Dark History - 22: Why 20,000 People Wanted Italian Immigrants Dead: Sicilian Lynchings
Episode Date: December 1, 2021In 1891, 11 Italian people were murdered in the streets of New Orleans, becoming one of the largest mass lynchings in American history. Because of this, there were rumors of war between the United Sta...tes and Italy. So, to calm the tension, the American government… created a holiday? Wait. What? Today, Bailey tells the bloody story of the Sicilian Lynchings, where 20,000 people lost their damn minds. Episode Advertisers Include: Aura Frames, Ouai Hair Care, Liquid IV, and Wicked Clothes. Learn more during the podcast about special offers! For 10% off go to Wickedclothes.com and use promo code DARKHISTORY.
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Hi friends, I hope you're having a wonderful day today.
My name is Bailey Sarian and I'd like to welcome you to the Library of Dark History.
It'd be so cool if I had an audience and they all started like, you know, I'm like,
yeah.
This is a safe space for all those curious cats out there who think, hey, is history really as boring as it seemed in school? Oh, Nene, let me tell you, this is where we can
learn about dark, mysterious, dramatic stories our teachers never told us about. So if you're
watching this over on YouTube, I'm blonde. So you have to call me Jessica, because that's my name,
like my name is Jessica. Hmm.
Anyways, so let me tell you about how I came across this story today.
So I was eating classic, well-known Italian food
at the Olive Garden, obviously.
And I was like, you know what?
I don't really know anything about Italian lifestyle, right?
I just know Olive Garden is delicious.
We love it.
And I started looking, so I went down this rabbit hole of Italian history and I came across like
some shady ass shit that I had no idea about. So technically I was searching for another story
about like maybe mass murder or something. I know, awful. And I came across today's story
and it's a lynching that I had never heard of, first of all.
It's a story of a vigilante justice gone wrong
and America loves vigilante stories.
I guess that's really all I have to say about this
is that I just like had no idea this happened
and I feel like that's all of the episodes of Dark History.
Stories that I personally was shocked about.
And if I was shocked about it,
then I feel like a lot of you out there
will probably be shocked about it too.
And also the Olive Garden is not real Italian food,
but you know, I love their breadsticks.
So good, oh my God, like, what the hell, you know,
so good.
Anyway, so today we're gonna to talk about really awful story.
There's really nothing else I could say.
Great.
So today's story starts out in New Orleans in the 1800s.
Now, before we get into the actual hues and what's and wares,
let me set the scene with a little murder.
There was a light rain falling on October 15th, 1890, in New Orleans,
and police chief David Hennessy was leaving the police station with his co-worker around 11 pm.
He walked down the street towards his house where he lived with his mother,
and his friend walked in the other direction. Now this was actually a little out of the ordinary
because David usually didn't walk home alone.
He always had bodyguards with him.
Why did he have bodyguards, you ask?
That's a really great question.
The reason is that New Orleans had a pretty big
mafia presence at the time,
and chief David was paranoid that they were out to get him.
But on this night he
let us guard down and he was walking alone. Now he got close to his house and he reached
in his pockets for his keys to open up the door and as soon as his back was turned from the street,
the night's eerie quiet was shattered with a loud bang of sawed off shotguns as a small group
of assassins appeared in the mist and filled
the chief with lead.
But the chief was quick and experienced, and as soon as the first shots were fired, he
turned around and pulled out his own gun and fired off a few shots back at them.
But as quickly as they appeared, they slipped back into the night fog, leaving the chief
on his mother's doorstep, bleeding
and clinging to life.
His coworker, who he had left the station with just minutes ago, heard the shots from
a few blocks away and ran towards the chief's house to see what happened.
When he arrived, chief David was on the ground and waved him over, and the other officer
said like, who did the CEO? Oh, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, not going to say what that word was because the chief's dying word was actually a racial slur for Italians.
And you know, we don't need to know that.
Well, yes we do, but we don't need to say the word is what I'm saying.
But that's what he said.
Anyways, for a minute there, they thought he would pull through, but you know, it was
1890, and any type of major wound is a death sentence.
So with that being said, he died the next morning.
Well, who would target such a prominent figure?
Why was Chief David killed?
What does this have to do with mass lynchings?
How come one of his last words was a racial slur?
Hmm.
Well, it all starts with Chief David Hennessy.
