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In every part of the City
It is impossible to give a detailed account
of what transpired in every part of the city. If there had
been a single band of rioters, no matter how large, a force
of military and police, properly armed, could have been
concentrated to have dispersed it. But bodies of men, larger
or smaller, bent on violence and devastation, were
everywhere; even out at Harlem eight buildings were burned,
and the lower end of Westchester was in a state of agitation
and alarm. A mob of thousands would be scattered, only to
come together at other points. A body of police and military
plunging through the heaving multitude, acted often only as
a stone flung into the water, making but a momentary vacuum.
Or, if they did not come together again, they swung off only
to fall in, and be absorbed by a crowd collected in another
part of the city. The alarm of Monday had only been partial,
but today it culminated. Families, husbands, and sons left
their business, and with arms patrolled the streets. Stores
were shut up, stages and cars stopped running, and all
business was suspended.
The blood flowing through the thousand arteries of this
great mart seemed suddenly frozen in its channels, and its
mighty pulsations to stop at the mandate of lawless men. The
city held its breath in dread, but there were firm hearts at
police head-quarters. Acton never flinched, and in General
Brown he found a soldier that knew his duty, and would do it
at all hazards. Still, the uprising kept swelling into
vaster proportions, embracing a still larger territory.
Broadway was deserted. A few hacks could be seen, but with
very different occupants than those which they ordinarily
contained. The iron shutters were closed on the Fifth Avenue
Hotel, and a stack of arms stood in the hall way. Crowds of
respectable citizens, not on duty, were making all haste
toward railroad depots and steamboat landings. Every boat,
as it swung from the dock, was loaded to its utmost capacity
with people leaving a city that seemed doomed to
destruction; going, many knew not where, only out of New
York. Cars were packed, and long trains were made up to
carry the crowds in haste to get away. But travel on the
Hudson River Road was soon stopped by the mob, that tore up
the track to prevent communication with other parts of the
State, and the arrival of troops.
The Harlem and Third Avenue tracks were also torn up, as the
rioters were determined to isolate the great city, which
they had doomed to destruction. Passing from one object to
another, now acting as if from plan, and now intent only on
destruction and plunder, the crowd streamed from point to
point with shouts and yells, that sent terror through the
adjoining streets. Suddenly, some one remembered that they
were in the vicinity of Colonel Nugent's house, in
Yorkville, the assistant provost marshal general, and
shouting out the news, a rush was made for it, and it was
sacked from top to bottom.
As the police were gathered together either at the precinct
stations or head-quarters, ordinary patrol duty was out of
the question; hence, many isolated, acts of violence could
be committed with impunity. This freedom from close
surveillance, coupled with the contagion of the lawless
spirit which was abroad, made every section of the city
where the lower classes lived more or less restless. It was
impossible for the police to divide itself up so to furnish
protection in individual cases, and yet be in sufficient
force to cope with the mobs, that numbered by thousands.
Although the whole city was heaving like a troubled sea, yet
the main gathering this day had been in the upper part and
on both sides of it. The terrific contests we described
farther back were in the Second Avenue, on the east side,
but, nearly opposite, in the Sixth Avenue, crowds had been
gathering since early in the forenoon.
For a long time they swayed backward and forward, apparently
without any definite purpose, and moved only by the spirit
of disorder that had taken possession of the city. But about
two o'clock, these various bodies began by mutual attraction
to flow together, and soon became one immense mass, and
impelled by some information or other, gathered
threateningly around a large mansion on the corner of
Forty-sixth Street and Fifth Avenue. They had supplied
themselves with all sorts of weapons, revolvers, old
muskets, stones, clubs, barrel staves in short, everything
that could be found, that might be of service in a fight and
soon commenced plundering the residence. But their movements
had been telegraphed to head-quarters, and Captain Walling,
of the Twentieth Precinct, was dispatched thither, with a
company of regulars under Captain Putnam, a descendant of
"Old Put." The report soon spread through the crowd, that
bayonets could be seen coming up the avenue. Marching up to
Forty-sixth Street, the force turned into it, towards the
Fifth Avenue; and breaking into the charge step, with the
order "no prisoners" ringing in their ears, struck the mob
almost in the centre, cutting it in two, like a mighty
cleaver. There was no need of bayonets the police, at the
head of the military, went right through it, and scattered
the men in every direction. The force then divided into
squads, and each one taking a section of the mob, followed
it up on a swift run, and smote them right and left for
several blocks. The larger portion went down Sixth Avenue,
and seeing only a portion of the police pursuing, turned and
showed fight, when the leader received a bullet in the head
and fell. Seeing their leader fall, the mob wheeled and took
to their heels.
