Throughline - Aftermath
Episode Date: April 23, 2020In 1927, the most destructive river flood in U.S. history inundated seven states, displaced more than half a million people for months, and caused about $1 billion dollars in property damages. And lik...e many national emergencies it exposed a stark question that the country still struggles to answer - what is the political calculus used to decide who bears the ultimate responsibility in a crisis, especially when it comes to the most vulnerable? This week, the Great Mississippi Flood of 1927 and what came after.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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It started raining in August 1926, and it didn't really stop.
Henry Waring Ball had recorded in his diary,
it had rained heavily for months.
March 8th, quote, pouring rain almost constantly for 24 hours.
March 9th, quote, rain almost all night. March 12th, quote, I don't believe I ever saw so much rain.
March 19th, quote, rain all day. March 20th, quote, still raining hard tonight.
March 21st, quite cold, Tarn of rain last night.
March 26th, bad, cold rain.
March 27th, March 29th, still cold and showering. Very dark and rainy.
March 30th, too dark and rainy to do anything.
April 1st, violent storm
almost all night. April 5th,
quote, much rain tonight. April
6th, quote, rain last night,
of course.
In the first five months of 1927,
there were
five storms, each one of which was bigger than any single storm in the preceding ten years.
If you lived near the river, and you had a brain you knew perfectly well, you were facing a serious threat. It is raining as usual on April 21st.
You have hundreds of men working at a weak spot in the levee of piling sandbags, piling sandbags, piling sandbags.
Water started to come over. You cannot hold back the Mississippi River when it's rising with sandbags.
All of a sudden, part of the levee sort of pushed forward.
People started screaming and running and rolling off the levee,
and then imagine a thousand fire hydrants bursting forth at the same time.
Somebody said that they heard what sounded like dozens of railroad trains
coming through the forest at them.
And that was the water. You're listening to ThruLine from NPR.
And on this episode, the great flood of 1927.
Well, we're about to start climbing the levee.
And once we cross the street, we will be facing the Mississippi River.
And it is a big river.
The voice you're hearing belongs to John Barry.
He lives in New Orleans.
I'm a writer, and we're standing on the
levee looking out at the Mississippi River. I became a river rat. You know, T.S. Eliot wrote,
the river is within us. And, you know, for some reason, the Mississippi always seemed to be within
me. He looks out on the Mississippi River every day, which explains his obsession with its awesomeness.
It drains 31 states and two Canadian provinces.
And the drainage basin actually stretches almost from Buffalo, New York, all the way to the Rockies.
So it's a pretty, pretty large area.
And it carries a tremendous amount of water.
The Mississippi River, this tremendous amount of water, floods.
It's flooded hundreds of times.
But there's one historic flood that John wrote an entire book about,
called Rising Tide, the Great Mississippi Flood of 1927 and How It Changed America.
The flood inundated seven states from Illinois down to Louisiana, where the river
swelled to 80 miles wide. For context, the Grand Canyon, on average, is only 10 miles wide. And
more than half a million people were displaced for months. From a money standpoint, it's estimated
that the flood created a billion dollars in property damage, which in 1927
was a third of the U.S. federal budget. So when you think of it in those terms,
it was enough to have some impact on the national economy. It had significantly greater impact
on American culture, on demographics, and particularly on politics.
This story about the most destructive river flood in our country's history
takes us to an inflection point in the ongoing battle
between big government and small government approaches to crisis.
It's a story about a president who didn't think the disaster was his problem to
solve, and the inherent shortcomings and prejudice that are often tied to government response. Hi, I'm Pam.
My team is the winner of ThruLine Trivia,
and you're listening to ThruLine on NPR.
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Part 1. Search and Rescue. By the 1920s, folks who lived near the Mississippi River were used to floods. From the 19th century and into the 20th century, you have a number of man-made levees that were being built to confine the Mississippi River.
And that was supposed to
protect this region from flooding. This is Richard Mizzell, Jr. I am an associate professor of
history at the University of Houston, and I am the author of Backwater Blues, the Mississippi
Flood of 1927 in the African-American Imagination. So there were all these levees built up at the turn
of the 20th century to protect river communities from the near constant flooding they had become
used to. But there was so much rain in the first few months of 1927. It rained incessantly. That
people worried the levees wouldn't hold. The authorities tried to calm the public. They
downplayed the storms and doubled down on their confidence in the system.
