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Commencement of the Mob
Commencement of the Mob. Its Line of March.
Its immense Size. Attacks a Provost marshal's Office, in
Third Avenue. Set on Fire. Terrible Struggle of Kennedy for
his Life with the Mob. Carried to Head quarters unconscious.
Acton's Preparations. The Telegraph System. Mob cutting down
Telegraph Poles. Number of Dispatches sent over the Wires
during the Riot. Superintendent of Telegraph Bureau seized
and held Prisoner by the Mob.
Meanwhile, events were assuming an alarming aspect in the
western part of the city. Early in the morning men began to
assemble here in separate groups, as if in accordance with a
previous arrangement, and at last moved quietly north along
the various avenues. Women, also, like camp followers, took
the same direction in crowds. They were thus divided into
separate gangs, apparently to take each avenue in their
progress, and make a clean sweep. The factories and
workshops were visited, and the men compelled to knock off
work and join them, while the proprietors were threatened
with the destruction of their property, if they made any
opposition. The separate crowds were thus swelled at almost
every step, and armed with sticks, and clubs, and every
conceivable weapon they could lay hands on, they moved north
towards some point which had evidently been selected as a
place of rendezvous. This proved to be a vacant lot near
Central Park, and soon the living streams began to flow into
it, and a more wild, savage, and heterogeneous looking mass
could not be imagined. After a short consultation they again
took up the line of march, and in two separate bodies, moved
down Fifth and Sixth Avenues, until they reached Forty-sixth
and Forty-seventh Streets, when they turned directly east.
The number composing this first mob has been so differently
estimated, that it would be impossible from reports merely,
to approximate the truth. A pretty accurate idea, however,
can be gained of its immense size, from a statement made by
Mr. King, son of President King, of Columbia College. Struck
by its magnitude, he had the curiosity to get some estimate
of it by timing its progress, and he found that although it
filled the broad street from curbstone to curbstone, and was
moving rapidly, it took between twenty and twenty-five
minutes for it to pass a single point.
A ragged, coatless, heterogeneously weaponed army, it heaved
tumultuously along toward Third Avenue. Tearing down the
telegraph poles as it crossed the Harlem & New Haven
Railroad track, it surged angrily up around the building
where the drafting was going on. The small squad of police
stationed there to repress disorder looked on bewildered,
feeling they were powerless in the presence of such a host.
Soon a stone went crashing through a window, which was the
signal for a general assault on the doors. These giving way
before the immense pressure, the foremost rushed in,
followed by shouts and yells from those behind, and began to
break up the furniture. The drafting officers, in an
adjoining room, alarmed, fled precipitately through the rear
of the building. The mob seized the wheel in which were the
names, and what books, papers, and lists were left, and tore
them up, and scattered them in every direction. A safe stood
on one side, which was supposed to contain important papers,
and on this they fell with clubs and stones, but in vain.
Enraged at being thwarted, they set fire to the building,
and hurried out of it. As the smoke began to ascend, the on
looking multitude without sent up a loud cheer. Though the
upper part of the building was occupied by families, the
rioters, thinking that the officers were concealed there,
rained stones and brick bats against the windows, sending
terror into the hearts of the inmates. Deputy Provost
Marshal Vanderpool, who had mingled in the crowd, fearing
for the lives of the women and children, boldly stepped to
the front, and tried to appease the mob, telling them the
papers were all destroyed, and begged them to fall back, and
let others help the inmates of the building, or take hold
themselves. The reply was a heavy blow in the face.
Vanderpool shoved the man who gave it aside, when he was
assailed with a shower of blows and curses. Fearing for his
life, he broke through the crowd, and hastened to the spot
where the police were standing, wholly powerless in the
midst of this vast, excited throng.
In the meantime, the flames, unarrested, made rapid way, and
communicating to the adjoining building, set it on fire. The
volumes of smoke, rolling heavenward, and the crackling and
roaring of the flames, seemed for a moment to awe the mob,
and it looked silently on the ravaging of a power more
terrible and destructive than its own.
At this time Superintendent Kennedy was quietly making his
way across the town toward the office of with a heavy club,
endeavored to break in his skull, but Kennedy dodged his
blows. Careful only for his head, he let them beat his body,
while he made desperate efforts to break through the mass,
whose demoniacal yells and oaths showed that they intended
to take his life. In the struggle the whole crowd, swaying
to and fro, slowly advanced toward Lexington Avenue, coming,
as they did so, upon a wide mud hole. "Drown him! drown,
him!" arose at once on every side, and the next moment a
heavy blow, planted under his ear, sent him headforemost
into the water.
