them to
calls for militant racial
struggle in the United States and in European colonial dependencies.
Marcus Garvey's Universal
Negro Improvement Association recruited thousands of adherents in the
eastern and southern
cities, while groups such as the African Blood Brotherhood and the
black socialists associated
with Chandler Owen's and A. Philip Randolph's magazine The
Messenger attracted the attention
of federal surveillance agents. But it was the NAACP that seemed for a
time to be using the
ferment among African Americans most effectively in broadening its
membership base and
extending recruiting well beyond its traditional constituency of urban
professionals and
businessmen. In Texas, for example, NAACP organizers had a field day
through the immediate
postwar months. "JOIN NOW AND FIGHT FOR JUSTICE," urged a black weekly
in Dallas,
seeking to mobilize African Americans to resist racial violence. "'The
people are in a "fever
heat,'" wrote a local secretary. Thousands of blacks flocked into new
branches, many of them
springing up in small hamlets. Returning veterans and newly politicized
women played key roles
in this remarkable flowering of activism. "Send me a copy of the 13th,
14th, 15th amendment," a
local secretary pleaded, for "'the time has come that the white man and
the black man to stand
upon terms of social equality.'" In a number of Texas towns, petitions
from engorged NAACP
branches were instrumental in causing white mayors to ban the showing
of the racist film The
Birth of a Nation. (32) During the decade of the Great
War also, the United States Supreme Court began a
cautious retreat from its robust endorsement of segregation and
discrimination. Inspired in part
by the promulgation in 1913 of the Natives Land Act in South Africa,
some southern whites
sought adoption in the United States of similar measures, designed to
prohibit black residence in
designated areas. A broad movement to emulate South Africa by creating
large, racially exclusive
black and white zones eventually fell victim to the reliance of
southern economic elites on cheap
black labor. But a number of southern cities did adopt ordinances that
would designate
geographical areas in which black (or white) residency was prohibited.
In many ways, the
movement toward this sort of geographical restriction was the logical
culmination of the
powerful segregationist impulse underway since the late 19th
century, an impulse that as late as
1908 in the Berea College case the Supreme Court
had sanctioned. But in April, 1917, the
Court, in an important precedent setting case, struck down a Louisville
ordinance that provided
legal enforcement of residential segregation. Though narrowly framed,
the Court's decision in
Buchanan v. Warley was crucial in that it specified sharp
limits to the segregationist tide
expressed in the Plessy (1896) and Berea (1908)
cases and rejected, albeit on narrow, property
rights grounds, the legally enforceable effort to impose strict
geographical segregation on racial
lines. While the Buchanan
decision was in no way connected with the Woodrow Wilson
administration, it did illustrate the ways in which the logic of the 14th
Amendment's specification
of national citizenship, however abridged in other respects, operated
to affirm African
Americans' rights in the critical realm of personal mobility. (33) All in all, considering
both governmental actions and organizing impulse within the black
community, the African American experience during the era of the Great
War was one of
promising beginnings, abrupt endings, and opportunities for future
advance. The AFL never did
budge from its haughty and self-defeating attitude toward African
Americans and the promising
grass roots efforts of meatpackers, timber workers, phosphate miners,
and others soon fell victim
to repression, internal conflict, and lack of sustained support. While
the Brotherhood of Sleeping
Car Porters preserved a precarious existence through the 1920s and
eventually linked up with the
eloquent Randolph to lay the basis for a successful black union, other
initiatives went
underground or collapsed under the pressure of federal and state
harassment. The DNE went out
of business and although the Republican administrations of the 1920s
often verbally invoked
racial justice, they provided no tangible support for black
aspirations, the passage by the House
of the Dyer Anti-Lynching Bill in 1922 proving the high-water mark of
GOP concern for its
African American constituents. In another sense,
though, what was important about the era of the Great War for African
Americans was what didn't happen. Looked at from the broad
perspective of the 20th century
overall, no event is more important that the mass migration that began
after war broke out in
1914. Over the decades, this great population shift beginning in the
era of the Great War brought
millions of people into the nation's industrial and urban matrix. For
all of the problems that have
developed in the great urban ghettoes, migration northward was central
to the entry of African
Americans into the mainstream of American life. Despite its
discriminatory features and the
failure of public authorities to support the legitimate aspirations of
blacks, North and South,
migration had a permanent and positive economic effect. To take just
one measure, the
proportion of blacks classified as skilled workers by the census rose
from 7.9% in 1910 to 12.6%
in 1930 (on its way toward 24% in 1950). And certainly, the political
power that enfranchised
blacks in key northern cities was the fulcrum that forced Congress to
give substance to the 14th
and 15th Amendments and to make real the constitutional
rights adopted in the 19th century.