The Corps of Engineers said for the first time they were in a position to contain the Mississippi River.
All levees are in fine condition and we expect no trouble.
The organization is functioning perfectly in all sectors.
Which is, of course, classic hubris.
Hubris that was quickly and tragically proven wrong.
The first breaks occurred in the upper valley, up by Cairo, Illinois. But slowly, but surely, these levees began to break throughout
the Mississippi Valley and into Louisiana and Mississippi in the cotton-producing regions.
This was really a domino effect. Once one levee began to break and the floodwaters began to sort of continue to push down towards the Gulf of Mexico, when those levees began to fail, you have a cascading effect of breaks throughout the Mississippi Valley.
At every point, people were fighting hard to save their homes, and at every point, the river defeated
them.
People were killed from Virginia to Oklahoma, but of course, the greatest damage was on
the lower Mississippi River in Arkansas, Mississippi, and Louisiana.
Perhaps the worst and most dramatic break happened in the Mississippi Delta, causing
it to be one of the regions hit hardest by the flood.
Then the water came out at the same rate they said as Niagara Falls.
And so when the levee broke, it was just, it was over.
This is Pete Daniel, a researcher and the former senior curator of the Smithsonian's
National Museum of American History. He's also the author of Deepen As It Come,
a book on the flood, with multiple firsthand accounts from survivors.
I interviewed these people in 1975, and they were old, but their memories were vivid.
Pete traveled down to the Delta with a tape recorder to talk to whoever he could find who was willing to share their experiences. I asked Mrs. Coralie Campbell
about the flood, and she started by saying, well, I believe it was a Thursday.
And then she gave this frantic description of what happened that morning and how she barely escaped
and got her son, Roosevelt Campbell Jr., in her arms and took him up to the levee, the highest ground still.
The Mississippi Delta is flat farmland, so when the water came, it stayed.
The only dry ground was up on the levee itself, so Mrs. Campbell wasn't the only one climbing up that muddy hill in search of safety. Thousands of people took refuge on the tops of levees.
And, you know, that's a crown that then was about eight feet wide
and then sloped off to the side.
It's not a very comfortable place to be.
And you might be there for certainly days and maybe a good deal longer.
Other people were stranded in trees or their roofs for weeks at a time.
They couldn't come down because the waters were still rushing.
These floodwaters could be deep and they could be dangerous
and they could be fast-moving.
You could easily drown or the rip currents would take you away
if you were not careful.
There were splintered houses.
There were cows, pigs just rolling over and over in this round surf.
You would see alligators and water moccasins in the street, in people's homes.
People talked about walking over thousands upon thousands of crawfish and snakes
and other river creatures.
The cows started lowing.
The dogs were barking.
People were screaming.
It was a total chaos.
The water covered the entire delta like an unforgiving blanket
until it eventually stifled all that noise into a deafening
silence. There was nothing alive. Everything had drowned. There were no sounds. There was nothing.
With all that noise and then all that silence,
people couldn't just sit around and wait to be rescued by the federal government.
So they took matters into their own hands.
The rescuers in most of the Mississippi Delta were mostly bootleggers who came from Arkansas,
and they had boats, and pretty good boats.
It was prohibition.
And yes, the rogue superheroes were bootleggers.
They claimed some of the biggest stuff was moonshine.
Well, whether they were or not, I couldn't say.
But they played a big part in it, too, because they used to run the night home.
And they were here about two, three days.
And the other superheroes? Mailmen.
Obviously, all the roads were underwater, but they would put a mailman in the back of the boat who knew the terrain
and could say, well, they're, you know, two miles that way,
there's 50 people who may need rescue.
You show up and there are 50 people in a barn, things like that.
For example, Herman Calloway had a boat, a powerboat, and he tied a skiff behind it,
and he just went out and rescued people with his own boat,
pulled them off of houses, treetops, and whatever.