Captain Walling in one instance saw a crowd with fire arms
standing in an alley way. Just then a fire engine and
company came down the street, and he with his small force
got behind it, and kept concealed until opposite the
unsuspecting crowd, when, with a shout, they dashed on it. A
volley received them, with answering volley, the police
charged into the narrow opening. The rioters fled into a
tenement house, from which came yells and screams of
terrified women and children. Walling had some sharpshooters
with him, to pick off those beyond the reach of the clubs.
One fellow, armed, was seen astraddle of the ridge pole of a
house. The next moment a sharpshooter covered him, and he
tumbled headlong to the ground. The same afternoon he saw
some twenty or thirty men attempting to stave in a hardware
store, evidently after pistols. Walling charged on them
alone, and with one terrible blow, his club sent the leader
to the pavement with his brains oozing out.
Although the draft was almost forgotten by the rioters, in
the thirst for plunder and blood, still men in the streets
and some of the papers talked of its being unconstitutional,
and to be contested in the courts others that it had been
and would be suspended, as though any disposal of it now
could affect the conduct of the rioters. Force was the only
argument they would listen to. The riot had almost ceased to
wear any political aspect since the attack on the Tribune
office, the day before, had been defeated. An occasional
shout or the sight of a negro might now and then remind one
of its origin, but devastation and plunder were the great
objects that urged on the excited masses. The sacking of
Opdyke's house was done chiefly by a few youngsters, who
were simply following the example set them the day before;
while the burning of negro buildings, the chasing and
killing of negroes, seemed to have only a remote connection
with the draft, and was simply the indulgence of a hatred
they were hitherto afraid to gratify. So the setting fire to
the Weehawken ferry afterwards, could be made to grow out of
politics only so far as a man who kept a liquor saloon there
was a known Republican. This seemed a weak inducement to
draw a crowd so far, when more distinguished victims were
all around them. It is more probable that some personal
enemy of parties in the vicinity, finding the mob ready to
follow any cry, led them thither; for one man seemed to be
the leader, who, mounted on a fine cavalry horse, and
brandishing a sword, galloped backwards and forwards through
the crowd, giving his orders like a field officer. Mobs
springing up everywhere, and flowing together often
apparently by accident, each pursuing a different object:
one chasing negroes and firing their dwellings; others only
sacking; a house, and others still, wreaking their vengeance
on station houses, while scores, the moment they got loaded
down with plunder, hastened away to conceal it all showed
that the original cause of the uprising had been forgotten.
A strong uncertainty seemed at times to keep them swaying
backwards and forwards, as though seeking a definite object,
or waiting for an appointed signal to move, and then at some
shout would rush for a building, a negro, or station house.
The mob was a huge monster frightful both in proportions and
appearance, yet not knowing where or how to use its
strength. The attack on Mr. Gibbon's house at Twenty-ninth
Street and Eighth Avenue, during this afternoon, was
attributed to the fact that he was Mr. Greeley's cousin, and
that the former sometimes slept there rather a far fetched
inference, as though a mob would be aware of a fact that
probably not a dozen immediate neighbors knew.
Some one person might have raised a cry of "Greeley's
house," which would have been sufficient to insure its
destruction. The police being notified of this attack, sent
a squad of men with a military force to disperse the mob.
Captain Ryer formed his troops in front of the house, and
Sergeant Devoursney did the same with a part of his men,
while the other portion was sent into the building, that was
filled with men, women, and children, loading themselves
down with the spoils. The appearance of the caps and clubs
in the rooms created a consternation that would have been
ludicrous, but for the serious work that followed. No
defence was made, except by a few persons singly. One fellow
advanced to the door with a pistol in his hand, and fired,
sending a ball through Officer Hill's thigh. The next
instant the latter felled him to the floor with his club,
and before he could even attempt to rise he was riddled with
balls. Some of the women fell on their knees, and shrieked
for mercy; while one strong Irish woman refused to yield her
plunder, and fought like a tigress. She seized an officer by
the throat, and trying to strangle and bite him, would not
let go till a blow sobered her into submission.
Some were loaded with shawls and dresses, and one burly,
ferocious looking Irishman carried under his arm a huge
bundle of select music. As the police chased the plunderers
down stairs, and out into the street, in some unaccountable
way the troops got so confused that they fired a volley that
swept the police as well as the rioters. Officer Dipple was
so severely wounded that he died the following Sunday, while
Officers Hodson and Robinson both received flesh wounds.
