Racial Injustice
The Wilmington Coup and Massacre
November 10, 1898, marked a dark day in American history when a white supremacist mob seized power in Wilmington, North Carolina, overthrowing the legitimately elected biracial government. This event, known as the Wilmington Coup and Massacre, stands as a stark reminder of the racial injustice and violence that plagued the post-Reconstruction South.
On November 10th, the carefully orchestrated plan unfolded. Armed white mobs stormed through the streets, attacking Black businesses and homes. They forced city officials to resign at gunpoint and installed their own leaders. The violence escalated into a massacre, with an estimated 60 to 300 African Americans losing their lives.
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The Wilmington Coup was not just about seizing political power; it was a deliberate attempt to strip Black citizens of their hard-won rights and to reassert white supremacy. The event had long-lasting consequences, ushering in an era of Jim Crow segregation and disenfranchisement that would last for decades.