And when he stopped at houses to get people,
people would get on the boat,
and dogs and chickens and the thing,
they would jump in the boat too.
Or chickens would automatically jump in the boat.
The rescue went on day and night.
So one thing I had to do was keep a gun in the boat so when your boat was getting loaded,
they'd just keep jumping on as you wouldn't tell them to get off.
They wouldn't stand for that.
But there was a couple of times I had to raise that gun.
I said, if another one of you drops something in here,
I'm going to shoot the rest of you off.
I put it out.
Slowed them down?
Yeah, slowed them down.
And then moved the ship.
In three days, Herman Calaluet saved 150 people.
Individuals taking initiative in a matter of a few days is beyond remarkable.
Remarkable, but not enough to save the hundreds of thousands of people displaced by this crisis.
There needed to be a national response.
The problem was, the president of the United States
didn't think this was his problem.
Well, of course, Coolidge is president.
Coolidge was a strange guy.
Calvin Coolidge, whose nickname was Silent Cal.
Because he didn't talk much.
His son had developed a blister after playing tennis in the White House.
Tennis courts had got infected and he died.
And after that, he said the power and the glory of the presidency went with it.
He almost seemed to lose all interest in his office.
Republican governors, Republican senators begged him to go south to show his support for people who were suffering.
But the pleading fell on deaf ears.
For instance, when a Philadelphia Republican told Coolidge that if he visited the flood district, the thrill would go through the country. Coolidge declined.
When the president of the Mississippi State Board of Development pleaded,
Mississippi Valley needs your help now.
Coolidge declined.
When the governor of Mississippi begged for the third time,
telling the president,
your coming would result in securing millions of dollars of additional aid.
Coolidge declined.
When NBC asked him to broadcast a nationwide appeal,
and when the famous Will Rogers asked for a telegram
to read at a benefit concert.
All these requests, Coolidge declined.
Coolidge wanted nothing to do with this mess.
He saw it as something states had to clean up
with the help of charitable donations and the Red Cross.
But the one thing he did do
was appoint a man to orchestrate that aid and relief effort, to serve as a sort of flood czar.
And that man was Herbert Hoover.
He was often referred to as the great humanitarian.
He had quite a track record.
During World War I, he organized a relief effort to feed occupied Belgium.
Right after the war, he fed much of Europe.
The continent was prostrate.
And so he organized that relief and made a name for himself.
And then he got into politics. And so by 1927, Herbert Hoover is Secretary of Commerce. There weren't a lot of
people he actually got along with very well because he was actually very shy. At one point,
he said he couldn't stand the pneumatic drill of constant human contact,
which is an odd thing for a politician to say, but if you give him a problem to solve,
then he was in his element. Hoover hopped on a train from D.C. and headed straight to Memphis,
where he set up his relief headquarters. From there, he addressed the nation in one of the first ever
national radio broadcasts.
I am speaking to you from the temporary headquarters, which we have established for the national
fight against the most dangerous flood our country has ever known. It is difficult to
picture in words the might of the Mississippi in flood.
He described the situation to American citizens all across the country to solicit sympathy and donations.
But thousands more have need to be removed in boats.
Other thousands are camped upon broken levees.
This is the pitiable plight of a lost battle.
There were many people who were moved by this.
And so you had kids setting up lemonade stands.
You had theater companies who would pass a donation can up and down the aisles.
Churches would have two donations, one for tithes and offerings and the other for the Mississippi flood.
You had Guam and Haiti sending cables of $500 or $200.
So the fact that there were so many people who were willing to give money and put forward
charitable operations really shows how prevalent this disaster was in the imaginations of most
people in this country. With millions of dollars pouring in, the Red Cross teamed up with the Army to set out on perhaps the largest Delta in the form of hydroplanes, boats, cutters, but also
planes. The planes were used to spot refugees. And any number of people I talked to said a sea
plane would fly over and they would wave their white handkerchief at it. They'd be on the roof
or something. And an hour or so later a boat would come.
So it was very effective.
The United States Army sent cots, they sent blankets, they sent cooks. And so it really did resemble for quite a bit of time a war zone.
