African American Dating Brownsville Fl

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  • A native of Jupiter, Florida, Adams was a prominent member of the Brownsville community. His well-known business, Neal’s Grocery Market, relocated to Brownsville at 4825 N.W. 27 th Avenue from its original location in Railroad Shop Addition at 4801 N.W. 13 th Avenue, where it opened in January 1940.
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Brownsville affair
Fort Brown, where the 25th Infantry were stationed at the time of the Brownsville affair
DateAugust 1906
LocationBrownsville, Texas, United States
Also known asBrownsville raid, Affray at Brownsville
Deaths1

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The Brownsville affair, or the Brownsville raid, was an incident of racial discrimination that occurred in 1906 in the southwestern United States due to resentment by white residents of Brownsville, Texas, of the Buffalo Soldiers, black soldiers in a segregated unit stationed at nearby Fort Brown. When a white bartender was killed and a white police officer wounded by gunshots one night, townspeople accused the members of the African-American 25th Infantry Regiment. Although their commanders said the soldiers had been in the barracks all night, evidence was allegedly planted against the men.[1]

As a result of a United States Army Inspector General's investigation, President Theodore Roosevelt ordered the discharge without honor of 167 soldiers of the 25th Infantry Regiment, costing them pensions and preventing them from ever serving in federal civil service jobs. The case aroused national outrage in both black and white communities. After more investigation, several of the men were allowed to re-enlist.

Following publication of a history of the affair in the early 1970s, a renewed military investigation exonerated the discharged black troops. The government pardoned the men in 1972 and restored their records to show honorable discharges, but it did not provide retroactive compensation to them or their descendants. Only one man had survived to that time; Congress passed an act to provide him with a tax-free pension. The other soldiers who had been expelled all received posthumous honorable discharges.

Background[edit]

Soldier of the 25th Infantry (photo c. 1884–90)

Since arriving at Fort Brown on July 28, 1906, the black US soldiers had been required to follow the legal color line mandate from white citizens of Brownsville, which included the state's racial segregation law dictating separate accommodation for black people and white people, and Jim Crow customs such as showing respect for white people, as well as respect for local laws.[2]

August 12–13, 1906[edit]

A reported attack on a white woman during the night of August 12 incensed so many townspeople that Maj. Charles W. Penrose, after consultation with Mayor Frederick Combe, declared an early curfew for soldiers the following night to avoid trouble.[2]

On the night of August 13, 1906, bartender Frank Natus was killed and police lieutenant M. Y. Dominguez was wounded by gunshots in the town. Immediately the residents of Brownsville cast the blame on the black soldiers of the 25th Infantry at Fort Brown. But the all-white commanders at Fort Brown confirmed that all of the soldiers were in their barracks at the time of the shootings. Local whites, including Brownsville's mayor, still claimed that some of the black soldiers participated in the shooting.[3]

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Evidence[edit]

Local townspeople of Brownsville began providing evidence of the 25th Infantry's part in the shooting by producing spent bullet cartridges from Army rifles which they said belonged to the 25th's men. Despite the contradictory evidence that demonstrated the spent shells were planted in order to frame men of the 25th Infantry in the shootings, investigators accepted the statements of the local whites and the Brownsville mayor.[3]

Outcome[edit]

When soldiers of the 25th Infantry were pressured to name who fired the shots, they insisted that they had no idea who had committed the crime.[3]Captain Bill McDonald of the Texas Rangers investigated 12 enlisted men and tried to tie the case to them. The local county court did not return any indictments based on his investigation, but residents kept up complaints about the black soldiers of the 25th.[2]

At the recommendation of the Army's Inspector General, President Theodore Roosevelt ordered 167 of the black troops to be dishonorably discharged because of their 'conspiracy of silence'. Although some accounts have claimed that six of the troops were Medal of Honor recipients, historian Frank N. Schubert showed that none were. Fourteen of the men were later reinstated into the army.[4] The dishonorable discharge prevented the 153 other men from ever working in a military or civil service capacity. Some of the black soldiers had been in the U.S. Army for more than 20 years, while others were extremely close to retirement with pensions, which they lost as a result.[3]

The prominent African-American educator and activist, Booker T. Washington, president of Tuskegee Institute, got involved in the case. He asked President Roosevelt to reconsider his decision in the affair.[3] Roosevelt dismissed Washington's plea and allowed his decision to stand.

