Silent Parade


The Negro Silent Protest Parade, commonly known as the Silent Parade, was a political protest in New York City on July 28, 1917. The primary objective of the march was to draw national attention to the widespread racial violence and entrenched systemic discrimination endured by African Americans. It was organized in direct response to a series of racially motivated attacks in 1916 and 1917, including the East St. Louis massacre and lynchings in Waco and Memphis.
The parade was organized by a coalition of African American groups, led by the recently formed NAACP. Starting at 57th Street, the parade route proceeded down Fifth Avenue, ending at Madison Square. It was a silent procession, with an estimated 8,000 to 15,000 African American participants marching in protest, accompanied by a muffled drum beat.
The event was widely publicized and drew attention to violence against African Americans. Organizers hoped the parade would prompt the federal government to enact anti-lynching legislation, but President Woodrow Wilson did not act on their demands. Federal legislation was required because Southern states often refused to prosecute lynchings under existing state statutes that outlawed murder, kidnapping, and assault. The federal government would not pass an anti-lynching law until 2022, when the Emmett Till Antilynching Act was passed.

Background

Lynching

Lynchings are extrajudicial killings carried out—often under the pretense of punishing alleged crimes—by individuals or groups lacking legal or law enforcement authority. These acts frequently involve mob violence and are commonly driven by racial animus. In the United States, documented instances of lynching date back to the 1830s. Lynching was a brutal manifestation of racism directed at African Americans, occurring alongside systemic forms of discrimination such as disenfranchisement and segregation. The frequency of lynchings steadily increased after the Civil War peaking around 1892. They remained common into the early 1900s, with a notable spike in 1915 following the founding of the Second Ku Klux Klan.
Southern states often failed to prosecute lynchings under existing state laws prohibiting murder, kidnapping, and assault. Federal authorities lacked the legal means to intervene, as no federal statutes at the time specifically criminalized lynching. In response, anti-lynching activists in the early 1900s advocated for new federal legislation to empower federal prosecutors to take action when state officials refused to do so.
The Silent Parade took place at a time when the anti-lynching movement was gaining momentum, led in large part by the NAACP. Founded in 1909, the NAACP sought to advance equal rights for African Americans. Two years before the Silent Parade, the NAACP's magazine The Crisis published an article titled "The Lynching Industry", which contained a year-by-year tabulation of 2,732 lynchings, spanning the years 1884 to 1914. During the year leading up to the parade, The Crisisedited by W. E. B. Du Boispublished a series of articles documenting specific lynchings, including: a group lynching of six African Americans in Lee County, Georgia; the lynching of Jesse Washington, a mentally impaired 17-year-old African American, in Waco, Texas; and the lynching of Ell Persons in Memphis, Tennessee. Anger over these lynchings was one of the motivations for the Silent Parade.

World War I

In April 1917, one month before the East St. Louis massacre, the United States declared war on the German Empire and joined the Allied Powers of World War I. The mobilization effort dominated the headlines in the United States. African American soldiers of that era were treated as second-class citizens, and were segregated from white troops. African Americans had mixed feelings about the war: some recognized military service as an opportunity to demonstrate their worth; others viewed it as yet another situation where they would be exploited by their country. Some African American leaders, such as Du Bois, voiced pro-war sentiments, and encouraged African Americans to join the military.

East St. Louis massacre

The Silent Parade was triggered by a series of riots in East St. Louis between May and July 1917. The rioting, by white residents, originated when the mostly white employees of the Aluminum Ore Company voted in Spring 1917 for a labor strike and the company recruited hundreds of African Americans to replace them.
The ensuing racial tensions led to widespread violence, with an estimated 39 to 200 African Americans killed by white people. In addition, hundreds were injured, and thousands were displaced from their homes. Nine white Americans were killed.
Du Bois and activist Martha Gruening visited the city after the massacre and spoke with witnesses and survivors. In September 1917, they published a photo-essay in The Crisis that described the riots in graphic terms. After the riots, many African Americans were discouraged, and felt that it was unlikely that the United States would ever permit African Americans to enjoy full citizenship and equal rights. The brutality of the attacks by mobs of white people, coupled with the failure of police to protect the African American community, led to renewed calls for African American civil rights from leaders such as Du Bois, Hubert Harrison, and Marcus Garvey. In response, the NAACP began planning a public protest.