In the upper part of the city, few buildings, except those
too near police and army head-quarters, or too well
defended, offered much spoil except private houses, and
these had been the chief objects of attack. But Brooks and
Brothers' clothing store in Catharine Street, situated in a
part of the city thickly populated with the very class mobs
are made of, became toward evening an object of great
attraction to groups of hard looking men and women. As night
settled down, the heavens being overcast, it became very
dark; for in all the neighboring houses the lights were
extinguished by the inmates, who were terribly alarmed at
the rapidly increasing crowd in the street. To deepen and
complete the gloom the rioters turned off the gas. Officer
Bryan, of the Fourth Ward, telegraphed to head-quarters the
threatening appearance of things, and a force of fifty or
sixty men were at once despatched to the spot. In the mean
time Sergeant Finney, with Platt and Kennedy, stood at the
entrance to defend the building till the police could
arrive.
For awhile the three determined police officers, standing
silent in the darkness, overawed the leaders. But soon from
the crowd arose shouts, amid which were heard the shrill
voices of women, crying, "Break open the store." This was
full of choice goods, and contained clothing enough to keep
the mob supplied for years. As the shouts increased, those
behind began to push forward those in front, till the vast
multitude swung heavily towards the three police officers.
Seeing this movement, the latter advanced with their clubs
to keep them back. At this, the shouts and yells redoubled,
and the crowd rushed forward, crushing down the officers by
mere weight. They fought gallantly for a few minutes; but,
overborne by numbers, they soon became nearly helpless, and
were terribly beaten and wounded, and with the utmost
exertions were barely able to escape, and make their way
back to the station. The mob now had it all its own way, and
rushing against the doors, burst bolts and bars asunder, and
streamed in. But it was dark as midnight inside, and they
could not distinguish one thing from another; not even the
passage ways to the upper rooms of the building, which was
five stories high. They therefore lighted the gas, and broke
out the windows. In a few minutes the vast edifice was a
blaze of light, looking more brilliant from the midnight
blackness that surrounded it. The upturned faces of the
excited, squalid throng below presented a wild and savage
spectacle in the flickering light. Men and women kept
pouring in and out, the latter loaded with booty, making
their way home into the adjacent streets, and the former
rushing after their portion of the spoils. Coats and
pantaloons, and clothing of every description, were rapidly
borne away; and it was evident, give them time enough, the
crowd would all disappear, and there would be scarcely
enough left to finish the work of destruction. Thinking only
of the rich prize they had gained, they seemed to forget
that retribution was possible, when suddenly the cry of
"Police! police!" sent a thrill of terror through them.
Sergeant Delaney, at the head of his command, marched
swiftly down the street, until close upon the mob, when the
order, "Double quick," was given, and they burst with a run
upon them. For a moment, the solid mass, by mere weight,
bore up against the shock; but the clubs soon made a lane
through it broad as the street. Just then a pistol shot rung
from a house, almost over their heads. Many of the rioters
were armed with muskets, and the comparatively small police
force, seeing that firearms were to be used, now drew their
revolvers, and poured a deadly volley right into their
midst. Several fell at the first discharge; and immediately
terror seized that portion of the multitude nearest the
police, especially the women, and many fell on their knees,
crying for mercy. Others forced their way recklessly over
their companions, to get out of reach. As the police made
their way to the front of the store, they formed line, while
Sergeant Matthew, of the First Precinct, with his men,
entered the building. The scene here became more frightful
than the one without. The rioters on the first floor made
but little resistance, and, thinking only of escape, leaped
from the windows, and rushed out of doors like mad
creatures. But as they attempted to flee, those without
knocked them over with their clubs. Having cleared this
story, the police mounted to the second, where the rioters,
being more closely penned, showed fight. Pistol shots rang
out, and some of the police officers had narrow escapes. One
powerful bully fought like a tiger, till two policemen fell
upon him with their clubs, and soon left him stark and
stiff. At last they drove the whole crowd into a rear
building, and kept them there till they had time to secure
them.
Just as the store was cleared, Sergeant Carpenter, who had
been sent as a reinforcement in case of need, came up with a
hundred and fifty men, and charging on the crowd, sent them
flying down the narrow streets. After quiet had been
restored, a military force arrived and took possession of
the building.
