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Worst U.S. Massacre?
The mass media coverage of how 32 students and faculty members were fatally shot and at least 15 injured on the Virginia Tech campus in Blacksburg, Va., is punctuated by phrases such as, "the worst massacre in U.S. history," or, as the New York Times put it, the "Worst U.S. Gun Rampage." CNN called it the "Deadliest Shooting Rampage in U.S. history." This was followed by San Francisco Bay Area's FOX affiliate KTVU Channel 2's claim that it was "the worst massacre ever in the United States."
TV commentary did not qualify these claims, and at least one Virginia Tech student, an Asian American himself, echoed the phrase when interviewed on national television, pondering his presence at the "worst massacre in U.S. history." In reality, an accurate investigation of mass killings of this magnitude would quickly reveal that the Virginia Tech massacre, as horrendous as it was, was not the worst massacre to occur on U.S. soil. There were much bloodier massacres before Blacksburg:
-- In 1860, Bret Harte, a well-known California writer, had just begun his writing career, working as a newspaper reporter in Arcata (known then as Union). Harte was expelled from Humboldt County because he recorded the Gunther Island Massacre of Wiyot Indians, committed on Feb. 26, 1860, when a small group of white men murdered between 60 and 200 Wiyot men, women and children. The massacre was encouraged by a local newspaper. Extermination was once the official policy of the California government toward Native Americans, as Gov. Peter H. Burnett stated in 1851: "That a war of extermination will continue to be waged between the two races until the Indian race becomes extinct, must be expected..."
-- On April 12, 1864, at Fort Pillow, near Memphis, Tenn., Confederate troops under Gen. Nathan Forrest massacred 227 black and white Union troops with such ferocity that an eyewitness Confederate soldier said, "blood, human blood, stood about in pools and brains could have been gathered up in any quantity...Gen. Forrest ordered them shot down like dogs and the carnage continued. Finally our men became sick of blood and the firing ceased."
-- On April 13, 1873, 350 miles northwest of New Orleans in Colfax, Grand Parish, La., 280 blacks were victims of a group of armed white men that included members of the White League and the Ku Klux Klan. Known as the Colfax Massacre, it was said to be sparked by contested local elections, although more generally its cause was white opposition to Reconstruction, which in 1875 resulted in a legal ruling, United States vs. Cruikshank, an important basis of future gun-control legislation, because it allows that "the federal government had no power to protect citizens against private action (not committed by federal or state government authorities) that deprived them of their constitutional rights under the 14th Amendment."
-- In 1913, during another nationally publicized action known as the Ludlow Massacre, more than 66 people were killed, including 11 children, and two women who were burned alive. Sparked by a strike against the Rockefeller family-owned Colorado Fuel and Iron Corporation by the mostly foreign born Serb, Greek and Italian coal miners after one of their union organizers was murdered, it eventually involved the Colorado National Guard, imported strikebreakers and sympathetic walkouts by union miners throughout the state. The union never was recognized by the company, and a U.S. congressional committee investigation failed to result in indictments of any militiaman or mine guard.
-- In 1921, a year when 64 lynchings were reported, the African American Greenwood business district of Tulsa, Okla., was the site of shooting deaths of at least 40 people, most of whom were black, although the undocumented death toll is said to be closer to 300. This site was then known as the "Negro's Wall Street," and was home to 15,000 people and 191 businesses. The rampage took the form of a riot, and was caused by economic tensions, particularly sparked by an article in the Tulsa Tribune regarding an alleged rape incident between a black shoe shiner and a white elevator operator. Because of this riot, Tulsa became the first U.S. city to be bombed from the air, when police dropped dynamite from private planes to break it up. Whites took possession of most of the land, and the site has become part of Oklahoma State University's Tulsa campus.
The reporting of the Virginia Tech massacre reveals that an ignorance of American history is not only a problem affecting American students but extends to our most influential newsrooms, even those with archives extending back to the 1800s. A member of the New York Times' editorial staff is Brent Staples, a black writer who is an expert on the Tulsa massacre. There is no excuse for such historical amnesia on the part of those who have taken upon themselves the serious task of informing the public.
Carla Blank is the author of "Rediscovering America" (Three Rivers Press, 2003).
© 2007 The San Francisco Chronicle



23 Comments so far
Show AllThe Wyoming Valley Massacre of 1778 was committed by British troops and their Iroquois allies during our Revolutionary War. While still an atrocity, it pales in comparison to massacres committed against American Indians and other non-British Americans.
