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2/9/2023
Civil Rights
Every month is Black History Month at HistoryLink, and this week we take a look back at the long struggle in Washington for Black equality. In 1844 the provisional government of Oregon enacted a ban on Black residents settling south of the Columbia River, a ban that was reenacted after Oregon Territory was created in 1848. To avoid the law, in 1845 a group of pioneers led by a free African American from Missouri, George W. Bush, and his friend Michael Simmons, moved north to today's Tumwater, where they established the first non-Native American settlement in what eight years later would become Washington Territory.
Washington Territory had no such ban, but was not free of racism. In 1874 a group of white parents were outraged when the University of Washington admitted a Black student. While many remained silent, newspaper editor and future Seattle mayor Beriah Brown came to the school's defense in a powerful editorial titled, "Civil Rights."
In 1890, one year after achieving statehood, Washington passed model civil rights legislation, but racial tensions grew nonetheless, particularly among workers who feared losing jobs to minorities. The first NAACP chapter in the state was formed in 1913, but many African Americans still had to battle against segregation and discrimination. In the early 1920s a resurgent Ku Klux Klan enjoyed considerable success in the state.
As late as 1938, a mob of white residents in Wapato, armed with clubs, sticks, and rocks, tried to drive the African American population out of town. That same year, in a rare rebuke of police misconduct, a Seattle jury convicted three officers of manslaughter for the fatal beating of a Black prisoner, but Governor Clarence Martin pardoned two of them the following year, while the third was paroled early. The influx of thousands of Black defense workers during World War II led to more conflict -- and to new leaders, laws, and determination to address and overcome racial barriers.
Civic Activism
Seattle's first sit-in of the modern civil rights era occurred on July 1, 1963, when 35 young African American and white demonstrators occupied Mayor Gordon Clinton's lobby to protest the make-up of the city's new Human Rights Commission. The protest ended within 24 hours without incident or arrests, but also without action from the mayor. Three weeks later, 22 protestors occupied the city council chambers for four days before being removed and carted off to jail. The commission was created as planned, and although an open-housing ordinance was put on the ballot the following year, Seattle voters rejected it. An open-housing law was finally enacted by the Seattle City Council in April 1968.
That year saw another sit-in, this time at Franklin High School, to protest suspensions and unfair treatment of African American students. It ended with the arrests of University of Washington Black Students Union members Aaron Dixon and Larry Gossett; Carl Miller, the head of the local Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee; and student Trolice Flavors. Their sentencing for unlawful assembly led to riots in Seattle's Central Area, and their case traveled up through the courts for years. In 1993 Gossett was elected to the King County Council and served until 2019.
Civil rights activists have come from all walks of life, including educators, ministers, rabbis, community organizers, lawyers, judges, doctors, dentists, nurses, poets, social workers, and legislators. Their struggle has been long, and some have paid dearly for their efforts, but progress has been made to ensure equal rights for all.
On February 15, 1909, concerned citizens founded the Anti-Tuberculosis League of King County. The league later received some of the profits from the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition, which helped fund a municipal tuberculosis hospital -- later renamed Firland Sanatorium -- near Shoreline.
On February 12, 1914, a ceremony in Port Angeles celebrated the arrival of electricity from the Elwha River hydroelectric project. But progress came with a price: the loss of massive, multiple runs of salmon and steelhead. In 2011, after other energy sources powered the peninsula, demolition began on the dam, and within a few years hundreds of thousands of salmon were once again able to run free from mountains to sea.
On February 14, 1961, the skeleton of an extinct giant sloth was unearthed during runway construction at Sea-Tac International Airport. The Sea-Tac sloth lived and died sometime between 12,600 and 12,760 years ago and is now on display at the Burke Museum.
On February 13, 1968, King County voters approved Proposition 6, a Forward Thrust parks and recreation bond that provided much-needed funding for King County's parks. Voters also approved bonds for a new stadium and an aquarium, but opted against funding a regional rapid transit system, to the continuing dismay of commuters.
On February 13, 1968, Joel Pritchard and several of his friends incorporated Pickle Ball Inc., to promote the new sport they invented in 1965 at Pritchard's Bainbridge Island cabin. Pritchard would later go on to serve as a state legislator, a U.S. congressman, and Washington's lieutenant governor.
Under a series of flawed treaties imposed by Washington Territorial Governor Isaac Stevens, local Native Americans were to retain their accustomed fishing rights, particularly to the sacred salmon. Those rights were repeatedly denied them, and federal policy sought to erase Indian culture after passage of the Dawes Severalty Act in 1887. It took nearly a century for Native fishing rights to be reaffirmed by the federal courts in the momentous Boldt Decision of February 12, 1974.
“Rule-following, legal precedence, and political consistency are not more important than right, justice and plain common-sense.”
–W. E. B. Du Bois