Just previous to this, another attempt was made to burn the
Tribune building, but was easily repelled. The Times office,
near by, warned by the fate of its neighbor the night
before, had established a regular garrison inside, while it
brilliantly illuminated the open space all around it, in the
circle of which the rioters did not care to come.
The invaluable service of the telegraph was tested today,
not merely in enabling General Brown and the commissioners
to despatch men quickly to a threatened point, but to keep a
force moving from one ward to another, as messages came in,
announcing the incipient gathering in different districts.
Word sent to the station in the neighborhood where they were
acting, would instantly change their route; and knots of
men, which if left alone would soon have swelled into
formidable mobs, were broken up, for they found military and
police force marching down on them before they could form a
plan of action. Nor was this all. A force sent to a certain
point, after dispersing the mob, would be directed to make a
tour through the disaffected districts all the time keeping
up its communication with head-quarters, so that if any
serious demonstration was made in that section of the city,
it could be ordered there at once, thus saving half the time
it would take to march from head-quarters. Thus, for
instance, Captain Petty was ordered this morning to
head-quarters from the City Hall, where he had passed the
night, and directed to take two hundred men (including his
own precinct force), and go to the protection of a soap
factory in Sixteenth Street, Eighth and Ninth Avenues. He
moved off his command, marching rapidly up Broadway and down
Sixteenth Street. The mob saw it coming two blocks off, and
immediately scattered in every direction, which awakened the
supreme contempt of the captain. He now marched backward and
forward, and through the cross streets, up as far as
Nineteenth Street, scattering every fragment of the mob that
attempted to hold together, and finally returned to
head-quarters. This was a long march, but the men had
scarcely rested, when the captain was hurried off to aid in
the protection at the wire factory in Second Avenue. In the
fierce fight that followed, he, with ten men at his back,
charged up the broad stairway, fighting his way step by step
to the fifth story. Caught up here at the top of the
building, the rioters were clubbed without mercy. Some, to
escape the terrible punishment, plunged down the hatchway;
others attempted to dash past the men, and escape down the
stairs. At one time eight bodies lay in the door way,
blocking it up. He then marched back to head-quarters. He
had been marching and fighting all day. Similar exhausting
duties were performed by other commands, both police and
military. Inspector Dilks, with his force gathered from
various precincts, passed the entire day in marching and
fighting. The men, weary and hungry, would reach
head-quarters or certain points, hoping to get a little rest
and refreshment, when the hurried order would come to repair
to a point a mile off, where the mob was firing and sacking
houses, and off they would start on the double quick.
Uncomplaining and fearless of danger, and never counting
numbers, both police and soldiers were everywhere all this
day, and proved themselves as reliable, gallant, and noble a
set of men as ever formed or acted as the police force of
any city in the world.
In the meantime, Governor Seymour and the Mayor of the city
were not idle. The latter at the City Hall, fearing an
attack, asked Acton for a guard of protection, and fifty men
were sent him. Report of the mob assembled there, reached
Governor Seymour, at the St. Nicholas, and he immediately
hastened thither, and addressed the crowd from the steps,
which allayed excitement for the time. This speech was
variously commented upon. Some of the criticisms were
frivolous, and revealed the partisan, rather than the honest
man. If the Governor had not previously issued a
proclamation to the whole city, in which he declared without
reservation that the mobs should be put down at all hazards
if this speech had been his only utterance, then the bitter
denunciations against him would have been deserved. It would
have been pusillanimous, cowardly, and unworthy the Governor
of the State. But he spoke in his official capacity, not
only firmly, emphatically, and in no ambiguous terms, but he
had hurried up the military, and used every means in his
power to accumulate and concentrate the forces under his
control to put down the riot. No faint heartedness or
sentimental qualmishness marked any of his official acts.
Prompt, energetic, and determined, he placed no conditions
on his subordinates in the manner of putting down the mob,
and restoring the supremacy of the law. But here in this
address he was speaking to men who, as a body at least, had
as yet committed no overt act; and many doubtless were
assembled expecting some public declaration from the City
Hall. He was not addressing the plunderers and rioters that
were firing houses and killing negroes, but a mixed
assembly, the excitement of which he thought best to allay,
if possible. Some said he began his address with "My
friends;" others, "Fellow citizens." Whether he did one, or
the other, or neither, is of no consequence and meant
nothing. To have commenced, "Ye villains and cut throats,
disperse at once, or I'll mow you down with grape shot!"
might have sounded very brave, but if that was all he was
going to say, he had better kept his room.