The parade

Planning

, the Field Secretary of the NAACP, worked with a group of influential community leaders from St. Philip's Church in New York to determine how best to protest the recent violence against African Americans.
Initial plans considered a protest at Carnegie Hall, but after the East St. Louis riots, Johnson proposed a silent march. The idea of a silent protest was based on a suggestion made in 1916 by Oswald Garrison Villard during an NAACP Conference. The Silent Parade was not the nation's first silent march: Villard's mother, anti-war activist Fanny Garrison Villard, had organized a silent march in 1914 to protest the war.
Johnson orchestrated the march, and his use of silencewhich contrasted sharply with the brutality of lynchings and race riotsserved to emphasize the message. Silence as a rhetorical tool was also employed by the Silent Sentinels suffrage protest group, which staged silent protests in front of the White House starting in January 1917.
The parade was organized by a committee composed of representatives from the NAACP, churches, and businesses. Two prominent members of the New York clergy served as executives of the parade: the president was Hutchens Chews Bishop, rector of the city's oldest African American Episcopal parish; and the secretary was Charles Martin, founder of the Fourth Moravian Church. Frederick Asbury Cullen served as vice president. Parade marshals included nationally prominent African Americans J. Rosamond Johnson, Christopher Payne, Everard W. Daniel, James Weldon Johnson, and John E. Nail. Du Bois marched within the group of parade leaders.
While the organizers of the Silent Parade did not explicitly exclude white people from marching, no white people participated because the parade was intended to be a demonstration of African American solidarity and unity.
A week before the parade, an announcement in the African American newspaper The New York Age described it as a "mute but solemn protest against the atrocities and discrimination practiced against the race in various parts of the country." The official name of the parade was the Negro Silent Protest Parade, although some contemporary sources referred to it as the Negro Silent Parade. Men, women, and children alike were invited to take part. It was hoped that ten thousand people would participate, and that African Americans in other cities might hold their own parades. During the week before the parade, major newspapers in several states published articles announcing the march.
The goal of the parade was to protest lynching in particular, and violence against African Americans in general. A specific objective was to urge President Woodrow Wilson to support the enactment of federal anti-lynching legislation. Organizers prepared a leaflet which was distributed before the parade as an invitation, and during the parade to bystanders. The leaflet contained a section titled "Why We March" which read, in part:
The leaflet was signed by Martin "Yours in righteous indignation."

The march

In the midst of a record heat wave in New York City on Saturday, July 28, an estimated 8,000 to 15,000 African Americans marched in silent protest. The march began at 57th Street, and proceeded down Fifth Avenue, ending at Madison Square. Mounted police escorted the parade.
Many marchers carried signs and banners that described contributions of African Americans to American society, or gave reasons for the protest. Some signs appealed directly to President Wilson. One banner displayed an African American family in the ruins of East St. Louis, pleading with Wilson to bring democracy to the U.S. before he brought it to Europe. Police deemed the banner in "bad taste", so parade organizers withdrew the banner before the parade began.
Several hundred children led the parade, followed by several thousand women dressed in white, then men. The men wore formal attire or military uniforms, and they marched in rows. Some of the men carried drums, which were muffled, and beat a slow cadence.
The placement of children and women at the front of the parade drew attention to the profound impact that lynching and racism had on African American families. Following the march, The Crisis published several photographs of the parade, all but one of which featured women and children. Their refined attire visually highlighted the connection between respectability and civil rights. Visual cues also made a connection between the military service of African Americans and their demands for equal rights. Some of the men wore their U.S. Army uniforms and carried placards drawing attention to the fact thatjust a few months before the parade African Americans were among the first U.S. soldiers to arrive in France after the U.S. joined WWI. A large sign carried at the front of the women's section read “The first blood for American independence was shed by a NegroCrispus Attucks.”
Over 20,000 spectators of all races looked on from both sides of Fifth Avenue, including an estimated 15,000 African Americans. African American Boy Scouts handed out leaflets describing why they were marching. Some White people stopped to listen to marchers explain the reasons for the march, while other White bystanders expressed support for the parade. Many spectators were moved by the spectacle; in his autobiography, organizer James Johnson wrote "the streets of New York have witnessed many strange sights, but I judge, never one stranger than this; among the watchers were those with tears in their eyes."