Background
The letter dated July 14th of 1863 was written in the midst of the New York City draft riots. On July 13, 1863, during a number drawing for the draft, approximately 500 people advanced upon the Ninth District Provost Marshal's Office on Third Ave and 47th Street, first throwing rocks at the building and then setting it on fire. A response to the conscription act passed by Congress authorizing the first draft in U.S. history, the riots and subsequent fires left many people homeless and over 100 dead. Lasting three days, the riots ended only after several regiments of militia and volunteer troops were sent to regain control over the city.
Scope of collection
The collection consists of a fragment of a letter from an unidentified correspondent addressed to "Dear Brother," dated July 14, 1863 from New York. In the letter the correspondent describes the drafts, which got off to a smooth start, but by Monday morning saw "...along several of the aves little groups of laboring men here and there...in earnest conversation." Before long, the letter continues, these small groups converged to make a mob of laboring men, who went around the city recruiting other working men to join their ranks. As the mob was formed the rioters began setting fire first to homes and then to businesses, ultimately setting fire to The Colored Orphan Asylum, tearing down telegraph poles and destroying railroad tracks. In the final section of what remains of the letter the correspondent describes an instance in which the rioters robbed and set fire to a house merely because they overheard a critical remark made by the woman who lived there.
Administrative information
Search terms
Subjects
- Draft Riot, New York, N.Y., 1863
- United States--History--Civil War, 1861-1865
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