A proclamation like this address would have been infamous.
Here is where the mistake was made in the criticisms heaped
upon it. His official acts were all such as became the Chief
Magistrate of New York. The speech, therefore, must be
judged rather by the rules of taste and propriety, than, by
those which apply to him officially. If a man's official
acts are all right, it is unjust to let them go for nothing,
and bring into prominence a short address made without
premeditation in the front of an excited, promiscuous
assembly, moved by different motives. That it was open to
criticism in some respects, is true. It should have been
imbued more with the spirit of determination to maintain
order and suppress violence, and less been said of the
measures that had or would be taken to test the
constitutionality of the draft, and of his purpose, if it
were decided in the courts to be wrong, to oppose it. Such
talk had better be deferred till after order is restored.
When men begin to burn and plunder dwellings, attack station
houses, hang negroes, and shoot down policemen, it is too
late to attempt to restore peace by talking about the
constitutionality of laws. The upholding of laws about the
constitutionality of which there is no doubt, is the only
thing deserving of consideration. The Common Council of the
city exhibited in this respect a most pusillanimous spirit,
by offering resolutions to have the constitutionality of the
law tested, when, the entire constitution and laws of the
State were being subverted! Unquestionably, some charity
should be extended to men who are pleading for those whose
votes elevated them to office. Brutuses are rare nowadays;
and politicians do not like to shoot down their own voters
they would much rather make more voters out of men no more
fit to exercise the right of suffrage than horses and mules.
Governed by a similar spirit, Archbishop Hughes, although he
had yielded to the pressure made on him and issued an
address to the Irish, calling on them to abstain from
violence, yet accompanied it with a letter to Horace
Grreeley, directly calculated to awaken or intensify, rather
than allay their passions. He more than intimated that they
had been abused and oppressed, and thought it high time the
war was ended. The proclamation was short, but the letter
was a long one, full of a vindictive spirit, and showing
unmistakably with whom his sympathies were.
Towards evening a mob assembled over in Ninth Avenue, and
went to work with some system and forethought. Instead of
wandering round, firing and plundering as the whim seized
them, they began to throw up barricades, behind which they
could rally when the military and police came to attack
them. Indeed, the same thing had been done on the east side
of the city; while railroads had been torn up, and stages
stopped, to keep them from carrying policemen, rapidly from
one quarter to another. During the day, Colonel Frothingham
had stood in Third Avenue, and stopped and emptied every car
as it approached, and filled it with soldiers, to be carried
to the upper part of the city. Acton, too, had sent round to
collect all the stages still running in Broadway and the
Bowery, and in a short time they came rumbling into Mulberry
Street, forming a long line in front of head-quarters. A
telegram from Second Avenue demanded immediate help, and the
police were bundled into them and hurried off. One driver
refused to stir, saying, roughly, he was not hired to carry
policemen. Acton had no time to argue the case, and quickly
turning to a policeman, he said: "Put that man in cell
Number 92." In a twinkling he was jerked from his seat and
hurried away. Turning to another policeman, he said: "Mount
that box and drive." The next moment the stage, with a long
string of others, loaded inside and out with the bluecoats,
was whirling through the streets. He had done the same with
the Sixth Avenue cars. The son-in-law of George Law
remonstrated, saying that it would provoke the mob to tear
down the railroad buildings. There was no time to stand on
ceremony; the cars were seized, and the company, to save
their property, paid a large sum to the ringleaders of the
rioters. In fact, a great many factories and buildings were
bought off in the same way; so that the leaders drove quite
a thriving business.
But, as before remarked, the commencement of barricades to
obstruct the movements of the police and military, after the
Parisian fashion, was a serious thing, and must be nipped in
the bud; and Captain Walling, of the Twentieth Precinct, who
had been busy in this part of the city all the afternoon in
dispersing the mob, sent to head-quarters for a military
force to help remove them. He also sent to General Sandford,
at the arsenal, for a company of soldiers, which was
promised, but never sent. At six o'clock a force of regulars
arrived from General Brown, and repaired to the Precinct
station house. Captain Slott, of the Twentieth Precinct,
took command of the police force detailed to cooperate with
the troops, but delayed action till the arrival of the
company promised from the arsenal. Meanwhile, the rioters
kept strengthening the barricades between Thirty-seventh and
Forty-third Streets, in Eighth Avenue, by lashing carts,
wagons, and telegraph poles together with wire stripped from
the latter. The cross streets were also barricaded. Time
passed on, and yet the bayonets of he expected reinforcement
from the arsenal did not appear. The two commanding officers
now began to grow anxious; it would not do to defer the
attack till after dark, for such work as was before them
required daylight. At length, as the sun stooped to the
western horizon, it was resolved to wait no longer, and the
order to move forward was given. As they approached the
first barricade, by Thirty-seventh Street, a volley as
poured into them from behind it, followed by stones and
brick bats.