(34) This observation,
commonplace though it may be, leads to another, namely that the
refusal to restrict internal migration may have been the most important
positive race relations
legacy of the public men of the World War I era. The absence of measures on the
part of the
federal government to treat African Americans as constitutionally
"other" merits registering. Clearly, when it came to matters of
prejudice and discrimination, the government was often
shockingly overt in its ill-treatment of blacks, as Du Bois, the Defender,
and thousands of
ordinary black citizens frequently and eloquently complained. Yet
citizenship rights were crucial
in a sense precisely because they were so rarely enforced. They
remained on the books,
repositories of legitimate dreams and aspirations and texts upon which
moral and legal appeals
could be based. And of course with the migration northward, voting and
other civic rights now
were exercised. (35) The fates of other
blacks caught in the maelstrom of the Great War contrasted sharply
with those of African Americans. In French West Africa, the French
recruited and conscripted
over 170,000 Senegalese and other colonials, over 30,000 of whom died
in service. Tens of
thousands of Africans were imported into France to work in wartime
transport and industry. During and after the war, when conscription was
actually intensified, these men not only suffered
from discrimination and ill-treatment; even more importantly, they were
subjected to special
rules and disciplines, both as soldiers and civilians. Postwar rule in
Africa brought no rewards for
loyal service but rather ever more degraded civic status. Remarks the
historian of these "colonial
conscripts," "For Africans, conscription was but another example of how
their situation
compared to France of the ancien regime rather than to France
of the Revolution. No
egalitarianism was ever intended or extended. . . ."
(36) South African blacks
were even more harshly victimized. Although the African Native
National Congress endorsed the Imperial war effort and blacks
volunteered to fight, South
African authorities refused them any military role. Indeed South
African statesman Jan Christian
Smuts chided his British and French allies for their use of
black troops in Africa and in France: In the future, he told a London
audience in the spring of 1917, "I hope that . . . the military
training of natives . . . will be prevented, as we have prevented it in
South Africa. It can well be
foreseen that armies may yet be trained there, which under proper
leading might prove a danger
to civilisation itself." Labor battalions recruited for heavy work in
England and on the Western
Front suffered appalling rates of death owing to disease and poor
conditions. Six-hundred died in the English Channel when the ship on
which they were being transported, Mendi, was sunk. Worse, however, was to come,
for in the wake of war, the reward for blacks' support of the
Imperial war effort and for the sacrifices they made was reaffirmation
and drastic intensification
of pre-war measures that relegated them to increasingly inferior civic
status. (37) The point here is not
that America's black citizens should have been grateful for escaping
worse mistreatment or that theoretical political and constitutional
rights are a substitute for
substantive justice. The sometimes-promising initiatives of the Wilson
government, as
evidenced in the work of the Division of Negro Economics, offer a sad
counterpoint to the
disappointments and illusions of the whole enterprise of the Great
Crusade. To look back
through the official records of America's wartime agencies in their
dealings with fellow citizens
of color is to be newly appalled and shocked by the depth and scope of
racism. But Du Bois's mid-war
judgment that "already because of this war . . . the [people of the]
Negro race in the United States, have gained more than at any time
since emancipation"
was
perhaps not entirely mistaken. (38) The physical and moral fact of
the Great Migration insured that,
in contrast to the experience after the Civil War, African American
progress would not descend
again to what historian Rayford W. Logan called "the nadir" (39) of race relations in the United
States that prevailed in the quarter century before the Great War. The
preservation of
fundamental constitutional status even during a period of perceived
national crisis and intense
and virtually universal ideological racism was, in the end, a worthy,
if inadvertent, achievement
of a government otherwise notable for its disdain and disregard for its
citizens of color.