Who was Chief David and who wanted him dead?
Well, let me open up my book to Chief David's chapter,
which is in my Dark History book somewhere.
Oh my God, look, right here on this page right here.
David Hennessey, let me tell you about him.
Well, hold on.
David Hennessey was born into an Irish Catholic family
in the mid 1800s.
His father, David Sr., was a soldier who fought in a civil war for the Union who later became
a cop.
Now unfortunately, David Sr., the father he was shot and killed while on duty by another
cop.
Now it's a little hazy like what exactly went down, but we know that Louisiana was a pro-slavery
state and his dad was very pro-slavery state and his dad was
very anti-slavery. So the rumor is that an argument broke out with a cop who was a Confederate soldier
and then things got super hated and David's dad got shot. So when David was 11, he started working
for the police department as a messenger boy to provide for his family. Yeah, at 11, that's wild. David was surprisingly kind of good at doing police work.
When he was a teenager, he was still working as a messenger, and he ended up catching two
full-grown adult thieves in the act. He beat the crap out of them, and then drag their asses
into the police station. Like, oh, great, you know.
When David was just 20 years old, he got the role as detective.
Now many saw David as a hero right from the start.
Like, wow, this guy's going places just like his father.
However, David was not like his father.
He was much more influenced by the pro-slavery and white supremacist beliefs of his co-workers.
In 1874, there were 5,000 members of a secret white supremacist league who wanted to make slavery legal again,
so they rose up to revolt against the state's anti-slavery government, and it resulted in the this like big bloody battle
where more than 60 people were killed, and for a short time drove the entire police force out of the city until the military could restore order.
When order was restored they asked none other than David Hennessy to be a detective at the
new police force in New Orleans which was headed by former Confederates and White Supremacists.
The important thing to know about this is number one.
New Orleans used to be seriously unhinged.
Well, that's not funny.
Like, it was kind of a mess,
those kind of get it together.
Girl, like, we're judging.
Number two, David Hennessy, the hero cop,
he worked closely with white supremacists
and helped to turn the entire police force
into a white- only Confederate circle jerk.
It was just like, whoa, you know. Fun fact, this little law enforcement outfit actually didn't do much law,
and mostly enforced protection for local criminals. We'll see that come up a bit later,
so keep that stored way in your noggin for a minute and we'll circle back.
Circle jerk, circle back.
Shapes. The other episode we were talking about animals today is about shapes.
Yay. Okay, so that's what David is up to, but let's turn our view to where Italians enter the mix in the 1800s. Now, New Orleans used to be mostly Irish and German immigrants,
along with the large enslaved African population.
But once the Civil War ended and slavery was abolished, there was a huge labor gap that formed in the 1880s,
and a ton of Italian immigrants came to New Orleans for work.
Now, back in Italy, specifically the island of Sicily, the law was corrupt and many Italians ended up having
to stick together and be their own form of justice.
Kind of like private security, and this is what we know as the mafia.
So when Italians came to America and then later New Orleans, the mafia came with them.
They were expected to look out for one another, especially because white people saw the Italian
immigrants as lower class and treated them as such.
Which isn't great when the police force was made up of all white supremacists.
Most of the time the mafia strategy is to stay away from the police, trying to just like
do your things separately and just mind your own business.
But sometimes the police they had to get involved.
And that's where Chief David comes back into the story.
Around 1881, David would become a national hero
after he tracked down and captured a mafia boss
who had cut off the ears of a rich British man.
Oh my God, what's that painter's name?
Very Van Gogh!
Okay, so there's a rumors circling around that David may or may not have
beheaded this mobster guy.
Like cut the head off, you know, whoa.
Some historians say that the mafia boss
spent the rest of his life in prison,
but you know, it's like the late 1800s.
Someone knew if he had a head or not,
but maybe it just wasn't written down.
I don't know.
Anyway, the press just gushed about this courageous cop
taking justice into his own hands,
and David became a national hero, basically overnight.
People were like, oh my God, yay!
Like David, do I rescue you, yay!
But first, let's pause for an ad break.
So we're back now from our break.
When we're got to New Orleans police department
about this mafia boss David was tracking,
they really didn't want him to pursue this guy.
You see, they like didn't have an arrest warrant
to actually arrest him, but David,
he had this itch to take manners and to his own hands.