The police now fell back to the left, and the regulars
advancing, returned the fire. The rioters, however, stood
their ground, and for a time nothing was heard but the rapid
roll of musketry. But the steady, well directed fire of the
troops, at length began to tell on the mob, and they at last
broke, and fled to the next barricade. The police then
advanced, and tore down the barricade, when the whole force
moved on to the next. Here the fight was renewed, but the
close and rapid volley of the troops soon scattered the
wretches, when this also was removed. They kept on in this
way, till the last barricade was abandoned, when the
uncovered crowd broke and fled in wild disorder. The
soldiers pressed after, breaking up into squads, and chasing
and firing into the disjointed fragments as they drifted
down the various streets.
There was more or less disturbance in this section, however,
till midnight. At nine o'clock, an attack was made on a gun
and hardware store, in Thirty-seventh Street, between Eighth
and Ninth Avenues, but Sergeant Petty was sent thither with
a small force, and scattered them at the first charge. At
midnight, an attempt was made to destroy the colored church
in Thirtieth Street, between Seventh and Eighth Avenues; but
before the rioters had accomplished their work, Captain
Walling, with his entire force and the regulars, came up,
and though met with a volley, fell on them in such a
headlong charge, that they scattered down the street.
All this time the arsenal presented the appearance of a
regular camp; videttes were kept out, sentries established,
howitzers commanded the streets, and everything wore the
look of a besieged fortress.
Sandford, whom Wool wished to take command of all the
troops, evidently thought that he had as much as he could do
to hold that building, without doing anything to quell the
riot in the city.
One of the first companies that came up from the forts the
day before, and hence belonged to General Brown's force,
got, no one could hardly tell how, into the arsenal, and
were there cooped up as useless as though in garrison for if
seven hundred men with cannon sweeping every approach could
not hold it, seven thousand could not. General Brown and
Acton needed this company badly, but how to get it was the
question. Governor Seymour held no direct communication with
the Police Commissioners; for they were not on friendly
terms, as they were holding their places in defiance of him,
he having removed them some time before. Mr. Hawley, the
chief clerk, who knew the Governor personally, acted,
therefore, as the channel of communication between them. He
now went to him, and asked him how things were at the
arsenal. He replied, he did not know no report had been sent
him. Hawley then asked him to send an officer and ascertain,
and get back the company belonging to General Brown's
command. He replied he had no one to send. Hawley then
offered to go himself, if he would give an order to this
company of United States troops to report at once to General
Brown at police head-quarters. He did so, and Hawley,
reaching the arsenal in safety, gave the order to the
adjutant-general, before calling on Sandford, so as to be
sure it was obeyed.
On the northern limits of the city, serious disturbances had
occurred during the day, especially in Yorkville, to which
Acton was compelled to send a strong force. The mob also
attempted to burn Harlem bridge, but the heavy rain of the
night before had made it so wet that it would not ignite.
Down town, likewise, mobs had assembled before the Western
Hotel and other places, but were dispersed before they had
inflicted any damage. Almost the last act in the evening was
an attack on the house of Mr. Sinclair, one of the owners of
the Tribune .
But rioters must eat and sleep like other people, and though
knots of them could be seen in various parts of the city,
the main portion seemed to have retired soon after midnight.
In the police head-quarters, men were lying around on the
floor in the warm July night, snatching, as best they could,
a little repose. General Brown and staff, in their chairs or
stretched on a settee, nodded in this lull of the storm,
though ready at a moment's notice to do their duty. But
there was no rest for Acton. He had not closed his eyes for
nearly forty hours, and he was not to close them for more
than forty to come.
With his nerves strung to their utmost tension, and resolved
to put down that mob though the streets ran blood, he gave
his whole soul to the work before him. He infused his
determined, fearless spirit into every one who approached
him. Anonymous letters, telling him he had not another day
to live, he flung aside with a scornful smile, to attend to
the telegraph dispatches from the different precincts.
Troops and men were stationed at various points, and
gunboats were patrolling the rivers, and he must be on the
alert every moment. The fate of a great city lay on his
heart, and he could not sleep.
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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