1. There is as yet no comprehensive study of
race and politics in the 1910s. For now-standard
treatments, see Jane Lang Scheiber and Harry N. Scheiber, "The Wilson
Administration and the
Wartime Mobilization of Black Americans, 1917-18, Labor History
10: 3 (Summer 1969): 433-58,
and Nancy J. Weiss, "The Negro and the New Freedom: Fighting Wilsonian
Segregation,"
Political Science Quarterly 84: 1 (March 1969): 61-79.
Important recent works that also deal
with this theme include Theodore Kornweibel, Jr.,"Seeing Red":
Federal Campaigns against
Black Militancy, 1919-1925 (Bloomington and Indianapolis: Indiana
University Press, 1998);
Theodore Kornweibel,
Jr., "Investigate Everything": Federal Efforts to Compel Black
Loyalty
during World War I (Bloomington and Indianapolis: Indiana
University Press, 2002); Mark
Ellis, Race, War, and Surveillance: African Americans and the
United States Government
during World War I (Bloomington and Indianapolis: Indiana
University Press, 2001); David
Levering Lewis, W. E. B. Du Bois: Biography of a Race, 1868-1919
(NY: Henry Holt, 1993);
Adam Fairclough, Better Day Coming: Blacks and Equality, 1890-2000
(NY: Viking, 2001), 86-109; and Jonathan Rosenberg, "For Democracy, Not
Hypocrisy: World War and Race Relations
in the United States, 1914-1919," International History Review,
21: 3 (September 1999): 592-625. Recent general studies of the U.S. in
World War I include Jennifer D. Keene, Doughboys,
the Great War, and the Remaking of America (Baltimore: Johns
Hopkins University Press,
2001), and Robert H. Zieger, America's Great War: World War I and
the American Experience
(Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield, 2000). Still standard, however, is
David M. Kennedy,
Over Here: The First World War and American Society (NY:
Oxford, 1980).
2. Jacquelyn Dowd Hall, "The Long Civil Rights
Movement and the Political Uses of the Past,"
Journal of American History 91: 4 (March 2005): 1233-63;
Cheryl Greenberg, "Or Does It
Explode?": Black Harlem in the Great Depression (New York: Oxford
University Press, 1991; Risa Lauren Goluboff,
"'Let Economic Equality Take Care of Itself': The NAACP, Labor
Litigation, and the Making of Civil Rights in the 1940s," UCLA Law
Review 52: 5 (June 2005):
1393-1486; Patricia
Sullivan, "Southern Reformers, the New Deal, and the Movement's
Foundation," New Directions in Civil Rights Studies, ed.
Armstead L. Robinson and Patricia
Sullivan (Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press, 1991), 81-102. 3. Chad Williams, "Vanguards of the New Negro:
African American Veterans and Post-World
War I Racial Militancy," Journal of African American History
92 (2007): 347-70; 4. Paul Ortiz, Emancipation Betrayed: The
Hidden History of Black Organizing and White
Violence in Florida from Reconstruction to the Bloody Election of 1920
(Berkeley: University of
California Press, 2005), 142-236; quotes on pp. 205, 171. 5. For a fascinating and insightful addition to
the extensive literature on African American
military service during World War I, see Richard Slotkin, Lost
Battalions: The Great War and
the Crisis of American Nationality (New York: Henry Holt, 2005),
1-11, 35-71, 112-53, and
passim. 6. The words are those of Du Bois, March, 1918,
as quoted in Philip Foner, Organized Labor
and the Black Worker (New York: International Publishers,
1974), 140.
7. Kornweibel, "Investigate Everything";
Theodore Kornweibel, Jr., "Seeing Red": Federal
Campaigns against Black Militancy (Bloomington and Indianapolis:
Indiana University Press,
1998); Mark Ellis, Race, War, and Surveillance African Americans
and the United States
Government during World War I (Bloomington and Indianapolis:
Indiana University Press,
2001)
8. John Higham, "Three Reconstructions," New
York Review of Books, November 6, 1997. 9. See Lee D. Baker, From Savage to Negro:
Anthropology and the Construction of Race,
1896-1954 (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1998).