So David comes up with his plan to tell the police department that he was going on vacation.
But really, he and his cousin were going down to hunt this mafia boss guy.
Why not just go on vacation instead, you know?
What a weirdo.
This made the police department angry, particularly David's boss, as he was Thomas.
He even tried to get David in trouble for not following orders, but since the media basically
worshipped him for it, the police department ultimately decided not to punish David for
going rogue.
But now Thomas felt he could not trust David in their working relationship.
I mean, this dude just doesn't seem to listen.
David's boss even got drunk one time and said, quote,
They may get the best of me with the police board,
but I'll get the best of them in the end,
even if I have to get a shotgun to do it."
End quote.
Hmm.
Sounds like a motive.
Was he David's killer?
We're going to find out.
I don't know. Long after he made those
comments, David and his cousin just so happened to be right outside of a barber shop that Thomas
happened to be in in his haircut, you know. David's cousin, who was also a cop, saw a man walking
out the barber shop with a gun. And so David and his cousin immediately pulled out their guns and started shooting
into the barber shop. Well, they would claim that they didn't know Thomas was in there
and just saw someone with a gun so they did what any cops would do and shot them. Obviously.
Thomas was shot multiple times, including a bullet at point-blink range right in his school. Yeah, so Thomas, unfortunately, RIP'd.
David and his cousin were arrested for the murder
of their boss, and they were both later put on trial.
The thing is, the public thought very highly of David,
not so much his cousin, they're like, fuck that guy.
We like David.
And so, like, did the rest of the police department?
Even the judge was quoted as saying that David
was a New Orleans hero.
So with that being said, David was off scot-free.
Yeah.
David could do no wrong in anyone's eyes.
Shortly after his murder trial,
David was obviously given a promotion,
because that's what you do after you murder someone.
And then that led him to becoming police chief in 1888.
Congratulations, David, you did it.
Now, as a chief, the mayor told David
to start collecting taxes.
Now, this was supposed to be a way to get money
from the different illegal businesses
around New Orleans.
So David would go around to all the illegal casinos and brothels collecting what they called
quote, protection money end quote, which basically was just a bribe so the police wouldn't arrest them
because like these businesses were running illegally. If the businesses paid the police to look the
other way, well the police would look the other way. I mean
hello money. Yeah I'll look away. You know. If this sounds familiar that's because it's
something you see in every mobster movie paying police off. So while David's out collecting
this money he starts getting a little involved with one of the big mafia families in Louisiana.
Now they were giving him money. He was giving them protection, but along the way they also became just super close, right? Just be a f so close as friends that when a different mob
family allegedly gunned down some of David's mob friends, they called up Chief
David to be a witness at their trial. But get this. David wasn't even at the
scene of the crime. He was just doing his friends a favor. You know, I'll scratch
your back, you scratch mine. Great. But going up in front of a jury wasn't such a good look for David in the eyes of the rival
mob family.
I mean, obviously, this police chief has their back, not ours, like that's not fair.
I mean, they're pissed.
Just one week before the murder trial, that is when David was found murdered outside of
his mother's home.
Now rumor has it that when David would make his rounds collecting protection money, he
saw a lot of things he shouldn't have seen.
Some say that he actually saw the murder of his mob friends, but this would later be denied
at the trial.
Others said that he saw other more suspicious things happen and that he was paid to keep quiet.
But at least one newspaper at the time said that David was going to turn on the Sicilian
mob family he was buddy buddy with and when they found out they decided to make sure that
he wouldn't say another word about it ever again.
So you see, it could have been like the family he was friendly with because he was going
to betray them or could have been the rival family because he was going to send them to jail for
shooting or killing someone. It could have even been his boss, Thomas' family looking for revenge.
The point is, there were a lot of reasons to kill David Hennessy, and he kind of got what was coming to him
for being so corrupt.
But that's not how the public saw it.
At this time, the public heard about Chief David's dying word, that racial slur he muttered
as he was like fighting for his life, and they wanted one thing.
The blood of Sicilians has revenge for the death of their beloved chief David.
But first, let's pause for an ad break.
Okay, if you aren't already starting to see how this is going to lead to an angry mob
of people going after Sicilian Americans, then you're not paying attention.
Hello!
Okay, so pay attention now.
Are you listening?
Great.