The whole operation thrown together from scratch, from essentially zero,
in a matter of a few days is beyond
remarkable. The rescue missions were just the beginning. There was nowhere for these people
to go. Their homes were either still completely flooded or destroyed altogether. They were
refugees. And they hated that name. Mrs. Campbell said, they called us refugees.
I guess that's what we were.
But she said it with total distaste.
So the Red Cross set up refugee camps, more than 150 of them.
They were mostly tent cities, and they were scattered all the way from the state of Missouri
down through Mississippi and Louisiana, almost to the Gulf.
Around 600,000 people were being housed, clothed, or fed by the Red Cross across the country.
And Herbert Hoover was looking like a hero.
There was a very triumphalist narrative that you would see in most newspapers.
That's very much American.
That's what America wants to hear. They want to hear,
oh, it was good. Everything worked out. There were heroes. And if there was the slightest
criticism of anything, Hoover would always respond. He let nothing slip, even from the
tiniest weekly paper in America. And of course, an editor of such a paper
would be astonished and, you know, flattered
to receive a response, and it would be printed.
He definitely used this flood as a springboard
into the 1928 presidency.
He knew how to use the press.
And in the middle of the flood,
with editorials hailing him as the great humanitarian, begging him to run for president, and this is in Democratic papers,
not just Republican papers. He is the ablest and most efficient American in public life.
In personal fitness for the presidency, there's no other American, even remotely, in Mr. Hoover's class.
The Oakland Tribune.
But the press then was no different than it is today.
It loves to hype someone, and it's just as happy to tear that person down if it has any good reason. The problem with that was that there were rumors and reports and confirmations that African-Americans were being mistreated in these American Red Cross relief camps.
These camps were mostly in the South, and not surprisingly, abuses began to surface.
And this began to leak into what was then referred to as the Negro press.
And Hoover recognized that a scandal that developed in those papers
might easily spread to the New York Times and the generally red press.
So he moved pretty rapidly to try to prevent that from happening.
When we come back, dueling narratives over what's really happening in the relief camps,
while Hoover does whatever it takes to preserve his path to the presidency. This is Sheena. What am I supposed to say again?
I forgot.
No, no. Oh, you can just say you're listening to ThruLine from NPR.
You're listening to ThruLine from NPR. Thank you. That was a good
one. Yeah. That sounded professional. I want to get into voiceovers if, you know, any of you can help.
I like it. I respect that.
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Part 2. The Promise
When the levee system along the river collapsed, the result was more than 23,000 square miles of land
submerged completely underwater. Some parts of the country, including residential neighborhoods,
were 30 feet underwater. The water just sat there while people left behind sat in camps.
And that's where they stayed until the water went down, sometimes weeks, sometimes months.
And of course, during that time,
they didn't know what happened to their belongings. They didn't know if their house was still there,
if what was in the house was still salvageable, whether or not they'd be able to plant a crop that year. All those questions of a person who's in a camp and doesn't know what happened back home. The flood dominated the national conversation,
and the press kept it going with daily front-page news stories
that painted Hoover as a national treasure,
a narrative that helped catapult him into the mix of the 1928 presidential candidates.
But there were two narratives forming about what life was like
for flood refugees living in these camps under his watch, specifically for Black refugees in the Mississippi Delta.
Well, many of them were saying that they were being forced into labor, where white individuals in these relief camps were receiving supplies, food, tents, free of charge.
Many African Americans had to work for this charity that was being given by citizens across the country.
The headline was like peonage in Red Cross camps.
Refugees herded like cattle to stop escape from peonage.
The Chicago Defender.
Conscript labor gangs keep flood refugees in legal bondage.
The Pittsburgh Courier.
Well, at that moment, I didn't know what peonage was,
but it's debt servitude.
It was so sensational that there was still slavery in Mississippi.
Sensational since slavery had officially ended
almost 65 years before the flood.
But now, many descendants of former slaves
were finding themselves under similar circumstances
to those before emancipation.
And word was traveling to Black newspapers up north
about what was going on down south.
If you were African American and you arrived
at one of these Red Cross relief camps,
then you would have to give the name of a white person that you worked for.