It pales in comparison to the thousands of Iraqi civilians our troops have killed, or bombed, or caused to stave to death.
Thank you, Carla Blank.
I lived in Humboldt County, California, for many years, and so knew of the massacre there from local history.
Every time we have had a mass shooting, it has been declared the biggest (the American way?).
And now finally someone has listed some of the "forgotten" massacres.
This should be printed on the front page of every paper in the country, not just the Chronicle.
MaryAnn
I guess Virginia Tech would be the worst massacre commited by a single individual, i.e., not involving a conspiracy among several individuals.
One vs several individuals implies a totally different standard, as organized violence can be much more lethal (eg, wars, etc).
With guns by an individual. Sounds like the oscars. What should the award for massacre-ism be named? Glocky? Walther? Napalm-D'or?
People, people. This is the worst massacre EVER because, clearly, it was the massacre of REAL Americans (white skinned women and men) by some unpalatable untermensch (in this case a guy originlly from Asia). Those other massacres mentioned in the article were of black people, poor people, eastern European immigrants, trades unionists, etc.
I would go so far as to say this is the worst massacre ever, not just in American history. It far outweighs the holocaust. I mean, nearly 30 of these people were WASPs. Oh the Humanity!
PS Let's not forget Wounded Knee also.
When are you people going to learn? The MSM uses terms like 'massacre', and 'worst ever' to get ratings! That is the only reason, it makes bucks!
The real massacre is taking place each and every day in this country. Between 500 to 600 hundred people killed each week with firearms either intentional, accidental or self inflicted. That is the equivalent of one fully loaded jumbo jet going down every three days with no survivors. God knows how many more are crippled for life by this gun culture insanity.
There is an incident that is barely known and never referred to in the long sad history of American genocide against native peoples. In 1846, the great "pathfinder" John C. Fremont and his famous scout Kit Carson helped locals wipe out a gathering of northern California Indians after surprising them on the banks of the Sacramento River. The historian David Roberts tells this sordid story in his book "A Newer World" in which he recounts a massacre on par with Sand Creek or Wounded Knee.
We might want to remember the 38 Dakota Sioux who were hanged at one time on December 26, 1862 in Mankato, Minnesota. I consider that a massacre. I think the problem with labeling this the worst massacre is that the american nation conveniently ignores history. it lets us do all kind of stupid things over and over again...like going into Iraq. anyone with the slightest intellegence and knowledge of history and culture would have known that the American invasion of Iraq could only lead to failure. Instead that is where the major Massacres of today are happening. Wonder if Bush ever read a history book?
Bush and his foreign policy – is now widely considered the CHO of our world, despite the often risible efforts of Karen Hughes, the administration's Image Czarina, to improve America's international standing through what she calls the diplomacy of deeds....
BUSH'S deeds have led other countries to see our government, in its aggressive unilateralism, as unreliable, if not deranged; obsessed beyond all reason with putative enemies and globe-spanning organizations of terrorists that despise us; ready to respond with unjustified violence to any perceived slight; unwilling to listen to, or accept, advice; and unconcerned with the consequences of what it does, even when this results in widespread death and destruction in one of the birthplaces of civilization, where Bush and his top officials now pride themselves on their latest accomplishment, a military "surge" that further encourages mass murder.
After six years of Bush&Co.... Baghdad and Blacksburg are, to many on our planet, not that far apart
Nor must we forget the Mountain Meadows Massacre of 120 men, women, and children of a wagon train by resident Mormons the morning of September 7, 1857.
And what of the Trail of Tears? Does a massacre have to happen within a few minutes to qualify by that nomenclature?
Thank you Carla Blank for reminding us to review our history.
The history recalled in the article and comments is impressive.
The the growing list, I add the Original Massacre (or North American Holocaust).
In 1492 the population of North America was about 15 million. From 1492 to, say 1700, European diseases (and outright murder where there was direct contact with Europeans) killed about 90 percent of that 15 million.
By the time Lewis and Clark toured the continent from 1804-1806, they saw only the remnants of the original civilizations the Indians had created in North America. The 90 percent had been killed for over 100 years by the time of their expedition.
One book about this from Indian sources is "Stolen Continents" and is quite thorough.
Here is the full name:
Stolen Continents: 500 Years of Conquest and Resistance in the Americas by Ronald Wright.