When David was taken to the hospital for his gun wounds, word got out what happened and
soon a large group of like mourners started to gather outside the hospital, okay?
Church members, upper-class rich people, even police were outside the hospital just openly
crying and swearing to avenge his death.
I mean, how could anyone murder our hero?
Waaaaah! Just a lot of that.
His funeral ended up being one of the largest in the city of New Orleans since the death of the Confederate President during the Civil War.
So starting at 6am, there were mourners arriving at the cemetery and by 10, there were people lined up around the block.
It was huge. You like turned into a massive rave, everyone out in glow sticks, I mean it was just like a big party.
People were like, I'm just kidding, but people were waiting for hours just to walk by the casket, and the funeral lasted well into the night.
The fire stations rang their bells in honor of the chief flags were flying at half-mast.
You get it, you get it, okay great.
So immediately, an investigation was opened by the city to figure out who done it, right?
Remember, David had a coworker rush to the scene after he got shot, but he was too
late to see who actually like killed David.
The only clue they had was when David was dying
and the racial slur he said.
It was a very racist and vague description,
but okay, David, you know, like, okay.
So this was all the evidence people needed
to get all fired up to teach those Sicilians a lesson.
The mayor even said, quote,
no community can exist with murder societies in its midst."
Because everyone loves a catchy rhyme.
Which is funny when you think about it because the only reason David got his job in the
first place was because a group of 5,000 white supremacists overthrew the local government
30 years ago.
Oh yeah, that is funny, huh?
When you think about it, yeah.
Irony, ironic.
Atlanta's more set.
That is where we're at.
Anyway, the investigation into who killed David didn't really go anywhere, so the mayor
stepped in and created a special committee to get to the bottom of this.
This committee started out by rating all Italian communities in New Orleans just kind of
look in, look for info. Anything
really. They're just rummaging around, seeing what they can find,
bustin' down doors for no rhyme or reason other than the fact that this place was owned by Italians,
or like Italians lived there. That was all the evidence they needed. Now this would lead to hundreds
of Italian immigrants being arrested and detained in jail.
Again, for no damn reason others just being Italian.
Like awesome.
Thanks.
Even though David's problems were obviously caused by his mafia involvement, people at the
time considered all Italians as part of the mafia, which honestly is still a stereotype
that continues to this day.
But as more Italians immigrated to America, there were scary stories in the newspapers about the mafia present, being a danger to the average rich citizen, you know, and like, you don't want
to scare rich people. They get shit done, and it's never good. At the time, there was major
anti-italian feelings. The New York Times once even described
Italians as not fully evolved members of criminal class and too unskilled for society. You know
what's crazy if you've been paying attention to the dark history episodes? How many times
the media has escalated like a certain narrative that usually doesn't end so well. I don't know freedom of the press is
super important but shouldn't it be like I don't know we should hold them
responsible? What's what they do in the press? Let me know down below. Thank you.
Vote for me for president.
for President. I don't want to be present.
Things escalated really fast from this point.
The newspapers in New Orleans started to be filled with articles cheering on their
rest and encouraging violence against Italians.
People were saying that they were sure that it was Italians who killed the chief, and
all this violence was totally justified.
After a few weeks, the police narrowed down the suspects to 19 Italian men,
including the leaders of the mafia family that hated police chief David.
As the men were taken into the police station, a large crowd of people were surrounding the
building, screaming just racial slurs and shouting in a bad Italian accent.
No, seriously, they were yelling at them in bad accents saying,
who killa da chief? As the prisoners were being loaded in, the Italian community
was outraged by this because the police never even took the time to consider
that maybe it wasn't an Italian person who killed him.
Hey, that's an idea. And there's no proof other than the chief saying
that racial slur, but many doubted him
because, you know, how'd he know?
It was dark outside, it was foggy.
And his back was technically turned.
It was clear that this wasn't an attack on the mafia,
but an attack on all of the Italians.
And they just needed some excuse
to do that, you know? We've seen this time and time again. They take one little thing and they run
with it. They being us whiteies. I could say that because I am white. In February 1891,
nine of the 19 Italian men went to trial. The trial lasted about a month and was covered by newspapers
all over Louisiana. The trial went by very quickly because they didn't have any real evidence
to present, so they were basically just like interviewing different people like, hey,
would you do that day? Yuki, next, it just like was pointless. Six of the defendants were
acquitted, and the jury couldn't agree on a decision for the other three defendants, which meant none of the nine men on trial were going to jail,
or getting punished for the killing of Chief David Hennessy.