If you did not work for a white person as a sharecropper or as a domestic or in any other capacity, then you had to have some white person to vouch for you before you were given food or a tent.
They were given a tag, which they had to have at all times,
and they were prevented from leaving and entering the Red Cross relief camps freely.
To not be able to move in and out of the relief camps was an affront to many African Americans across the country,
resembling a form of 20th century slavery in many ways.
They wasn't given too good of food from that Red Cross up there.
Some of the people got beat bad up there.
Many found themselves being held at gunpoint in these Red Cross relief camps,
sometimes guarded by
national guardsmen, sometimes guarded by sort of small boys who were given guns by their fathers
to guard these individuals. At any given time, if laborers were needed to load sandbags, to lift sandbags, to carry sandbags, these men could be conscripted
for labor. And if they refused to do so, then they were subjected to violence.
It was the Jim Crow South. The Ku Klux Klan was at its height, and many Black people in the Delta
worked as sharecroppers. They lived and worked on white-owned plantations
and paid rent by coughing up a portion of their crop.
This created a cycle of seasonal, never-ending debt
that the Black farmers owed to the plantation owners.
Because not only would they have to make a profit
with the sharecropping system itself,
but they would have to pay back the debt and the loans
that were provided to them by the landowners.
And so this system was inherently flawed.
It was unscrupulous, and it was really designed
to keep sharecroppers in debt every year.
And white planters had every reason to want to keep the Black planters in debt.
That debt kept them tied to working their plantations,
which was hugely important in 1927 because...
This was also the moment of the Great Migration
in which African Americans, roughly 3.5 million African Americans
between 1915 and 1970,
migrated out of Mississippi, Louisiana, Alabama,
other parts of the South,
to the North, Chicago, Detroit, New York City, Philadelphia.
There was a huge fear on behalf of white planters that many of these sharecroppers
and other workers would use this as an opportunity to migrate North,
that this was the last straw, this was an opportunity to leave this country for
good. There were people in the camps who made efforts to leave the camps and head to Chicago
or Detroit or Los Angeles. They had lost everything. Why should they stay? And yet,
leaving was almost impossible with soldiers guarding the gates. While some black and white refugees were evacuated north, many people were left behind.
Some say that black farmers were left behind intentionally so that they couldn't get out of their sharecropping debts.
John Barry says that happened in Greensville, Mississippi.
The fact is that there were several dozen steamboats pulling barges who had gathered in Greenville.
They could have evacuated the 10,000 to 15,000 people in a day and taken them to safety.
But that's not what happened.
A group of planters pointed out that if that happened, the labor force would go away.
And when the water went down, there'd be nobody to work on the plantations.
And instead, the steamboats left Greenville empty.
And that's what happened.
You know, there were roughly 150 refugee camps,
and this one single camp in Greenville, Mississippi,
developed a reputation as the single worst camp to be an African American.
Whites were kicking culleds and beating them and knocking them around like dogs.
Hungry people, they wouldn't feed them sometimes.
Just like dogs, I'll tell you.
They were treated like dogs.
African American newspapers in the North and Midwest got tipped off about these realities,
and journalists like Ida B. Wells started publishing stories about what was going on.
These people of our race are giving Mr. Hoover a loving cup in appreciation of his good work for them,
while their own people are being treated like slaves.
Herbert Hoover's position was that they were not in a position to go against the local norms and the local customs,
that they were just channeling this money into the hands of people who were in need.
In the Mississippi Delta, of course, they channeled much of that money through politicians and businesses who were sort of no friends, to put it lightly, to African Americans.
And so by remaining neutral, the criticism was that they were essentially allowing this discrimination to occur by their silence.
Hoover was basically saying, look, all we can do is funnel money to local institutions and have them run things on
the ground. Problem was, those local institutions were run by people with racist agendas. And
instead of pushing back against the local powers, he decided to run some serious damage control.
What Hoover did then was contact a man named Robert Moten.
Robert Moten.
He was the head of the Tuskegee Institute, which is now Tuskegee University, made famous by Booker T. Washington.
And Washington had created what was referred to as the Tuskegee machine, a political machine of African-Americans that was important
to the Republican Party. At the time, of course, every African-American who voted anywhere in
America voted Republican. Lincoln, of course, had freed the slaves.