Congress steps in[edit]

Both blacks and many whites across the United States were outraged at Roosevelt's actions.[3] The black community began to turn against him, although it had previously supported the Republican president (in addition to maintaining loyalty to the party of Abraham Lincoln, black people approved of Roosevelt having invited Booker T. Washington to dinner at the White House and speaking out publicly against lynching). The administration withheld news of the dishonorable discharge of the soldiers until after the 1906 Congressional elections, so that the pro-Republican black vote would not be affected. The case became a political football, with William Howard Taft, positioning for the next candidacy for presidency, trying to avoid trouble.[2]

Leaders of major black organizations, such as the Constitution League, the National Association of Colored Women, and the Niagara Movement, tried to persuade the administration not to discharge the soldiers, but were unsuccessful.[5] From 1907–1908, the US Senate Military Affairs Committee investigated the Brownsville Affair, and the majority in March 1908 reached the same conclusion as Roosevelt. Senator Joseph B. Foraker of Ohio had lobbied for the investigation and filed a minority report in support of the soldiers' innocence. Another minority report by four Republicans concluded that the evidence was too inconclusive to support the discharges.[2] In September 1908, prominent educator and leader W. E. B. DuBois urged black people to register to vote and to remember their treatment by the Republican administration when it was time to vote for president.[5]

Feelings across the nation remained high against the government actions, but with Taft succeeding Roosevelt as president, and Foraker failing to win re-election, some of the political pressure declined.

On February 23, 1909, the Committee on Military Affairs recommended favorably on Bill S.5729 for correction of records and reenlistment of officers and men of Companies B, C, and D of the 25th Infantry [6]

Senator Foraker continued to work on the Brownsville affair during his remaining time in office, guiding a resolution through Congress to establish a board of inquiry with the power to reinstate the soldiers. The bill, which the administration did not oppose, was less than Foraker wanted. He had hoped for a requirement that unless specific evidence was shown against a man, he would be allowed to re-enlist. The legislation passed both houses,[7] and was signed by Roosevelt on March 2, 1909.[8]

On March 6, 1909, shortly after he left the Senate, Foraker was the guest of honor at a mass meeting at Washington's Metropolitan African Methodist Episcopal Church. Though both whites and African Americans assembled to recognize the former senator, all the speakers but Foraker were African American. Presented with a silver loving cup, he addressed the crowd,

I have said that I do not believe that a man in that battalion had anything to do with the shooting up of 'Brownsville,' but whether any one of them had, it was our duty to ourselves as a great, strong, and powerful nation to give every man a hearing, to deal fairly and squarely with every man; to see to it that justice was done to him; that he should be heard.[9]

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On April 7, 1909, under the provisions of the Act of March 30, 1909, a Military Court of Inquiry was set up by Secretary of War Jacob M. Dickinson to report on the charges and recommend for reenlistment those men who had been discharged under Special Order # 266, November 9, 1906. Of the 167 discharged men, 76 were located as witnesses, and 6 did not wish to appear.[10]

The 1910 Court of Military Inquiry undertook an examination of the soldiers' bids for re-enlistment, in view of the Senate committee's reports, but its members interviewed only about one-half of the soldiers discharged. It accepted 14 for re-enlistment, and eleven of these re-entered the Army.[5][11]

The government did not re-examine the case until the early 1970s.[2]

Later investigation and presidential pardon in 1970s[edit]

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In 1970, historian John D. Weaver published The Brownsville Raid, which investigated the affair in depth. Weaver argued that the accused members of the 25th Infantry were innocent and that they were discharged without benefit of due process of law as guaranteed by the United States Constitution. After reading his book, Congressman Augustus F. Hawkins of Los Angeles introduced a bill to have the Defense Department re-investigate the matter to provide justice to the accused soldiers.[citation needed]

In 1972, the Army found the accused members of the 25th Infantry to be innocent. At its recommendations, President Richard Nixon pardoned the men and awarded them honorable discharges, without backpay. These discharges were generally issued posthumously, as there were only two surviving soldiers from the affair: one had re-enlisted in 1910. In 1973, Hawkins and Senator Hubert Humphrey gained congressional passage of a tax-free pension for the last survivor, Dorsie Willis, who received $25,000. He was honored in ceremonies in Washington, DC, and Los Angeles.[12]

References[edit]