Okay, so as you can maybe imagine, people, just the city was pissed off.
Okay, they wanted justice, they wanted blood, and they hated these Italians.
So these guys, getting off easy, made everyone mad as hell.
Everyone in the newspapers were saying that the mafia was bribing or intimidating the jurors
to force them to let the defendants off easy, once again, media fueling the flames here.
So nobody is believing that this was honestly a fair trial.
So nobody wanted to accept this verdict.
They thought justice still needed to be served.
So this city did what their hero police chief David would have done.
They decided to take justice into their own hands.
But first, let's pause for an ad break.
Glory.
The night the nine Italians were acquitted,
some very important men in the community.
I'm talking like doctors, lawyers,
even like a future mayor,
they met at an undisclosed location to write a statement,
calling for the citizens of New Orleans
to take justice into their own hands.
You see what they did?
Was they gathered signatures from about 150 men who were the some of the richest,
and most successful in the entire state to sign the statement. Then it was published in the
newspaper. Anybody reading the story would think, well, if these super wealthy rich people
sign the statement, then it probably should be taken seriously. This story told the people of New Orleans to prepare for action.
That's exactly what they did. Now, wouldn't this be called a dog whistle?
So at this time, there happened to be a representative of the Italian government who was stationed
in New Orleans. Now, he was already concerned about the men being held in jail and trying
to find a solution, right? But when he read the statement in the paper, he knew he had
to act fast because things were going to get violent. And boy, was he right, okay? Because
the next morning, he saw men gathering with rifles and Lafayette Square, which at this
time had grown to about 6,000 onlookers with an additional
2,000 men all waiting outside the jail. He ran to the mayor's office to put a stop to whatever
the hell was brewing. But when he got there, the mayor wasn't even there. It was just like the
local sheriff who told him like, relax, we've got things under control, the mayor's already over there.
relax, we've got things under control, the mayor's already over there. But the mayor wasn't there and he wasn't trying to help stop anything. You see he was actually downtown at like some private
business meeting with the governor of Louisiana and the United States General of Military and they
were all together, you know, doing some kind of like business meeting and just pretending that
nothing was going on.
They're like, yeah, everything's fine. Mmm, nothing to deal.
By this time, the crowd outside the jail had grown to about 8,000 people.
Oh yeah, people were giving speeches to get all fired up, shouting about how New Orleans
shouldn't allow the mafia to assassinate the poor innocent cops or bribe jurors.
Again, they're just like hyping each other up over like,
nothing.
It is wild.
Another person shouted to them, quote,
talk is idle.
Action must be the thing now.
End quote.
And this just got the crowd super jazzed up.
They were practically salivating as they were cheering
and screaming and chanting slurs against the Italian people.
Then the crowd began to move towards the prison.
People had set up little booths around the street filled with guns of all kinds,
like a street fare or something, very wild.
And they started handing them out like they were free Costco samples.
You know how excited you get when you see those samples?
That's how they were getting about these guns.
The police knew what was going on and they tried to stop the crowd from breaking into the prison, When you get when you see those samples, that's how they were getting about these guns.
The police knew what was going on
and they trying to stop the crowd
from breaking into the prison, but the crowd was just too big,
too angry and honestly too important.
Look, I'm not trying to stereotype us whites,
but if you tell them no stop,
someone gets triggered and like starts screaming back,
will my brothers in a churny?
My husband's a judge.
My friend told me she got punched in the face
by an Italian once, like those kinds of people.
They always have a friend who like,
have a story about how awful these people are.
They managed to break into the prison
from the front and the side.
The crowd, which was now like 20,000 people deep, was described by some historians as if they were a violent river just smashing the doors open,
quickly, furiously, like a burst of water.
I'm not sure what their end goal was here, but they were doing the most.
Okay.
Some prison guards saw the bloodthirsty mob of people forming and knew that the prisoners were
goners if they left if they left them there. So they opened up the cells and told the prisoners to find somewhere to hide.
It's a prison. The point is that there is nowhere to hide. So
yeah, some of them managed to hide in the women's jail section, and two others fought each other to crawl together
in the dog's tiny kennel.