Hoover was a Republican and needed to stay in good graces with the African-American base that
supported his party, which was more important than ever with his eyes on the presidency.
So he got in touch with the most powerful black, unquote, and Moten was going to be
its head. And he wired Moten to invite him to come to Memphis and, in fact, spelled his name wrong
in the wire. But for the opportunity to meet Hoover and be a player, Moten got over the offense.
This colored advisory commission was tasked with investigating the abuses of the refugee camps and compiling a report of the findings.
Moten accepted the position and got to work.
He formed a group of the nation's top black leaders who set out to visit the camps and document the conditions.
So you have this commission that contains a lot of important African-Americans.
And, you know, they go to the camps, they do an investigation, and they put it all down in writing.
And, well, that's when the shit hit the fans.
The Colored Advisory Commission delivered its report to Hoover,
detailing the discrimination and abuse that was taking place in the camps,
particularly in the Mississippi Delta.
Hoover was not pleased.
Because Moten's report told exactly what was going on in the camps.
And Hoover didn't want that.
He wanted praise.
And he browbeat Moten.
I mean, he really browbeat him to take all that out.
Hoover intimated that he wanted the report to be revised,
with all the incriminating findings removed.
But such a bold request came with an equally bold offer.
He made an extraordinary suggestion to Robert Moten.
And that suggestion was, since the Delta was underwater,
Louisiana was underwater, Arkansas was underwater, all those, most of those plantations
had no financial resources and could not recover. And Hoover proposed creating an entity that would allow the transition from sharecropping to ownership
so that eventually tens of thousands of people who are sharecroppers would soon own that land.
That Hoover would plan to raise money through the flood effort
and use that financial resource to bankroll the beginning
of that.
Hoover was insinuating putting an end, in effect, to the sharecropping system in the
U.S. and that with his help, the flood could actually turn these Black farmers into first-time
landowners.
And he made this case of providing 20 acres to select African Americans to farm in the aftermath of the flood to rehabilitate both laborers and the environmental landscape.
He called it a land resettlement plan. And for the time, it was revolutionary.
This was 1927. So the planters needed this labor and they didn't want anybody to interfere with their labor. And if you tried to revise the sharecropping system, you were messing with their labor. people would not agree to that. Most people sort of did not believe that this was a reality.
But nonetheless, Hoover floated that idea past Moten.
And Moten told the national Black political leadership that this was the most important
thing to happen to the race since the slaves were freed. And he believed it. I am not at liberty to give you details,
but you will hear about it soon. But the Red Cross Fund would doubtless be the instrument
for doing something in behalf of the Negro more significant than anything which has happened
since emancipation. Hoover was dangling a carrot. and if Moten played along by revising the report,
he would be granted a reward beyond his wildest dreams. So Moten played along and watered down
the report. And so the final report is Pablo. Everything's fine. Some of Moten's most respected colleagues were skeptical of this offer
and skeptical of Moten himself. We have grave suspicions that the Moten committee will be
sorely tempted to whitewash the whole situation, to pat Mr. Hoover loudly on the back, and to make
no real effort to investigate the desperate and evil conditions of that section of
our country. The one fatal thing for them to do, and the thing for which the American Negro will
never forgive them, is spineless surrender to the administration and flattery for the guilty Red
Cross, W.E.B. Du Bois. Despite such strong disapproval,
Moten felt there was no way he could pass something up
that could be so groundbreaking for his fellow black Americans.
You know, this was an implicit quid pro quo, as most of them are.
But clearly, Moten had every reason to do anything he could possibly do to see to it that Hoover was nominated and elected.
So he made a point not only of whitewashing the report, but working as hard as he possibly could to ensure Hoover's nomination. When we come back,
Hoover continues to rise as the waters recede,
and his promise is put to the test.
Hi, this is Ryan,
and I'm in recovery from an L5-S1 spinal fusion surgery
I just had a couple hours ago.
You're listening to ThruLine by NPR.