10. E.g., Merl E. Reed 11. See 12. See endnote 1 for the relevant citations,
as well as Erez Manela, The Wilsonian Moment:
Self-Determination and the International origins of Anti-Colonial
Nationalism (New York:
Oxford University Press, 2007), 26-28, 34.
13. K. Walter Hickel, "War, Region, and Social
Welfare: Federal Aid to Servicemen's
Dependents in the South, 1917-1921," Journal of American History
87: 4 (Mar 2001): 1362-91. See also Cindy Hahamovitch, The Fruits
of Their Labor: Atlantic Coast Farmworkers and the
Making of Migrant Poverty, 1870-1945 (Chapel Hill: University of
North Carolina Press, 1997,
83-96, 103-113.
14. Louisiana Congressman John T. Watkins to
William B. Wilson, July 14, 1917, Great
Migration, Reel 14.
15. Quoted in Hahamovitch, The Fruits of
Their Labor, 103.
16. Lind telegram to Wilson, July 7, 1917, Great
Migration, Reel 14; Report of Labor
Committee of State Council of Defense of Illinois upon the Inquiry into
the Recent Race Riots in
East St. Louis, n.d.; enclosed in John M. Walker, President of the
Illinois State Fed of Labor, to
William B. Wilson, July 5, 1917, ibid. 17. David E. Bernstein, Only One Place of
Redress: African Americans, Labor Regulations,
and the Courts from Reconstruction to the New Deal (Durham: Duke
University Press, 2001), 9-26, and supporting notes; William Cohen, At
Freedom's Edge: Black Mobility and the Southern
White Quest for Racial Control, 1861-1915 (Baton Rouge: Louisiana
State University Press,
1991), 238; William J. Breen, "Sectional Influences on National Policy:
The South, the Labor
Department, and the Wartime Labor Mobilization, 1917-1918," The
South Is Another Land: Essays on the Twentieth-Century South, ed.
Bruce Clayton and John A. Salmond (Westport: Greenwood, 1987), 78. See
also William J. Breen, Labor Market Politics and the Great War:
The Department of Labor, the States, and the First U.S. Employment
Service, 1907-1933 (Kent,
OH: Kent State University Press, 1997), 126-30.
18. Breen, "Sectional Influences on National
Policy," 76; Cohen, At Freedom's Edge, 238. On
agricultural recruitment and the role of the USDA in the South, see
Hahamovitch, The Fruits of
Their Labor, 83-96.
19. W. B. Wilson to John Lind, July 16, 1917 20. Dillard quoted in Breen, "Sectional
Influences on National Policy," 72; U.S.,
Division of
Negro Economics, U.S. Department of Labor, Negro Migration in
1916-17, with an introduction
by J. H. Dillard (Washington: GPO, 1919; 1969 reprint).
21. Breen, "Sectional Influences on National
Policy," 73-74; Henry P. Guzda, "Social
Experiment of the Labor Department: The Division of Negro Economics," The
Public Historian
4: 4 (Fall 1982): 7-37; Haynes, "Function and Work of the Division of
Negro Economics." 22. Negro Migration in 1916-17, 34.
23. George E. Haynes, The Negro at Work
during the World War and during Reconstruction: Statistics, Problems,
and Policies Relating to the Grater Inclusion of Negro Wage Earners in
American Industry and Agriculture (Washington: GPO, 1921); draft
article by Haynes for the
Detroit Compass, c. June 25, 1920, Great Migration,
Reel 12; "Division of Negro Economics--Matters of Record," c. 1919-20,
ibid.
24. "Inspector's Report on Visit to
Pittsburgh, August 12-13, 1920 25. Haynes, The Negro at Work during the
World War and during Reconstruction, 21, 26-31;
26. George Edmond Haynes, Negro
New-Comers in Detroit, Michigan: A Challenge to
Christian Statesmanship-A Preliminary Survey (New York: Home
Missions Council, 1918;
1969 reprint); Guzda, "Social Experiment of the Labor Department: The
Division of Negro
Economics"; Breen, "Sectional Influences on National Policy," 73-74.