And there are others.
This one is fabulous:
1491: New Revelations of the Americas Before Columbus Written by Charles C. Mann.
Also, Kirkpatrick Sale wrote Conquest of Paradise.
It seems to me that the phrase "worst massacre in the history of America" cannot not neglect the Original Massacre any more than "worst massacre in the history of Germany" cannot neglect the Holocaust.
Oops. Pardon the "cannot not neglect" in the last sentence above. I meant to write "cannot neglect." (I wish we posters could edit our own like they can on Alternet when we goof.)
...one Virginia Tech student, an Asian American himself,...
A member of the New York Times' editorial staff is Brent Staples, a black writer who...
Come off it Carla. It was the worst massacre by a single individual gone mad with blind rage. Obviously, that was the context. Sure, the news media didn't qualify their statement with the fact that it ommitted Ted Bundy, the KKK, Civil War prison massacres, and Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Those would be of another context altogether.
You almost seem to be implying that if this had been done by a white guy, the media wouldn't have simply overlooked the fact that it was the worst massacre in American history and not have mentioned that fact at all.
And, for what it's worth, every source I recall stated that it was the worst massacre in recent American history.
But, oh yeah, I'm a white guy, so I must be out to oppress, so nevermind.
Well then....what about the oklahoma city bombing? Oh get off the poor me I'm an oppressor crap already. It's boring already. Next thing you'll be trottting out tired cliches like "self-hating", and "white guilt". That's just lame pure and simple, from one white guy to the next.
ps....Ward Churchills book "A Little Matter Of Genocide" is a good resource as well.
This is not even the worst incident by an individual. In Bath, Michigan on the 17th of May, 1927 Andrew Kehoe blew-up a school, killing forty-five people, thirty-seven of which were children, and 67 others were severely injured.
We're not a gun-culture gone rampant, either. There are millions of firearms legally owned in the US. If firearms themselves had some inherent evil to them, why aren't we all dead yet? I'm sure you own kitchen knives, why haven't you stabbed someone yet? Because it takes bad wiring to lack respect for life. Firearms are tools, there are other tools out there, and taking tools away will not create world peace and end hunger, nor will it cure the mentally ill.
Yes, the media bills this incident like it's some new movie, bigger, bolder, and badder than ever. Yes, it's vulgar sensationalism that lacks respect and insight, almost as much as murderers themselves.
I agree that the worst shooting incident in American history is not appropriately labeled to the Virginia Tech incident....although how horrible and painful that the event is. I know of some historical facts that had been buried in the achives of the American soul and experience that have yet to be totally exposed to the light of day. It is terrible to think of the loss in the loved ones who perished at the VTU campus recently......I cannot even imagine what those families have and are now, going through, as a result of that terrible, and unexpected event. However, our present corporate media driven society today, only sees things that are thrust upon them, without any serious or honorable duty to dig for facts of the real story that lies beneath every newsworthy event......at least through the lens of what "will sell" nowdays.
Not to diminish the terrible suffering and the pain suffered by those families that lost loved ones recently, at VTU, or for that matter, the families of those that have been killed recently in Iraq or Afghanistan, it seems as if the focus of the value of each individual life, no matter where it is lost, is not less precious, or has caused just as much pain. I pray for those families, and for the souls of all of those human beings that have been deprived of the physical life on Earth, leaving behind the grieving and the questions...as to how, why, when, where.......I pray that the Great Spirit help and guide those families and the souls of those that lost their physical lives, so that the Spirit may carry them upon the wings of peace and solace, to achieve a sense of understanding that those that are taken from us by physical death, never really leave us.....for they remain with us all forever, in our hearts and woven into our souls.
My anscestors were subjected to a planned and detailed effort to "remove" or otherwise, exterminate them, because of the land and resources that they once held in a sharing atmosphere, before the "white father" and the policies and intentions of the US, chose to seek to rid themselves of the "Indian" problems.
If any of you reading this post, have looked seriously at the history of this country, you may well recognize that the governmental policies of the time, much the same as today, give very little acknowledgment of the true value of each and every breathing and living soul at any particular time, whether they be a young Sioux baby and his defenseless mother coddling him at the time of killing or internment, or of the useful means of sending the least affluent children of ours to go to the killing grounds of foreign lands, under less than honorable or truthful means or purposes........