Part 3. The Betrayal
Now, to understand what's going to happen next, we have to talk about the Republican Party,
the party of Lincoln. By the time of the Mississippi Flood, the party had presided over
unprecedented economic growth, and their rhetoric emphasized personal responsibility and the power
of individualistic American capitalism, and most importantly, small government.
By adherence to the principles of decentralized self-government,
ordered liberty, equal opportunity, and freedom to the individual, our American experiment in Calvin Coolidge decided not to run again in 1928,
and in his stead was Herbert Hoover.
And he really wanted to be president.
It is the American system.
It is founded upon the conception that only through ordered liberty, freedom, and equal opportunity to the individual
will his initiative and enterprise spur on the march of progress.
The Hoover campaign pointed to his self-made success,
his sense of rugged individualism,
and the swift action he took in response to the Mississippi flood.
The campaign even produced a film about Hoover called Master of Emergencies.
The Republicans were now the party of decentralization, of the free market,
and Hoover was the consummate symbol for this
corporate future. Calvin Coolidge summed up this philosophy in the simplest way possible,
when he said, the chief business of the American people is business.
And with a powerful candidate like Hoover, the Republicans saw an opening to steal some
Democratic voters in the South,
which was a big deal because back then, Democrats were the party behind many racist Jim Crow policies.
And in the lead up to Election Day, right there in the mix supporting Hoover was Robert
Moten.
And he did everything he possibly could do to see that Hoover was nominated and elected.
Moten went to Black leaders urging them to publicly back Hoover, despite their reservations.
After all, Moten believed that he'd potentially secured a game-changing promise from Hoover.
Because remember, the whole ending Black sharecropping thing
was not Moten's idea. It was Hoover's idea.
Whether it was a, quote, quid pro quo or not,
Moten very much expected Hoover as president to move forward on that.
Herbert Clark Hoover has been elected president
of the United States.
His electoral vote now stands at 418
and may reach the unprecedented total of 467.
Herbert Hoover won the 1928 election in a landslide. He has cut into the solid south
for the first time in 50 years, and latest returns indicate he has carried Virginia
and North Carolina and probably Florida. Texas is in the balance.
These four states have voted Democratic for 50 years.
The Republican has swept the Corn Belt as well as every other Midwest state.
But this was not the way Moten viewed Hoover's election.
He saw it as a huge opportunity to end sharecropping in the South through Hoover's land resettlement scheme.
And what did Hoover do once he got into office?
Nothing.
It was as if Hoover had never heard of it,
even though it was his own idea.
Hoover delayed meeting with Moten over and over.
But Moten didn't stop.
He continued to try to push Hoover to act.
And even though it was clear Hoover wasn't going to do anything,
Moten didn't give up.
He came up with another plan.
He tried to raise money to enact the policy privately.
Moten began making arrangements with major private donors,
like the Rockefellers, but not exclusively John D. Rockefeller.
There were others as well who were very supportive of Tuskegee and African Americans in the South in general.
He even got an agreement from Hoover to show up and speak to the donors privately.
A word from you with half a dozen gentlemen, in my opinion, would settle the matter in an hour, so far as the financial end of
it is concerned. He tried to arrange meetings and had them all set up, and all he was hoping for
was for Hoover to show up at the meeting and give the most bland endorsement. You will, I know,
forgive me for this seeming persistence in the matter,
but if you could make the trip to New York as you had one time suggested,
it would assure success at the start.
And Hoover did nothing.
Kind of reminiscent of Coolidge's refusal to do anything during the flood.
Moten, as you can imagine, was disappointed,
understanding that this was probably not likely in an oppressive era of the Jim Crow South.
The deal Moten thought he had was an illusion.
And it leaves us with the obvious question.
Why?
Why would Hoover so easily turn his back on his own idea?
Well, we don't know why he dropped it.
You know, there's no smoking gun.
There's no written record.
It could be that he just was using Moten, it could be that Hoover's landslide election opened up other possibilities,
and that was a white Republican Party in the South that might begin to rival the Democrats.
And doing something for the African-American community would have killed
those efforts. Could be that Hoover, after all, just decided it was a bad idea and wouldn't work.
We don't really know why. We can only speculate.
Regardless of his motivations, one thing is clear. Hoover's broken promise and inaction as president
cooled his relationship with Moulton and many in the black political elite.