One of them was a 14 year old boy that had been accused
of being a lookout for the people who killed David Hennessy,
and he had under a box across the hall from his cell.
From here, all hell broke loose.
The crowd poured into the prison
and grabbed several of the men inside
and murdered them. Some of the men managed to escape or hide out until the coast was clear,
but others were beaten and shot in the head. I mean, it was just brutal. The 14-year-old boy's
father was shot just a few feet away from where he was hiding and his body fell right next to the
box he was in.
The press one laners say that the boy tried tearing his eyes out in grief when he saw his
father's body beside him.
I mean, this is just chaos.
But unfortunately, this is just a start.
But first, let's pause for an ad break.
One of the guys that got shot in the head was dragged out of the jail and the crowd hung
his already dead body on a tree outside.
The crowd cheered.
They cheered this on.
And this gave them the idea to start grabbing the prisoners who were still alive and do the
same to them.
They grabbed a guy named Immanuel, Politi.
They put a rope around his neck and tried to hang him,
but the rope ended up breaking.
They tried stringing him up again, but he climbed the rope up the tree.
Well, sadly, it didn't last long because the crowd also climbed the tree and beat him
until he was unconscious, then hung him again, cheered as he died, and then shot him multiple
times, like fucking psychos.
And what the hell's wrong with people?
The press later said that the crowd were ripping his clothes
and shoes off of his body.
Yeah, like they were grabbing some kind of gross souvenir
to take home.
How disappointing.
This whole thing lasted only 25 minutes.
Yeah, only 25 minutes.
And when the Italian representative arrived,
it was just way too late.
He described a scene of bodies hanging in every tree,
rioters, parting and singing,
and just appear utter Satan shit show.
He retreated to his office to find dozens of Italian Americans
waiting to be let in because they were just scared to go home.
Some of them were the escaped prisoners from earlier. When the smell cleared and the murderous crowd
completely dispersed, 11 of the prisoners had been killed, including a few Italian prisoners
who weren't even involved in a trial. They were just there. I mean, it was just horrible. It was this was a horrible outcome, right?
Well, leave it up to the media around the country.
They were reporting that these deaths
were actually justified.
Many of these stories focus on how chief David Hennessey's
murder had finally been avenged.
I, for an I, are good pals at the New York Times said,
quote, 11 of his assassins lynched by a mob.
Another one said, Slayer Slain.
All over the country, this was being painted as just good old fashion vigilante justice.
A hero cop had died and the Sicilians paid the price for it, whether they did it or not.
But the international community, specifically the Italian government, they felt a little
bit different.
Although Rome heavily disliked the Sicilian Mafia, everybody lynched in New Orleans, had
been under US custody, and a few were still Italian citizens.
So it led to demanded, under international law, that the United States pay some restitution
to the families of the deceased back in Sicily, and to also secure justice against these
quote, vigilantes.
Instead, the public in Louisiana actually ended up blaming the Sicilians.
Of course they did.
It got so tense that rumors of this war between Italy and the United States started to fly.
A lot of pressure from Italy and mostly the United States were put on Washington DC to do something
to protect the people from its country, from these crazy mobs.
But the United States was like, you know, that's not on us, that's on Louisiana.
So the governor of Louisiana decides to step in, like maybe smooth things over.
He would tell the press that
the mobs weren't racially motivated at all, and that the crowd simply wanted justice
for Chief David.
They had nothing to do with race.
They just wanted justice.
Well, a grand jury was assembled, and after some deep investigation, they concluded that
there were just too many people involved, and they weren't able to place guilt on anyone.
The grand jury did say that the Congress needed to make tougher immigration laws,
which is like not what anyone was going for, going on to say that this was all just a conspiracy from the Italian government to send criminals to the United States.
What a fucking joke.
The mayor of New Orleans sang a similar tune.
He said publicly that he didn't see anything wrong
with the lynchings.
He said he believed that it was legal, public lynching
because, quote, the Italians had taken the law
into their own hands, and we had to do the same."
End quote.
I don't really have anything to say to that
because what the fuck?
In order to prevent an international war, because the United States government didn't want that shit,
they're like, what do we do?
Money, they bring in money, right?
So they end up paying the families of the victims, $25,000 each.
Thanks.
