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Vigilance committee

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A vigilance committee was a group of private citizens who took it upon themselves to administer law and order or exercise power through violence in places where they considered the governmental structures or actions inadequate. A Vigilance Committee was a form of vigilantism (often just a more structured kind of lynch mob). The term is commonly associated with the frontier areas of the American West, where throughout the mid-19th century, groups targeted and attacked cattle rustlers. Additionally, individuals at gold mining claims held kangaroo courts, beating, killing, or exiling those believed to have violated their preferred norms (sometimes on a thin pretext of such, motivated by personal or mercenary gain). As non-state organizations, no functioning checks or safeguards ("due process") existed to protect against the use of excessive force from the committees. In the years before the Civil War, some committees worked to free enslaved people and transport them to freedom.[1]

Assisting fugitive slaves

Vigilance committee in Boston in 1851, after Thomas Sims's arrest

Between 1850 and 1860, following the passage of the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850, when professional bounty hunters swarmed through Northern states searching for missing enslaved people, vigilance committees were set up in several places in the North to assist the escaped enslaved people. Gerrit Smith called the Fugitive Slave Convention of 1850 "on behalf of the New York State Vigilance Committee".[2] These vigilance committees helped to run the underground railroad.[3]

In the West

In the Western United States, before and after the Civil War, the stated purpose of these committees was to maintain law and order and administer summary justice where governmental law enforcement was inadequate. In reality, those high in the social hierarchy often used them to attack maligned groups, including recent immigrants and racial or ethnic groups. In newly-settled areas, vigilance committees promised security and mediated land disputes. In ranching areas, they ruled on ranch boundaries, registered brands, and protected cattle and horses. In the mining districts, they defended claims, settled claim disputes, and attempted to protect miners and other residents. In California, some residents formed vigilance committees to take control of officials whom they considered to be corrupt. This occurred during the trial of Charles Cora (Husband of Belle Cora) and James Casey in San Francisco in 1856.[4]

Nature

Vigilance committees, by their nature, lacked an outside set of checks and balances, often making them a tool of abuse.

In the West, the speed of the vigilance committees and lack of safeguards sometimes led to the innocent being hanged or disappearing. Fraudulent individuals seeking profit or political office took over a few committees.

United States vigilance committees

Other vigilance committees

  • Biddulph Peace Society; 1876, Biddulph, Ontario, Canada
  • Whitechapel Vigilance Committee; 1888, London, United Kingdom – founded to capture Jack the Ripper.
  • Vigilance Committee of the Gaelic Athletic Association – A committee tasked with identifying association members who either played or attended "Foreign Games" (predominantly soccer and rugby union) in contravention of the association's rules. The rule was in place until 1971, up to which point, many GAA players who also wished to play other sports had to resort to elaborate tactics, including the wearing of disguises, the use of false names, and travelling covertly (e.g. in the boot of a car) to attend matches.
  • An Oxford Vigilance Committee was formed during World War I in Oxford, UK, a town whose own men of military age had gone to war and where soldiers were stationed. The Committee ran volunteer patrols of women to discourage, observe, and report on what was perceived as "immoral" behaviour of the town's women. In November 1916, the Committee issued a report "on the Moral Condition of Oxford," warning that the town's streets were "crowded with young girls, whose dress [and] behaviour show that they are deliberately laying themselves out to attract men." Their reports included detailed accounts of casual or adulterous sexual liaisons in the town. Births out of wedlock in Oxford decreased from 1914 to 1925, but the Committee attributed the reduction to "forced marriages" and abortions.[7]

In film and media

Other uses of the term

  • Vigilance Committee is also a term used by some interest groups that monitor the actions of others.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Arthursville abolitionists ran Underground Railroad through Pittsburgh". Archived from the original on 8 March 2012. Retrieved 9 January 2014.
  2. ^ "Gerrit Smith's Convention". Lehigh Register. Allentown, Pennsylvania. August 29, 1850. p. 2. Archived from the original on 2022-06-20. Retrieved 2022-06-20 – via Library of Congress Chronicling America.
  3. ^ Foner, Eric (2015). Gateway to freedom : the hidden history of the underground railroad (First ed.). New York. ISBN 978-0-393-24407-6. OCLC 900158156.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  4. ^ Woolley, Lell Hawley (1913), "Vigilance Committee of 1856", CALIFORNIA : 1849-1913 or The Rambling Sketches and Experiences of Sixty-four Years' Residence in that State, Oakland, California, archived from the original on March 6, 2017, retrieved February 26, 2017{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  5. ^ Dresser, Amos (1836). The narrative of Amos Dresser : with Stone's letters from Natchez, an obituary notice of the writer, and two letters from Tallahassee, relating to the treatment of slaves. Link is to a reprinting in the collection Slave Rebels, Abolitionists, and Southern Courts. New-York: American Anti-Slavery Society. Archived from the original on 2022-06-20. Retrieved 2021-07-30.
  6. ^ Krieger, Dan (July 13, 2013). "Lynch mobs part of area's history". The Tribune. Archived from the original on September 2, 2021. Retrieved May 29, 2020.
  7. ^ Malcolm Graham (30 November 2014). Oxford in the Great War. Pen and Sword. pp. 122–124. ISBN 978-1-78346-297-1.

General references

  • Click here for a WorldCat search for American vigilance committee pamphlets published before 1900 available online, many but not all free. Click here for a search that includes pamphlets not available online.