Falling with his face amid the stones, he was kicked and
trampled on, and pounded, till he was a mass of gore. Still
struggling desperately for life, he managed to get to his
feet again, and made a dash for the middle of the pond. The
water was deep, and his murderers, disliking to get wet, did
not follow him, but ran around to the other side, to meet
him as he came out. But Kennedy was ahead of them, and
springing up the bank into Lexington Avenue, saw a man whom
he knew, and called out: "John Eagan, come here and save my
life!" Mr. Eagan, who was a well known and influential
resident of that vicinity, immediately rushed forward to his
assistance, and arrested his pursuers. But the
Superintendent was so terribly bruised and mangled, that
Eagan did not recognize him. He, however, succeeded in
keeping the mob back, who, seeing the horrible condition
their victim was in, doubtless thought they had finished
him. Other citizens now coming forward, a passing feed wagon
was secured, into which Kennedy was lifted, and driven to
police head quarters. Acton, who was in the street as the
wagon approached, saw the mangled body within, did not dream
who it was. The driver inquired where he should take him.
"Around to the station," carelessly replied Acton. The
driver hesitated, and inquired again, "Where to?" Acton,
supposing it was some drunkard, bruised in a brawl, replied
rather petulantly, "Around to the station." The man then
told him it was Kennedy. Acton, scanning the features more
closely, saw that it indeed was the Superintendent himself
in this horrible condition. As the officers gathered around
the bleeding, almost unconscious form, a murmur of wrath was
heard, a sure premonition what work would be done when the
hour of vengeance should come.
Kennedy was carried into head quarters, and a surgeon
immediately sent for. After an examination had shown that no
bones were broken, he was taken to the house of a friend,
and, before the week closed, was on his feet again.
Acton, now the legal head of the police force, soon showed
he was the right man in the right place. Of a nervous
temperament, he was quick and prompt, yet cool and decided,
and relentless as death in the discharge of his duty.
Holding the views of the first Napoleon respecting mobs, he
did not believe in speech making to them. His addresses were
to be locust clubs and grape shot. Taking in at once the
gravity of the situation, he, after despatching such force
as was immediately available to the scene of the riot,
telegraphed to the different precincts to have the entire
reserve force concentrated at head quarters, which were in
Mulberry Street, near Bleecker.
He saw at once, to have his force effective it must be well
in hand, so that he could send it out in any direction in
sufficient strength to bear down all opposition. Subsequent
events proved the wisdom of his policy, for we shall see,
after it had been accomplished, the police never lost a
battle.
There being thirty two precincts in the limits of the
Metropolitan Police, a vast territory was covered. These
were reached by a system of telegraph wires, called the
Telegraph Bureau, of which James Crowley was superintendent
and Eldred Polhamus deputy. There were three operators
Chapin, Duvall, and Lucas. A telegraph station was in each
precinct thus making thirty-two, all coming to a focus at
head-quarters. These are also divided into five sections
north, south, east, west, and central. The Commissioners,
therefore, sitting in the central office, can send messages
almost instantaneously to every precinct of the city, and
receive immediate answers. Hence, Mr. Acton was a huge
Briareus, reaching out his arms to Fort Washington in the
north, and Brooklyn in the south, and at the same time
touching the banks of both rivers. No other system could be
devised giving such tremendous power to the police the power
of instant information and rapid concentration at any
desired point. That it proved itself the strong right arm of
the Commissioners, it needs only to state, that during the
four days of the riot, between five and six thousand
messages passed over the wires, showing that they were
worked to their utmost capacity, day and night. The more
intelligent of the mob understood this, and hence at the
outset attempted to break up this communication, by cutting
down the poles on Third Avenue. This stopped all messages to
and from the precincts at Fort Washington, Manhattanville,
Harlem, Yorkville, and Bloomingdale, as well as with the
Nineteenth Precinct.
But fortunately, the orders to these had passed over the
wires before the work was completed. Subsequently, the
rioters cut down the poles in First Avenue, in Twenty-second
Street, and Ninth Avenue, destroying communication between
several other precincts.
Mr. Crowley, the Superintendent of the Telegraph Bureau, was
made acquainted early, Monday, by mere accident with this
plan of the rioters. Coming to town in the Third Avenue cars
from Yorkville, where he resided, he suddenly found the car
arrested by a mob, and getting out with the other
passengers, discovered men chopping furiously away at the
telegraph poles; and without stopping to think, rushed up to
them and ordered them to desist. One of the ruffians,
looking up, cried out, "he is one of the d d operators."
Instantly yells arose, "Smash him," "Kill him," when those
nearest seized him. By great adroitness he disarmed their
suspicions sufficiently to prevent further violence, though
they held him prisoner for an hour. At last, seeing an
opportunity when more important objects attracted their
attention, he quietly worked his way out and escaped.
Great Riots of New York 1712 to 1873,
Including a Full and Complete Account of the
Four Days' Draft Riot of 1863
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