I mean, today, it would be like around $750,000, which is cool, but like,
money doesn't bring people back from the dead. Point blank period. This is my
therapy couch because this is just too much sometimes, you know? how disappointing. Hmm? Disappointing, all of it.
So the president condemned the event as deplorable,
which like a lot of people didn't even know
what that meant, they had to look it up.
And then he declared Columbus Day a one time holiday
because Christopher Columbus was a famous Italian,
and it kind of just was supposed to make Italian Americans
less mad at the government.
Yeah.
Thanks for the holiday, I guess, you know.
I guess these efforts were enough to satisfy the country of Italy because obviously we never went to war with them,
but still nobody even got like convicted or held accountable for what the fuck happened.
Media.
First of all, we could start there, I don't know, idea. So on that day in New Orleans, a mob of white people who were like super upset at the mafia
became so bloodthirsty that they murdered 11 people in broad daylight and got away with it.
The craziest part of this entire event was of all things.
A children's game that would be played in elementary schools across Louisiana.
Seriously.
For decades after the death of David Hennessy, kids would chase each other around shouting,
who killed a chief?
Yeah, like it was a random game and not something shouted during the literal murder of 11 Italian
men.
Like it was ring around the rosy or something?
Because, you know, ring around the rosy, also,
dark history, based off bubonic plague.
We should have mentioned that.
Damn it! This story sucks, okay?
This is often cited as the largest targeted attack
on Italian Americans in the United States.
Honestly, I don't know about you guys,
but for me, I had never in my,
I never heard of this before.
I was like, what?
Yes, yes.
Okay, this story sucks because a lot of reasons.
One, it's kind of like a story that we've heard
a million times here on dark history,
which is just like exhausting, right?
Like how many times do we hear about immigrants
coming to America to live a better life, a safer life whatever? And obviously
shit goes south, it doesn't make sense, get treated like shit, get taken advantage of,
and then it gets like swept under the rug. It's weird. Well I don't get it. Do you get it? I don't know. You know, I was thinking about the other day I was laying in bed
I couldn't sleep. And I was thinking like America is like one big science project and the rest of the world is kind of like watching us. Have you ever
noticed that or thought about that? Like all of us are immigrants from somewhere else except for Native Americans. They were here first.
But all of us are immigrants and we're all just
like fighting with one another for what? I don't know! I don't know! It's just
weird! Why is everyone so mad about? I can't wait all this whole
hands and come by y'all. Oh my god. Real talk, dark history listeners out there.
I don't know how to end this one, because it's dark.
It sucks.
If I never heard about it,
that I'm sure maybe you haven't heard about it.
I mean, I'm not, can't be the only one
who didn't know about this story.
I'm sure there is more stories out there like this.
This is probably just one in a sea of a million, you know?
So let's keep continuing the conversation. Let's try and share more stories and I would
love to hear your reactions to the story over on social media. So don't forget to use the
hashtag dark history and let me know your thoughts, your opinions if there are any other stories
that are similar to this one because boy, did this open up a can of worms of what the actual bug, you know?
Jesus.
Anywho, starting to drop all that on you and then I'm like, bye.
Okay, join me over on my YouTube where you can watch these episodes on Thursday after
the podcast airs, if you want to see my hair.
And also, don't forget to catch murder mystery and makeup which drops on Mondays.
Thank you guys so much for hanging out with me today.
I hope you have a great recipe per week.
Don't forget to make good choices
and I'll be seeing you later.
Bye!
Star History is an audio boom of original.
This podcast is executive produced by
Bailey Sarian, Kim Jacobs,
Dunia McNally from Three Arts,
Ed Simpson and Claire Turner from Wheelhouse DNA.
Produced by Lexi Kiven, Dariel Christon, and Spencer Strassmore, research provided by Tisha Dunston,
writers, Jed Bookout, Michael Obers, Joyce Gavuzo, and me.
Barely shuron. Special thank you to our historical consultants, Marco,
Romanelli, and Dr. Fred Gardefe.
And I'm your host, Bailey Sary, but today you're supposed to call me Jessica.
I forgot to close the book!
God damn it, Joan. You dirty little bitch.
You forgot to tell me that we're done with the book.
Joan, you dirty little bitch. You forgot to tell me that we were done with the book.
Anyways, so I'm gonna close the book.
Another dark chapter concluded in our book of dark history.
They weren't lying when they said this was dark.
Bye.