Mar 31, 2016 - Sale 2408

Sale 2408 - Lot 377

Price Realized: $ 2,000
?Final Price Realized includes Buyer’s Premium added to Hammer Price
Estimate: $ 3,000 - $ 4,000
(MILITARY--WORLD WAR ONE.) PHOTOGRAPHY. "The Houston Riot of 1917 or Camp Logan Riot." Photograph, 9 x 14 inches, with margins; some slight creasing but not affecting the image. A detailed explanation of the court scene, written in white in the negative in the lower right corner. San Antonio, TX, 1917

Additional Details

one of only three known copies of this photograph of the trial of the 24th infantry soldiers, accused of mutiny and murder. On August 23rd, 1917, two Houston Texas police officers, who later claimed to be looking for someone, stormed the home of a black woman, dragging her into the street, half naked. Alonso Edwards, a black soldier from the 24th Infantry saw the incident and confronted the policemen, asking what had happened. He was set upon and beaten, and arrested. Later that day, Corporal Charles Baltimore entered the Houston Police headquarters to investigate the beatings of both the woman and the soldier. After an argument, he too was beaten and then shot at as he left the station. That evening, a large group of soldiers from Camp Logan stole weapons from the camp depot, and marched to the city of Houston. They were met by an armed group of both civilians and police. No one knows who fired first, but a bloody race riot claimed the lives of 20 people: four soldiers, four police and twelve citizens. Order was restored and the Third Battalion was returned by rail to New Mexico.
The trial, shown in this photograph, took twenty-two days, and involved two hundred witnesses. Nineteen black soldiers were hung, and forty-one given life sentences. Defense attorneys were less than aggressive in trying to show that witnesses were hardly able to distinguish one black man from another, at night and in the rain. The trials were hurried and kept out of the news as much as possible because tens of thousands of blacks were still overseas fighting for the country that was hanging them at home.