  1. ^Wormser, Richard (2002). 'The Brownsville Affair (1906)'. The Rise and Fall of Jim Crow. Jim Crow Stories. PBS, Educational Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved July 22, 2012.
  2. ^ abcdefChristian, Garna L. (June 12, 2010). 'Brownsville Raid of 1906'. The Handbook of Texas Online. Texas State Historical Association. Retrieved July 22, 2012.
  3. ^ abcdefWormser, Richard (2002). 'The Brownsville Affair (1906)'. The Rise and Fall of Jim Crow. Jim Crow Stories. PBS, Educational Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved July 22, 2012.
  4. ^Frank N. Schubert, 'The 25th Infantry at Brownsville, Texas: Buffalo Soldiers, the “Brownsville Six,” and the Medal of Honor,' Journal of Military History, October 2011, pp. 1217–1224.
  5. ^ abcRucker, Walter C.; Upton, James N., eds. (2007). 'The Brownsville (Texas) Riot of 1906'. Encyclopedia of American Race Riots. Hartford, Connecticut: Greenwood Publishing Company. pp. 81–83. ISBN978-0-313-33301-9. Retrieved July 22, 2012.
  6. ^Congressional serial set, By United States. Government Printing Office 1909 Report #2248
  7. ^Weaver 1992, pp. 147–150.
  8. ^Walters, p. 246. sfn error: no target: CITEREFWalters (help)
  9. ^Joseph Foraker, vol. 2, pp. 320–321, 326. sfn error: no target: CITEREFJoseph_Foraker,_vol._2 (help)
  10. ^Annual reports / United States. War Dept, Volume 1, 1909, p. 57-68
  11. ^United States Congressional serial set, Issue 5943 1911 Senate Document #833. pp.67–68. (Includes a list of those who re-enlisted.)
  12. ^Weaver, John D. (1992) [1970]. The Brownsville Raid (reprint, with new Afterword ed.). Texas A & M University. ISBN978-0-89096-528-3. Retrieved July 22, 2012.

Further reading[edit]

  • Christian, Garna L. (July 1989). 'The Brownsville Raid's 168th Man: The Court-Martial of Corporal Knowles'. Southwestern Historical Quarterly. 93.
  • Lane, Ann J. (1971). The Brownsville Affair: National Crisis and Black Reaction. Port Washington, New York: National University Publications, Kennikat Press.

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External links[edit]

  • Affray at Brownsville, Tex, Volume 1. By Francis Emroy Warren, United States. Army. Court-martial (Penrose : 1907), United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Military Affairs, United States. War Dept. 1907.
  • Report of the Senate Committee on Military Affairs regarding the Affray at Brownsville, Texas. U.S. Government Printing Office. 1908.
  • Congressional serial set Report #2248. U.S. Government Printing Office. 1909.
  • Annual reports / United States. War Dept, Volume 1. U.S. Government Printing Office. 1909.
  • United States Congressional serial set, Issue 5943. U.S. Government Printing Office. 1911.

African American Dating Brownsville Fl Map

Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Brownsville_affair&oldid=1000187307'

When he died in March 1996, Neal Adams left a legacy of exemplary service to the black community in Dade County and to the local branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP).

A native of Jupiter, Florida, Adams was a prominent member of the Brownsville community. His well-known business, Neal’s Grocery Market, relocated to Brownsville at 4825 N.W. 27th Avenue from its original location in Railroad Shop Addition at 4801 N.W. 13th Avenue, where it opened in January 1940. For a short time, when he and others were fighting the county’s eviction notice that cleared the way for construction of Allapattah Elementary and Middle schools, he operated The Sepian movie theater at the 27th Avenue site.

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His selfless service is legendary. He donated $25,000 in cash contributions for the construction of the well-known Brownsville Improvement Aviation Community Center building and helped other black businessmen in establishing their own firms. He also stopped mortgage foreclosures on numerous homes in the black community, assisted in securing welfare and other assistance for the needy and created numerous job opportunities within the black community of greater Miami.

African american dating brownsville florida

Adams also believed passionately in the right of blacks to receive just treatment under the law. As direct results of his successful efforts to register Brownsville residents to vote, the community gained stature with the county commission and successfully lobbied for the installation of street lights, paved roads, improved storm drainage, and other improvements. Neal supplied round-trip transportation to the voter registration office in downtown Miami and instruction on successfully completing registration process for those who agreed to take this step. Later, he and his wife set up a registration center in the market, 8 a.m. to 10 p.m., to facilitate the registration process for their Brownsville neighbors.

In recognition of his exemplary leadership, Adams became the first black chosen to serve on the Crime Commission of Greater Miami. He also was twice appointed to the Board of County Commissioners by the Governor of the State of Florida, even as he continued to immerse himself in the struggle to make equality of economic and political opportunity a reality for blacks in South Florida.

Adams’ involvements in the NAACP included a term as Regional NAACP Coordinator for the South East Region of Florida. In this capacity, he was involved in civil rights struggles from coast to coast. For his assistance in the reorganization of the Miami-Dade Branch, he received the Rughtledge H. Pearson Award, the most prestigious honor given by the Florida State conference of NAACP branches. The Adams-Powell Award, the highest award given to an individual by the local NAACP chapter, was named for Adams and his best friend, Richard Powell, who together gave many years’ service to the local NAACP chapter.

In honor of Neal Adams’ many important contributions to the spirit and the substance of the organization, the souvenir journal commemorating the 8th annual NAACP Freedom Fund Banquet, held on June 1, 1996, was dedicated to his memory.

Source: Article in the Souvenir journal, 8th Annual Freedom Fund Banquet, NAACP, June 1, 1996; and interview with Mrs. Ora Lee Adams, January 24, 1997, n.p.