This betrayal, it really snapped the emotional connection
between the national African-American political leadership
and the Republican Party, or certainly between them and Hoover.
The Chicago Defender, a major Black newspaper, wrote this in 1928.
Strange as it may seem, the Democrats are more favorable to the political and social aspirations of the Black man than other Republicans. And by 1932, when Hoover ran against the Democratic candidate Franklin D. Roosevelt,
Moten and many other black leaders didn't come out and publicly endorse Hoover.
Which was almost inconceivable given the connections between African-Americans
and the Republican Party ever since Lincoln.
I'm not saying that Hoover's betrayal shifted Black voters to the Democratic Party because
the average African-American voter was unaware of the deal, but it did create certain openings.
Openings that the Democratic Party stepped into.
But we don't want to oversimplify too much here.
African-Americans shifting to the Democratic Party was a long and complicated process that deserves its own episode of the show.
But according to John Barry, Hoover's broken promise?
It was certainly a starting point.
While all of the politics were playing out at the national level,
back along the Mississippi, some people were going back home.
Or what remained of their homes.
The camps operated until the people could go back home.
In some cases, it was weeks.
In some cases, months.
And what they went back to was usually,
if the house was intact, it stunk.
All the river things had passed through it. Snakes. Sometimes people found snakes, frogs,
whatever still in the houses. The walls were pretty much
destroyed. And it was almost impossible to get the smell
out. And then people would go back and their house wouldn't be there anymore.
Many people described an eeriness to the Mississippi Delta.
And so places like Greenville and Cleveland sort of took on this aura of death that lasted for quite a while.
And you can see it in the photos.
They're like scenes from war.
Streets filled with debris, buildings empty,
families picking up the pieces of the places they once called home.
But as much as things had changed,
in a way, everything was the same.
Much of the landscape would come to resemble, you know, pre-1927 in the sense of, you know, sharecroppers were re-inscribed to their debt.
The racial system was not washed away in the flood, as some people argued and hoped for.
It was in many ways a status quo in terms of, you know, how African-Americans were treated.
Sharecropping continued in the South for decades.
The flood had dislodged thousands of people,
but left the racist system that ruled over them in place.
One witness to the flood, named Lucy Somerville,
called it a great mountain of water that brought death and destruction.
Those words, that description, is as old as humanity itself.
Over and over, throughout our history, our lives have been upended and uprooted by the indifference of nature.
This is why the flood myth plays an integral role in our ancient holy stories.
It is a fear that we constantly live with.
The 27th flood was really the first time we began to really think about what does it mean to be in this particular space that's vulnerable?
What does it mean to be in this particular space where you are vulnerable as a citizen?
And what do people try to do after a disaster to better their situation?
And I think that's one of the lasting legacies of the 1927 flood.
But what happened in 1927 isn't just an inevitable stop along the path of natural
destruction. It's what happened after the levees broke that reminds us how much our response to
crises as individuals and as a society, flawed with prejudice and injustice, exacerbates their
already tragic impacts. Today, our country is still shaped in sometimes imperceptible ways
by the suffering and broken promises of that terrible year.
If we are to draw any lessons from the enormous tragedy,
it's that doing nothing will never be enough. That's it for this week's show.
I'm Ramtin Adablui.
I'm Randa Abdel-Fattah.
And you've been listening to ThruLine from NPR.
The episode was produced by me.
And me.
And.
Jamie York.
Lawrence Wu.
Lane Kaplan-Levinson.
Julie Kane.
Nigery Eaton. Fact-checking for this episode was done by Kevin Vocal.
Special thanks to Diane Mack
Alan Shapiro
Jason Fuller
Alex Curley
Steve Tyson
JC Howard
Travis Lux
Avi Wolfman-Arent
Ken Black
Kia Miyaka-Natisse
and Nikolai Hammer for their voiceover work.
Thanks also to Cara Talo and Anya Grunman.
Our music was composed by Ramtin and his band, which includes
If you have an idea or like something on the show,
please write us at throughline at npr.org
or find us on Twitter at Throughline NPR.
Thanks for listening.