Every single life is precious, no matter who you are, your backgroud, the color of your skin, your bank account, the shape of your face, the way you walk, the way you talk, the god you choose to worship, the way you express yourself, the manner of your livlihood, the appearance of your stature........it all does not matter, or should not matter, when we think in terms of looking into each others' eyes and seeing the reflection of those that bore us, raised us, nutured, cared and loved us.....for every single person on this gracious Earth has the gift of life within us and within our lungs and in our beating hearts, but also within our minds and souls, that no act of meaningless or planned attempt to deprive the individual human being from that very gift of the individual life, is wrong......every person on this planet has a mother, a father, possibly, sisters and brothers, sons and daughters, and is a son or daughter of another innocent father and mother. When physical life is extinguished by unexplained or unfettered violent acts of another, or that of a planned motive, it creates a soul wound upon the race of human kind.
Until we realize as a people that we all live our lives for each other, and that violence and death is not conducive to what God and/or the Great Spirit intended, we are on a terrible path. Mothers, embrace your daughters. Fathers, hug your sons. Brothers, tell your siblings how much they mean to you. Sisters, share your outward love with those that surround you......while, ......you can. A wise friend of mine once said something to me that made alot of sense...."bring me flowers while I am alive, so that I may enjoy them and realize the smell of love".
Too many times in our rushed and stressful lives, we forget about the kind and gentle moments that we all carry with us in our DNA when we relive the happy and human moments that occur in our individual lives. If only we could teach each other and specifically the young, the value of each and every life on this planet, and believe that we would want ourselves to be treated the same as we treat others, we could immediately solve so many differences that we see in everyday life........if the individual person and the individual soul were to reach out to our fellow man with kindness and understanding, rather than suspicion and hatred of what we may not know or be familiar with, the bridges of foundation to spread and perpetuate the thread of life, could become the lifeline for those that may find themselves on the brink, thinking all is lost, and only pain and suffering is the answer. We have the ability to talk to each other....we have the ability to rationalize each other's plight....we have the ability to think before we act. These are gifts granted to us upon our entry in this physical world, by the Great Spirit. We all have these tools within our souls, but many times, these God-given tools are not utilized when they should be at the times when they are needed most. There is still hope for our race, the human race. But we need to really realize that we are one and the same in our wants and needs, for love and basic human respect. Can it happen? Sure it can. We just need to be willing to do our own part. We need to speak up about the moments of injustice that create the soul wounds in those that may be the most vulnerable of the herd. We need to think before we act. We need to see the people in the reflection of the eyes that we look into every day of our lives, and see ourselves in that human mirror. I believe this to be a truth that is within all of us, no matter where we come from or where we have been. Noone is too far gone. Noone is beyond the touch of another's seemingly insignificant, act of kindness, in merely acknowledging that that other person shares our need for love and understanding.
thanks for listening. your friend
Jazzdog
Blacks, Indians, poor people trying to form a union are not seen as being as important as the white children of rich people, that is why they consider this the worst one.
Blog "Michigan, dynamite, school, 1927" and see what you get.
It was the worst massacre by a SINGLE person. That's what people are referring to.
"Come off it Carla. It was the worst massacre by a single individual gone mad with blind rage. Obviously, that was the context."
Exactly. That's what the media are talking about. All of the other atrocities were committed by groups. I knew someone would use this whole thing as a excuse to dredge up all of these American horrors and thusly add to tensions. How productive. Let's all dig for more reasons to resent one another why don't we?
I'm not defending the mainstream media. They are slanted and inaccurate much of the time of course.
Actually, I think we should stop sensationalizing these sorts of things. All it does is encourage copycats.
Approsimately 500 men, women and children were killed, mutilated and burned in one day by Creek warriors at Fort Mims in Alabam during the Creek war in 1813. I guess all those white settlers don't count as much as blacks, Indians etc...it goes both ways.
I don't understand why some of you say that blacks, poor people, or any other people besides White, aren't americans. People who are less fortunate and white, doesn't mean your not a true American at all. It's not like they came from another country and was poor, they were born and raised here, and became poor.I'm poor, so im not American? It's called being racist, and prejidice. Just because your a different color skin, or don't have enough money, doesn't meen your not a true American.
So therefore, i honetly dont think this is the worst massacre. Maybe the most recent one by one person, but in the end the number of people who died, matters the most. yea it was pretty tragic, but so was many, many more. and yea it happened in our lifetime, but i garentee theres more brutal ones to come.