November 23: Today in 1887, Black Farm Workers Were Massacred in Thibodaux, Louisiana

0 Posted by - July 3, 2024 - On This Date

Photo credits: The History Press (Charleston, South Carolina)

The Thibodaux Massacre took place in Thibodaux, Louisiana on November 23, 1887.

Black sugar cane workers, determined to unionize for a living wage, chose to combine their minimal power during the crucial harvest season. Instead, their actions sparked a relentless massacre.

With echoes of the bondage, which their ancestors had experienced during slavery, the cane workers protested the harsh working conditions, long hours, and starvation wages. They were fed subsistence meals and paid as little as 42 cents a day with scrip, which could only be used in plantation stores.

The Knights of Labor, one of the few labor unions to organize blacks, encouraged the sugar cutters to demand better treatment and $1.25 a day in cash. The Knights had tried unsuccessfully to organize the workers in 1874, 1880, and again in 1883 but had been blocked all three times.

But the cutters thought the results might be different in 1887 when the Knights urged them to wait until the rolling season was almost underway to propose making a stand.

During the rolling season, there was a narrow window of time to harvest the cane and unlike cotton growers, the planters were unable to attract enough strikebreakers from out of the area because of the low pay they offered.

With this strategy in mind, Junius Bailey, a 29-year-old schoolteacher and the president of the Terrebonne chapter of the Knights of Labor, went directly to the growers with the sugar cutter’s demands.

When the growers refused to negotiate and fired the union members on November 22, the strike began. For the next three weeks, an estimated 10,000 workers (the largest such action in the farming industry) went on strike.

The strike affected four Louisiana parishes: Lafourche, Terrebonne, St. Mary, and Assumption.

Meanwhile, angry white mobs locked down Thibodaux and went door to door attempting to identify strikers. They demanded passes from any blacks going in and out of town. As morning broke on November 23, shots rang out from a cornfield and two white guards were injured. At that point, the massacre began.

The planters persuaded Governor Samuel D. McEnery, a Democrat and former sugar planter, to unleash several units of the all-white state militia.

Commanded by ex-Confederate General P.G.T. Beauregard, the militia brought a .45 caliber Gatling gun while the paramilitary groups set up outside of the Thibodaux courthouse. Both the militia and white vigilantes went door to door shooting suspected black strikers and anyone unlucky enough to cross their path.

The indiscriminate killing left approximately 60 people dead. The bodies of many of the strikers were dumped in unmarked graves. Those who survived hid in the woods and swamps as the killings spread to other plantations.

Although the Thibodaux Massacre was one of the deadliest episodes in United States labor history, the Southern white press heralded the action of the militia and vigilantes. Sugar planter Andrew Price, who participated in the attacks, won a seat in Congress in 1888.

Statues were erected and public areas named after many involved in the unlawful killings while the workers, including women and children. The victims went anonymous; their murders marked only by their loved ones.

Black farm workers wouldn’t attempt to unionize in earnest again until the 1930s.

Washington, K. (2019, March 11) The Thibodaux Massacre (November 23, 1887). Retrieved from https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/the-thibodaux-massacre-november-23-1887/

*BlackThen.com writer and historian Victor Trammell edited and contributed to this report.

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