27. Eric Arnesen, "Charting an Independent
Course: African-American Railroad Workers in the
World War I Era," Labor Histories: Class, Politics, and the
Working-Class Experience, ed. Eric
Arnesen, Julie Green, and Bruce Laurie (Urbana: University of Illinois
Press, 1998), 284-308 28. Joseph McCartin, Labor's Great War:
The Struggle for Industrial Democracy and the
Origins of Modern American Labor Relations, 1912-1921 (Chapel
Hill: University of North
Carolina Press, 1997), 114-18.
30. For accounts of the wartime race-labor
nexus, see Zieger, America's Great War, 203-15, and
Robert H. Zieger, For Jobs and Freedom: Race and Labor in America
since 1865 (Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, 2007),
91-100. Detailed discussions of bi-racial initiatives are
found, e.g., in 31. W. E. B. Du Bois, "The African Roots of
the War," Atlantic Monthly 115 (May 1915): 707-14, reprinted
in Herbert Aptheker, compiler and editor, Writings by W. E. B. Du
Bois in
Periodicals Edited by Others (Millwood, NY: Kraus-Thomson, 1982),
vol. 2, 1910-1932, 96-104 33. See Leonard Thompson, A History of
South Africa (3d ed.; New Haven: Yale University
Press, 2000-paperback ed., 2001), 163-64; George Fredrickson, Black
Liberation: A
Comparative History of Black Ideologies in the United States and South
Africa (New York: Oxford University Press, 1995), 126-30; and
Roger L. Rice, "Residential Segregation by Law,
1910-1917," Journal of Southern History 343:2 (May 1968),
179-99. On the effort to emulate
South Africa's program of geographical restriction, see Jeffrey J.
Crow, "An Apartheid for the
South: Clarence Poe's Crusade for Rural Segregation," Race, Class,
and Politics in Southern
History, ed. Jeffrey J. Crow, Paul D. Escott, and Charles L.
Flynn, Jr. (Baton Rouge: LSU Press,
1989), 216-59, and Jack Temple Kirby, Darkness at the Dawning:
Race and Reform in the
Progressive South (Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott, 1972), 119-30.
On Progressive Era southern
"moderates" generally, see John Cell, The Highest Stage of White
Supremacy: The Origins of
Segregation in South Africa and the American South (Cambridge,
etc.: CUP, 1982), 174-91. To
be sure, actual de facto residential segregation proceeded apace,
unaffected by the Court's ruling,
as realtors, politicians, and ordinary citizens used restrictive
covenants, zoning ordinances, and
physical violence to enforce housing segregation. See Stephen Grant
Meyer, As Long as They
Don't Move Next Door: Segregation and Racial Conflict in American
Neighborhoods (Lanham,
MD: Rowman and Littlefield, 2000), 13-29, and Thomas W. Hanchett, Sorting
Out the New
South City: Race, Class, and Urban Development in Charlotte, 1875-1975
(Chapel Hill:
University of North Carolina Press, 1998), 116-44.
34. George Fredrickson, "Industrialism, White
Labor, and Racial Discrimination," pp. 199-238,
in Fredrickson, White Supremacy: A Comparative Study in American
and South African History
(NY and Oxford: Oxford University Press), 1981, 237; 35. Second Lieutenant Edward D. Busby,
National Army, to Benjamin F. McAdoo, January 17,
1918, Du Bois Papers, Reel 7. 36. Myron Echenberg, Colonial Conscripts:
The Tirailleurs Senegalais in French West Africa,
1870-1960 (Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann, 1991), 83-84. See also 37. Kenneth W. Grundy, Soldiers without
Politics; Blacks in the South African Armed Forces
(Berkeley, etc.: University of California Press, 1983), 58-60; Albert
Grundlingh, Fighting Their
Own War: South African Blacks and the First World War
(Johannesburg: Ravan Press, 1987);
Fredrickson, "Industrialism, White Labor, and Racial Discrimination," 38. Du Bois to Emmett J. Scott, April 24, 1918 39. See Rayford W. Logan, The Negro in
American Life and Thought: The Nadir, 1877-1901
(NY: Dial Press, 1954).