Racial #History
On this dayJul 29, 1910
White Mob Massacres Black Residents in Slocum, Texas
Beginning on July 29, 1910, a white mob of hundreds massacred Black residents in and around Slocum, a majority-Black community near Palestine, Texas. According to some estimates, the mob killed as many as 200 Black people in the span of just two days. Hundreds more fled the area in the aftermath of the massacre, forced to leave their homes, farms, and businesses behind.
Most newspapers downplayed the extent of the violence and claimed that the white mobs only shot at Black citizens after being threatened. However, contemporaneous and subsequent investigations found that the massacre was wholly unprovoked. A local sheriff commented to the New York Times that white men βwere going about killing Negroes as fast as they could find them.β He continued, βThese Negroes have done no wrong that I can discover β¦ They hunted the Negroes down like sheep.β
Two weeks after the massacre, a group of Black ministers called on President William Howard Taft to intervene in Texas to βsuppress lynching, murder and other forms of lawlessnessβ and βmake human life more valuable and law more universally respected.β President Taft declined to take action, characterizing the widespread racial violence as a state matter rather than a federal one.
While at least 11 members of the mob were arrested and seven were indicted, no one was ever prosecuted or convicted for their role in the massacre.
The Slocum Massacre was not officially acknowledged in Texas by state or local officials until 2011β100 years after it took place. In 2016, descendants of victims of the massacre unveiled a historical marker recognizing the Slocum Massacre and commemorating those who were killed.