WILMINGTON RACE RIOT FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2006 -f THE CHARLOTTE OBSERVER CHARLES B. AYCOCK Charles Brantley Aycock was born in Wayne County on Nov. 1, 1859, the youngest of 10 children. After graduating from the Univer sity of North Carolina in 1880, he practiced law in Goldsboro and became involved in Democratic Party politics. As North Carolina’s governor from 1901 to 1905, he championed education and white supremacy. He died in 1912 while delivering a speech on education. COURTESY UNC LIBRARY JOSEPHUS DANIELS Josephus Daniels was born in Washington, N.C., in 1862. His fa ther, a shipbuilder for the Confed eracy, was killed before the child was 3. His mother soon moved the family to Wilson, where she worked for the post office. At age 16, he entered the world of journalism; by 18 he had bought the Advance, a paper serving Wilson, Nash and Greene counties. After studying at the University of North Carolina's law school, he was admitted to the bar in 1885, though he never practiced. In stead he continued to publish and edit newspapers, proving himself a fierce ally of the Democratic Party. He purchased The News and Observer in 1894, making it a pivotal instrument of the white supremacy campaign. President Woodrow Wilson named him secretary of the Navy in 1913. President Franklin Roosevelt appointed him ambassador to Mexico in 1933. Daniels died in Raleigh on Jan. 15,1948. FURNIFOLD SIMMONS NEWS & OBSERVER FILE PHOTO Furnifold Simmons was born on his father's plantation near Pol- iocksville in Jones County in 1854. After graduating from Trinity College (now Duke University) in 1873, he studied law and began practicing in New Bern. He served one term in Congress (1887-89), then lost the next two elections for that seat. After losing statewide elections in 1894 and 1896, North Carolina's Democratic Party named him its chairman. Simmons orchestrated the campaign of 1898 that would restore the party to power. Show ing its gratitude, the legislature appointed him in 1900 to a seat in the U.S. Senate that he would hold for 30 years. COURTESY UNC-CHAPEL HILL THE STATEWIDE WHITE SUPREMACY CAMPAIGN C harles B. Aycock, governor of North Carolina from 1901 to 1905, has become the central symbol of the state’s progressive traditions, first and most illustrious of our “education governors.” Politicians in North Carolina making high-minded appeals for education and civility routinely invoke “the spirit of Aycock.” The contradictory truth is that Aycock earned his prominence by fomenting a bloody white supremacy revolution in North Carolina. This campaign — with Wilmington as its flash point — essentially overthrew the state gov ernment by force and by fraud, ending meaningful democracy in the state for generations. How this happened is a lesson in the politics of racial violence and the ironies of public memory. SPREADING THE WORD Flash points of statewide white supremacy campaign in 1898; Fayetteville: The paramilitary Red | Shirts make their first appearance | at an October rally featuring p South Carolina Sen. Sen Tillman. Is Raleigh: Josephus Daniels spearheads anti-black propaganda campaign through his newspaper. The News and Observer. 1? Goldsboro: Flanked by Charles | Aycock, Alfred Waddell delivers | speech decrying “Negro f domination" in October 1898, i Charlotte: H.E.C, “Red Suck" Bryant, a star reporter for the Charlotte Daily Ohserv'er, travels the state to report anti-hlack and anti'Fusion articles. Hamlet: Gov. Daniel Russell hides in a railroad mail car to avoid a gang of Red Shirts hunting foi him after he voted in Wilmington on Nov. 8. Source; 1898 Wilmington Race Riot Commission Report As the 1898 political seascm loraned, the Populists and Republicans hoped to make more gains throng Fusimi. The Democrats, desperate to over come their unpopularity, decided to place all their chips on racial antago nism. Party chairman Furnifold Sm- mons mapped out the campaign strat egy with leaders whose names would be immortalized in statues, on build ings and street signs; Aycock, Henry G. O)imor, Robert B. Glenn, Claude Kitchin, Locke Craig, Camerwi Mor rison, (^rge Rountree, Francis D. Winston and Josephus Daniels. These men knew that the Demo crats’ only hope was to develop cam paign issues that cut across party lines. Southern history and practice politics had taught them that white discomfort with black political par- Laurinburg; Aycock sounds the theme of white supremacy in a speech lust before the Democratic State Convention in May. ■ '-.i■■ 'iMtpi 11 '1 •mjr/inyvifmm * m"L* Wilmington: in a speech on Oct 24.1898, Waddell promises to "choke the current of the Cape Fear with carcasses" to end "Negro domination." The News & O&server ticipation remained a smoldering ember that they could fan to full flame. So they made the “redemp tion” of North Ciarolina from “Negro domination” the theme of the 1898 campaign. Though promising to re store something traditional, they would, in fact, create a new social or der rooted in white supremacy and commercial domination. A propaganda campaign slander ing African-Americans would not come cheap. Simmons made secret deals with railroads, banks and in dustrialists. In exchange for dona tions right away, the Democrats pledged to slash corporate taxes af ter their victory. At the center of their strategy lay the gifts and assets of Daniels, edi tor and publisher of The News and Observer. He spearheaded a propa ganda effort that made white parti sans angry enou^ to commit elec toral fraud and mass murder. It would not be merely a campaign of heated rhetoric but also one of vk dence and intimidatioa Daniels called Simmons “a genius in putting every body to work—men wdio could write, men who could speak, and men who could ride—the last by no means the least important” By “ride,” Daniels employ^ a euphemism for vi^iante terror. Black North Carolinians had to be kept away from the polls by any means nece^ary. Thou^ it would end in bloodshed, the campaign began with an ordinary enou^ meeting of the Democratic ex- CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE