121 v *r THE DRAFT RIOTS IN NEW YORK. JULY, 1863. -♦+ THE METROPOLITAN POLICE: THEIR SERVICES DURING RIOT WEEK. THEIR, HONORABLE RECORD BY DAVID M. BARNES. NEW YOEK: BAKER of whom he speaks with a just and earnest pride. Ninth Precinct. Jacob L. Seeking, Captain, No. 94 Charles Street. On Monday, at 10 A. M., Sergeant Margin, with ten men, reported to Captain Speight, No. 1190 Broadway,, and were parties to the defence of the Provost Marshal's office there. At 11 A. M. Sergeant Smiih, with a platoon, was also ordered to report to Captain Pouter. Both of these officers and their commands were subsequently ordered to Forty-sixth Street, where Sergeant Ellison and force were so badly handled, a detailed account of which is given in the record of the Eighth Precinct. They arrived at the scene same time as Sergeant Wade, and went gallantly into the fight against overwhelming odds ; the list of casualties — Ser- geants Mangin and Smith and ten of the force being badly injured — shows how well and bravely they performed their part on this disastrous occasion. After the retreat they returned to their own precinct, escaping thither as best they could, and instantly reformed for further duty. At 5.30 P. M. the entire force, under Captain Sebring, reported at head- quarters. They were with Inspector Carpenter in the evening, at the exemplary punishment of the mob in the City Hall Park and Printing- house Square, and thence with him in the useful tour through the Fourth and adjacent wards. At 1 o'clock A. M., on Tuesday, with the command under Sergeant Copeland, they went to Clarkson Street, to recover the body of the colored man hung, and which was cut down and taken to headquarters. At noon Captain Sebring, with his command, dispersed a gang at Spring and Murray Streets, who had sacked a liquor store and nearly murdered its proprietor. In the afternoon they were with Captain Dilks, in the visit to the factory in Second Avenue, and participated gallantly in DURING THE RIOT WEEK, JULY, 1863. 49 the battle there. In the evening they took a tour through the Fourth and wards adjoining. Wednesday morning the Captain and command, with Sergeant Cope- land's force, visited the infected portions of the Second and Third Ave- nues, dispersing all crowds. In the evening a section assisted the de- tectives in arresting gangs of thieves in Crosby and Houston Streets. At night the entire command were ordered to the Eighth Precinct to protect the " Arch," in Sullivan Street, populated by colored people. They charged the mob, beat and dispersed them, and prevented great destruction of lives and of property. On Thursday morning the force was on miscellaneous duty, aiding as escorts to the military, guarding the prisoners at headquarters, &c. On Friday, same duties, which continued until noon Saturday, when ordered to their own precinct, and ordinary routine. Sergeant Smith was so badly injured at Forty-sixth Street as to be confined to his bed. Sergeant Siebert had throughout remained in charge of the station-house, and proved equal to any emergency. Col. Ladue, resident of the precinct, had formed a citizens' corps of " specials," and did patrol duty as well as acting for the protection of the station ; and to him and the firemen of the precinct, who were of great service to Captain Sebring, much credit is due. During the entire week there was not a word of complaint from either officers or men. Constant as was the duty, all orders were re- sponded to with alacrity, and each one performed thoroughly. Tenth Precinct. Captain T. C. Davis, Essex Market. At noon the reserve of this precinct was sent to Forty-sixth Street and Third Avenue, under Ser- geants Minor and Davenport, and participated in the savage fight, here- tofore described, which occurred there. At 5 P. M. Captain Davis re- ported, with his entire force, at headquarters ; and in the evening, under Inspector Carpenter, this force effectively used their locusts upon the mob which had attempted to burn the Tribune Buildings ; thence in the risky march through the Fourth and other wards, and thence to head- quarters for the night. On Tuesday morning Captain Davis and his force, with the force under Inspector Carpenter, went on the hazardous march to Second Avenue, and were prominent in the assault of the houses from which the police were fired at. In this, four of the men of the precinct were badly injured, but all evinced a courage and determin- ation which no danger baffled or checked. Subsequently at headquarters, from whence they were ordered to the Fifth Regiment Armory, to pro- 4 50 SERVICES OF THE METROPOLITAN POLICE cure the arms there and bring them to the Central Office for distribution ; the men were desirous for more active duty and anxious to " flesh " their locusts again, but performed the duty promptly and well. At night Captain Davis and command were with Inspector Leonard at the City Hall, where, on duty in various sections thereabouts of the city, they remained until Wednesday morning ; then sent to Twenty-seventh Pre- cinct station-house, sweeping away a threatening crowd in front of it ; thence to the bonded warehouse in West Street, and thence to Twenty- seventh Precinct station again, where they remained on guard till late in the evening, when ordered to headquarters, and from thence to their own precinct. On Tuesday officer James Adams was accidentally shot in front of headquarters. He was conveyed home by a brother officer. This force did well and faithfully ; and Captain Davis, his officers and men, won the honor that an entire and fearless discharge of duty entitled them to. Ser- geant Wemyss and Roundsman Hart were especially active and valuable in all duties. On the evening of Monday the station-house was attacked by a mob, who were driven off by officers Wood and McCloud, and officer King of the Third District Court, sundry citizens aiding, as did Surgeon Wells and Sergeant Garland of the Seventh Precinct. Officer McCloud found a cannon in the building, and it was placed at the door, pointing on the mob ; empty as it was, it had the desired effect — the rascals scattering. On Monday an attack was made on the house No. 134 Division Street, and the furniture destroyed. Officer Wood, of this precinct, and officer King, of the Third District Court, with a number of citizens, made a charge on and dispersed the rioters. At the attack on the lawless in Second Avenue, officer Rothschild was struck and badly hurt on the head, and officer Sandford also in- jured. Eleventh Precinct. John J. Mount, Captain, Union Market. At six P. M. Monday, Captain Mount, with his whole force, reported at headquarters. At evening this command formed part of the force under Inspector Car- penter, in the Park and Printing-house Square attack on the mob. The Tenth, being in the rear, had the last punishment of the flying, and put some fifty hors du combat ; also, with the Inspector through the Fourth and other wards on same evening. On this tour Captain Mount and men were detached to protect the persons and property of colored people DURING THE RIOT WEEK, JULY, 1863. 51 near New Bowery and Roosevelt Street, the balance of the force con- tinuing on their march. The Eleventh did a hard duty well, kept the mob in check, and ultimately drove them off. Were rejoined by the force, and detailed to the Fourth Precinct for the night. At 10| P. M. repaired to Roosevelt and Batavia Streets, charged upon and had a sharp fight with a mob of rioters and thieves, who were sacking houses, and put them, with not a few badly injured, to flight. The force were here assailed from the roofs, and officer McMahon was very badly injured by a brick. A large bonfire had been made by the mob, of the articles taken from the houses which were too cumbrous to steal — for the first, last, and only purpose of the riots by every man and woman engaged in them was theft, from a penny dip up to all things portable — and threat- ened to fire the adjacent buildings. Captain Mount secured a length of hose, and, attaching it to a hydrant, put the flames out — all the time his force being the recipients of volleys of bricks and stones. This done, another fight was had with the rioters, who, for a while, boldly stood their ground, but gave way finally, severely punished. Tuesday morning the force were at headquarters, and, with Inspector Carpenter's command, went to the Second Avenue. On the terrible assault the force received from the windows and roofs of the houses in the vicinity of Thirty-fourth Street, Captain Mount, by order of the In- spector, led the storming party ; and gallantly did he do so, as the details of this affair, already given, show. One huge rioter was, on this occasion, knocked clear off his feet and off the roof of a four-story tenement house, by a single well-directed and well-dealt blow of a club. He was crushed to death by the fall. Subsequently the force reported to In- spector Leonard, at City Hall, and were engaged several times during the afternoon in dispersing the crowds in the Park and Printing-house Square. At midnight were at Western Hotel, Courtlandt Street, and on guard there till 3£ P. M. ; back to City Hall ; there till 11 A. M. Wed- nesday ; and thence to headquarters, where orders to return to own pre- cinct were received. Here, with special force, patrol duty was per- formed until 6 A. M., when ordinary duty was resumed. All officers and men of this precinct did their entire duty ; there was not an exception ; and while each is entitled to the credit therefor, yet especial mention should be made of Sergeants Polly, Ahearn, and Reed ; Roundsmen Warmsley and Donohue ; Patrolmen Warren, Beatty, Gass, Bogart, McMahon, and McCarty, for unflinching courage and devotion to duty. During the riots Sergeant Upham was left in charge of the station-house and precinct, discharging his responsible du- ties there in a manner which restored confidence in the neighborhood, and was most creditable to himself. 52 SERVICES OF THE METROPOLITAN POLICE Sergeant Polly was the officer who, with Inspector Leonard, boldly entered into the midst of the mob assailing the military at Broadway and Chambers Street. They arrested the ringleader in order to divert attention from the military and draw it on themselves. The ruse suc- ceeded and they were instantly assailed. They hung on to the prisoner, arrested another leader, and backed their way toward the City Hall, fighting at every step, and keeping the mob from them with their clubs. Inspector Leonard is warm in his praise of the Sergeant's coolness and unflinching courage on this occasion — against the hundreds — and, in- deed, no braver man is on the force. Both prisoners were held by these bold men, and the howling mob kept at bay until, as has hereto- fore been stated, relief from the City Hall arrived, when their assailants were attacked and beaten, and their prisoners cast off. In connection with the Eleventh Precinct, it may be said that the German residents of that ward cannot have too much praise awarded them. They rallied to the aid of the authorities, and were prepared to assist them zealously, efficiently, and willingly whenever their services might be required. Another valuable force was also in readiness ; at the Neptune Iron Works, Messrs. Boardman & Watts had organized three hundred good men and true for the protection of the ward. Two hundred were armed with sabres, one hundred with muskets, and all ready at a moment's notice to respond to any call. Woe would have fallen upon the rioters had they ever met them. Twelfth Precinct. Capt. A. S. Relay, Harlem, One Hundred and Twenty-sixth Street, near Third Avenue. Early orders were received at this precinct, on Monday morning, to call in reserve and hold the force in readiness, but owing to the subsequent destruction of the telegraph, it was not until 5.30 P. M. that, by a special messenger, directions were received upon which Sergts. Osborn and Walters left for headquarters with thirty- five men. They took the Third Avenue cars as far as Seventy-first Street, where, the operations of the road being stopped below, the com- pany had concluded to haul off. The force thence took up the long march to headquarters, reaching there at 8 P. M. In the night they were with Inspector Leonard's command at City Hall, and engaged on the various and constant duties required in that vicinity ; portions of the time being the only force in Printing-house Square, and effectually keeping it clear of the ill-disposed. On Tuesday morning reported at headquarters, and, attached to Capt. Walling's command, made the tour through the Bowery and adjacent streets ; in the afternoon another tour DUKLNG THE RIOT WEEK, JULY, 1863. 53 to the Bowery and vicinity, under Inspector Carpenter. On the return, one Patrick Carle stood on the sidewalk brandishing a sword, and threatening destruction to all in, and some out of, authority. Officer Banfield seized him, secured the weapon, and drew him into the ranks, conveying him to headquarters, where he was locked up. In the evening the command were at the City Hall again, and participated in the vari- ous excursions therefrom. On Wednesday morning the force were ordered to the Twenty-seventh Precinct, and thence to their own precinct, Har- lem. They reached Harlem in the afternoon, and were received with enthusiasm by the residents. Although this force were not engaged on any very hazardous duty, yet they were actively employed, and what duties were assigned them were fully performed. The few of this precinct who remained with Capt. Relay and Ser- geant Sandford, at the station-house, had very constant duty; they staid at request of citizens, who reinforced them with special patrolmen. The station-house was threatened on several occasions, but no attack made. At 3^ A. M., Tuesday morning, the premises at One Hundred and Twenty-ninth Street and Third Avenue were fired, and the force aided the firemen in their duties. About this time officer Bertholf, who was scouting, was attacked in the vicinity by six or eight men, and badly beaten ; he continued, however, on duty. During Tuesday night three attempts were made to burn the Baptist Church on Fifth Avenue and One Hundred and Twenty-fifth Street, but were frustrated by the vigilance of the officers and specials ; an attempt to fire the dwelling of Edgar Ketchum, Esq., on One Hundred and Twenty-seventh Street, was also prevented ; Sergt. Wares, discovering the attempt, gave timely alarm. There were no further matters of note in the precinct, except the visit, on Wednesday morning, of a gang of thieves, who, meeting citizens, would demand and take money from them. They were speedily driven away. The first arrest of this character of villains was made in Harlem by a number of firemen — Messrs. Peter Gallagher, Thos. Green, Luke Hope, and A. Liscomb, of Engine Company No. 35, and Charles Riker, of Hook and Ladder Company No. 7. These gentle- men, while on patrol, came across a gang of fifteen or twenty of them, and made an attack forthwith. A severe fight ensued, but resulted in the capture of four and the flight of the rest of the thieves. They were taken by their captors to the station-house, subsequently committed, and have been indicted. Of the courage of these gentlemen the police and citizens of Harlem speak in just terms of praise. So do the latter of the Captain and the force left there, whose well-arranged plans and con- stant vigilance were of the greatest value. 54 SERVICES OF THE METROPOLITAN POLICE Thirteenth Precinct. Capt. Thomas Steers, No. 178 Delancey Street. At noon the Cap- tain, with Sergeants Bird and Smith, and twenty-five men, were ordered to Forty-sixth Street and Third Avenue, to report to Capt. Porter. It was with much difficulty that they made their way as far as Thirty-fifth Street and Third Avenue, and here found it impossible to proceed fur- ther, the mob being overwhelming and threatening. The force, there- fore, reported at the Twenty-first Precinct, East Thirty-first Street. Here great excitement prevailed, the mob gathering around the station- house, threatening to destroy it. Sergeant Samuel Forshay was in com- mand, at whose request Capt. Steers took charge and made arrange- ments to defend it, which deterred the rioters from further demonstra- tions. From this station Capt. Steers sent conveyances for the wounded in the fight up the avenue and at Forty -sixth Street, and several were thus brought in. In the evening reported at headquarters, and were joined by the balance of the command, except Sergt. Woodward, left in charge of the station. The force were on picket duty around headquarters, and subsequently with Inspector Carpenter in the attack on the mob in the Park, where they did considerable execution ; thence, under same command, through the Fourth and other wards ; over night at headquarters, and on Tuesday morning, with others, under Capt. Sebring, gave the mob at Spring and Crosby Streets a severe defeat ; on the same day were with Capt. Helme's command in the attack on the mob at Sec- ond Avenue and Twenty-second Street, w r here this force evinced great bravery, being among the first on the mob and into the building, en- countering about fifty of the rioters armed with carbines, who, after a severe fight, were disarmed and terribly punished. The Thirteenth were subsequently engaged in the laborious work of securing and carrying down stairs the large number of carbines and loading them into the wagon which had been secured. After this work was done, and the entire command reformed by Capt. Helme, they were hemmed in from all directions by mobs, and would have had a bloody battle but for the timely arrival of Inspector Dilks and his command. After the taking of the building, Capt. Steers sent Sergt. Laflin, officers Seymour and Osborn, to seize a wagon for the purpose of load- ing it with the arms. They took one, emptied out its load, and, with the driver, brought it to the building, where it was used for the required purpose. At night this precinct formed a portion of the force under Inspector Carpenter in the attack upon the rioters at Brooks Brothers' clothing store, Catharine Street, after which, from headquarters, it was ordered to the DURING THE RIOT WEEK, JULY, 1863. 55 care of its own precinct, where the rioters had sacked Provost Marshal Duffy's quarters in Grand Street, were robbing stores, and beating ne- groes. A short time before their arrival, a mob, led by a man since ar- rested and indicted, had been met at Pitt and Delancey Streets, and fired into by the military, and a number killed ; the body of one of them was brought to the station about the time the force reached there. This had had a good effect, and deterred the mob from an attack on the sta- tion-house, threatened several times during the day, but each time boldly met and prevented by Sergt. Woodward, in charge. The force arrived at midnight, and at once were engaged in dispersing all gatherings in the precinct, saving and affording refuge to colored people, and, with a force of specials aiding, broke upon and scattered a mob about to destroy the " Hook," in Jackson Street. At every turn the rioters were subse- quently met, no opportunity afforded them of uniting, and by Wednes- day noon order reigned in the precinct. Then the force devoted them- selves to recovering stolen goods, and during the week secured a large quantity. On Saturday resumed usual duty. All of this precinct did faithfully, finely, and it is just to make signal mention of special police- men Braisteed, Welsh, Barrett, and Tooker, whose efficiency and courage were especially noticeable. Fourteenth Precinct. Capt. J. J. Williamson, No. 53 Spring Street. The force, under the Captain, Sergeant Mackey accompanying, on Monday reported in full at lieadquarters at 4 P. M., being among the earliest, and accompanied Inspector Carpenter to Broadway and Amity Street, where such a bold and successful fight was had with a mob, and where the locusts of the Fourteenth were active in strewing the ground. At night were at the City Hall, under Inspector Leonard, where a full share of the responsible duties in that section was performed by them. On Tuesday were sent, Sergeant Ulman in command, with Capt. Petty's command, to disperse the rioters at the soap factory in Sixteenth Street ; and afterward, under Capt. Helme, were engaged in the recovery of the arms at Twenty-second Street and Second Avenue, where the terrible fight was had, and where, but for the steady courage of the men, they would have been overcome. In this affair the Fourteenth, under Ser- geant Hughes, were closely engaged', and many of them had narrow es- capes ; they acted together and made havoc among their opponents, some of whom they pursued far beyond where safety would suggest. At night they were at Brooks Brothers' store, under Inspector Carpenter, where 56 SERVICES OF THE METROPOLITAN POLICE again their steady courage was evinced. It was a sharp, quick, hard fight, and well won. The night was pitchy dark. The command came on to the mob gathered at Catharine, Hamilton, Cherry, and Oak Streets. A platoon charged into each street. The Fourteenth took Oak ; had hand-to-hand fight, but cleared it of everything living. In the melee officer Regan became separated from his force, and was chased into a hallway, from which he escaped to the rear, and fled- over fences and sheds. He received bad injuries in jumping to the ground, but saved his life. After this affair a march was made through the Fourth Ward, and several collisions with the rioters had, — in all cases the latter being speedily dispersed ; thence the command marched to the Fifth Ward ; at West Broadway and Leonard Street they were unexpectedly attacked with shot and stones ; made a rush, swept the rioters right and left, and cleared the vicinity. Soon after returned to headquarters, where they were held in reserve until Friday, then returning to routine duty at their own precinct. On Wednesday morning twenty-five were sent to Yorkville, under Roundsman Steers, where they were of the greatest service. At 11 A. M. Wednesday, officers Sutton, Riley, Dubuar, and Cannon, of this force, were detailed to pilot a regiment to Jackson's foundery, /Twenty-eighth Street, between First and Second Avenues, which had been threatened. At Twenty-third Street and First Avenue the military were fired on by the mob ; the attack was continued through Twenty-third to Second Avenue, and on the Avenue to Twenty-fifth Street, without any response ; here, however, the howitzer was unlim- bered, and the mob fled. The line of march was resumed, when the mob rallied and renewed the assault, continuing it till the foundery, on Twenty-eighth Street, was reached. Soon after the military reached it they were again assailed by the mob which had followed them, and by another from the First Avenue. There was a delay in getting into the building, the doors being locked, and the mobs were firing and pressing down. The military thereupon fired several well-directed volleys, kill- ing and wounding a number, and causing a dispersion. Until late next day the foundery was constantly besieged and threatened by large mobs, but the determination of the military kept them at bay. The fury of the rioters appeared to be directed against the four po- licemen ; a committee waited on the officer in command and demanded that they should be delivered up ; if not, the foundery would be stormed at all hazards ; he was assured if they were delivered up the mob would disperse. The committee stood at a respectful distance while delivering their message, and took to their heels, on an intimation to do so or they would be shot. At 1 P. M. Thursday, the four of the Fourteenth, dis- guised in old garments of workmen which had been found in the foundery, DURING THE RIOT WEEK, JULY, 1863. 5f made their way out, mingled with and through the mob, and succeeded, unmolested, in reaching headquarters. On all the duties this force were engaged in they were up to the requirements, on no occasion failing to respond faithfully and gallantly. Fifteenth Precinct. Capt. C. W. Caffry, No. 221 Mercer Street. At 9 A. M. Monday, Sergeant McCredie and fourteen men reported to Capt. Speight, at No. 1190 Broadway, and were sent to Third Avenue and Forty-sixth Street. Reaching the avenue from Forty-third Street, a crowd was found extend- ing to Forty-sixth Street — a mass of excited, belligerent people. Here the small force of the Fifteenth was joined by more of the police, making in all forty-four. The mob met them defiantly. Sergt. McCredie — Fighting Mac, as he is familiarly called — took command. The regulars, beaten by the rioters, were fleeing down the avenue pursued by the mob. The Sergeant ordered a charge, which was instantly and gallantly made ; the mob was driven back to Forty-sixth Street, prostrate men marking the advance of the force ; at Forty-sixth Street, where they expected to meet more police, none were to be seen ; the mob rallied and soon poured down the avenue again, and crowded it in the rear from the side streets ; they numbered thousands ; they made an overwhelming charge from above upon the force ; stones, bricks, &c, from street and houses, from front and rear, filled the air ; clubs, iron bars, guns and pistols were used upon them ; the men attempted to keep together, but it was in vain ; the force broke before the mass and fled, each for himself; those who took the side streets were the most fortunate ; those who ran down the avenue were not only pursued and beaten by the mob which had charged on them, but had to run the fearful gauntlet of the one below. Of the fourteen men of this precinct engaged here, nine were injured — several seriously. All those who escaped reported as soon as possible to the station-house. In this battle and retreat officer Bennett was knocked down three times before he ceased fighting ; the last time he was senseless. He was robbed of every article on him save his drawers, beaten savagely as he lay in the street, and left for dead. After the mob passed on he was conveyed by some strangers to St. Luke's Hospital. Here he was thought dead, and placed in the dead-house by order of some one in charge, where he remained several hours. His distracted wife, ascer- taining where he was, hastened to him. She could not believe him dead ; discovered that his heart pulsated ; flew to the officials and begged their aid. He was removed into the hospital buildings, restoratives applied, 58 SERVICES OF THE METROPOLITAN POLICE and he revived, but remained unconscious for three days. His condition for some time was critical. Officer Travis, at the defeat and separation of the force, started down the avenue ; his foremost pursuer had a pistol ; he wheeled, knocked him down, and secured the weapon ; before he could use it others were on and upon him ; he fell beneath a score of clubs, was stamped, jumped upon, and otherwise terribly assailed ; his jaw was broken, his teeth knocked out, his head terribly cut, his right hand broken, and he left for dead, after being stripped of every article of clothing, even to shirt and stockings. He was subsequently carried to St. Luke's Hospital. The retreat down the avenue was under a shower of shot and stones. Officer Phillips also ran the gauntlet, receiving many head and body blows, and, on turning into Thirty-ninth Street, made for the open door of a residence, but it was closed against him. At this moment one of his pursuers, in soldier's clothes, fired a musket, but, missing him, clubbed the weapon, and assailed him. The blow was caught, and the musket wrenched away. Phillips, almost blind with blood, and stag- gering from exhaustion, clubbed the fellow down, and another run for life was had, during which the musket was thrown over a fence ; he made across lots in rear of Third Avenue, to Fortieth Street, but here was headed off by a portion of the mob ; a woman rushed upon him, and making a blow at his neck with a shoemaker's knife, missed her mark and split his ear ; another lunge, and it made a severe wound in his arm. At this juncture some one, evidently of influence in that sec- tion, came to his rescue and threatened with death any one who made further attack ; he took Phillips' club, and by his determined manner succeeded in keeping them off and getting him to the Thirty -first Pre- cinct station. When the mob met him at Fortieth Street, a little fellow of some thirteen years sought to save him by running up, grasping his hand, and claiming that he was his father, beseeching them not to kill him. His entreaties were of no avail, and, but for the interference of the party mentioned, his fate would have been a hard one. Sergt. McCredie, on the charge, was struck on the wrist with a bar of iron and badly injured. On the retreat he was attacked by four men, and knocked down two ; he fled into the house of a German family, and was instantly secreted by a young woman there between two mattresses ; the mob soon came rushing in ; searched the house from cellar to garret without success ; were told that the Sergeant had ran through and escaped by the rear way, and left satisfied it was so. Officer Sutherland was knocked down with a brick, then beaten till insensible — from head to foot a mass of gashes and bruises. He was picked up when the mob left him, and conveyed to St, Luke's Hospital. Officer DURING THE RIOT WEEK, JULY, 1868. 59 Mingay was badly beaten on head and body. The crowd only left him when they thought he was punished enough. Officer Terence Kiernan, after receiving a stunning blow on the back of the head with a stone, a blow on the back of the neck with a hay-bale rung, and a blow on each knee about the same moment, fell ; while prostrate and nearly insensible, the wife of Mr. Eagan, who saved Superintendent Kennedy, threw her- self on his body and cried : " For God's sake, men, do not kill him." This restrained the mob, and they passed on ; he, Kiernan, was carried into a house, minus his coat, vest, cap, and shield ; the shield was after- wards given to him by Mrs. Eagan, who picked it up, covered with blood, in the street. He was subsequently disguised and smuggled out. In coming down, he called at the Croton Cottage, was recognized, but, by a clever dodge, escaped. Not so with the cottage ; in less than an hour afterward it was in flames. Officer Broughton, on the charge, was cut in head and face, one of his eyes almost destroyed, but went twice into the fight after being in- jured. Officer Gabriel received enough body blows to make a jelly of him, but none that proved serious. While Sergt. McCreadie's section was thought safe at Forty-sixth Street and Third Avenue, the off-platoon, under Roundsman Thacher, consisting of eighteen men, was sent to reinforce him. They reached the scene after the defeat, without knowing of it, and were instantly and desperately attacked. A bold fight was, for a time, made, and a running retreat, in tolerably good order, ensued. The fight throughout was hand to hand, the men injured receiving club blows. Officer Bodine's head and face was a mass of wounds, and his clothes were stripped from off him. He was rescued and brought to the station in a wagon. Officer Foster was cut on the face and head, badly bruised on the body, and, in running the gauntlet of clubs and stones on the avenue, was knocked down fourteen times ; he fainted after escaping his pursuers, and was taken by citizens to the station. All of those who were able to, reported promptly at the precinct. Officers Did way and Gibbs of this platoon arrived too late at the sta- tion to join it, and so followed it up. On reaching Forty-sixth Street and Third Avenue, and knowing nothing of the defeat of their comrades, they turned into the avenue, and were forthwith set upon by the mob ; they fought their way back as best they could. Officer Didway, after receiv- ing much injury, and a terrific blow on ( the head, which forced his eye out of the socket, managed to find safety in an alley-way, from whence he was taken to his home. Officer Gibbs fought as long as he could see, fell beneath the blows, and was then kicked, beaten, stoned, and left for dead. He was conveyed to St. Luke's Hospital by some residents of 60 SERVICES OF THE METROPOLITAN POLICE the vicinity so soon as the mob left him. Of the injured in these two fights, officers Bennett, Travis, and Gibbs were long unable to do duty. In the afternoon a portion of the force were with Inspector Carpenter in the defeat of the mob at Broadway and Amity ; here one of the ringleaders was captured by Sergeant Roe, and another by officer Bar- hebt; both were severely punished, and were lodged in the station near by. Fourteen knapsacks filled with plunder were dropped on the street by the rioters, and taken charge of by the police. At midnight the force returned to its own precinct. On Tuesday morning to Central Office ; subsequently, with Captain Helme's command, to Second Avenue and Twenty-second Street. In the severe fight here, this command were unflinching and valuable ; Sergeant Blakelock was fired at, the ball grazing his cheek. Returning to the Central Office, were ordered to report to Inspector Leonard, at City Hall, and were engaged on guard and other duties thereabouts. At night were with Inspector Carpenter's command in the attack on mob at Brooks Brothers' clothing store, and on the subsequent tour and skir- mishes. Returned to Central Office, and thence to own precinct for the night. Captain Caffry received word that Broadway was infested with highwaymen ; Roundsman Thacher, with six men, started on patrol, and at one o'clock arrested three highwaymen, two of whom have since been sent for ten years to State Prison ; they had met, knocked down, and robbed a Mr. Searles, in front of the Jones House. Next morning the force returned to the City Hall, where they remained, engaged in divers duties, until Saturday, when ordered to their precinct on usual ser- vice. The Fifteenth have won great credit for the amount of services ren- dered and the courage and fidelity with which they were performed. The number of wounded in the various engagements was fifteen, of which eleven were very seriously injured — a greater list of casualties, probably, than in any other precinct. On all occasions they were willing and effective. Sergeant Blakelock was sick in bed when he heard of the riot, but at once reported himself for duty ; he served bravely through the week, and then went to bed again more ill than before. Sergeants Dilks, McCredie, and Roe, with Roundsmen Thacher and Lefferts, are entitled, with the men, to all commendation, and the Captain bestows it lavishly. While on guard duty in Park, Tuesday evening, officer Hector Moore came across two men garroting a returned soldier; he arrested both of them, and they have since been sentenced, by Recorder Hoffman, to fifteen years each. Six others arrested by the officers of this precinct are awaiting trial for highway robbery, and two for riot. At the fight DURING THE RIOT WEEK, JULY, 186S. 61 at Leonard Street and West Broadway, Sergeant Roe was fired at, the ball cutting off the tip of a finger. Sergeant Dilks was invaluable to his command during Riot Week, as he was to other commands to which he was attached. On all occasions he was cool and courageous. The first intimation received by the Captain of the very serious character of the riot was when his men came in, on retreat, bringing some of the wounded with them. Six doctors were at once engaged in attending to the latter. On the retreat of McCredie's section from Forty-sixth Street, men and women from adjoining houses, for want of other articles, hurled house- hold furniture and crockery at them. Sixteenth Precinct. Captain H. Hedden, No. 156 West Twentieth Street. At 5 P. M. Monday the force was at Central Office ; at night at City Hall, under Inspector Leonard, where employed till morning. On Tuesday morn- ing Captain Hedden and force were part of Inspector Dilks' command in the battle at the factory, Twenty-second Street and Second Avenue, where the officers and men had severe encounters ; the rioters, at close quarters, clubbed their muskets, and fought desperately ; but it was of no avail ; down they went and over were they run. At this time Sergeant Wright was disabled by a blow with the but of a musket, as was also officer Warner, in hand-to-hand encounters. Many others of the force were injured, but not seriously. At the above battle one of the parties of rioters attacking the Six- teenth were under the lead of a man who exhibited great courage ; his comrades were driven back and he retreated under terrific and deadly punishment ; turning to escape, and even then dying, as he reached the sidewalk he tripped on the curb and staggered head foremost on to an iron picket-fence ; one of the pickets entered under his chin, penetrating to and into the roof of his mouth. Thus horribly impaled, his head sus- pended, his body [stretching to the ground, he died, — there being, by friend or foe, no opportunity at the time of extricating him. The attention of Captain Hedden was subsequently attracted to his shocking position, the body was taken down, and laid on the sidewalk. It was found, to the surprise of all, to be that of a young man of delicate features, white, fair skin. Although dressed as a laborer, in dirty overalls and filthy shirt, underneath these were fine cassimere pants, handsome rich vest, and fine linen shirt. He was evidently a man, in intelligence and posi- tion, far above those with whom he had been in fellowship. It was im- possible at the time to take possession of the body, as further attacks by the rioters were constantly expected. Nothing of the identity of the 62 SERVICES OF THE METROPOLITAN POLICE party is known ; the body, left with those of the others killed, found a grave with them. This is a suggestive incident, and, were it possible to have secured the remains, a revelation of great importance as to the in- stigators of the riots, it is thought, would have been made. At this same fight a rioter came rushing out of the factory having a carbine with sword-bayonet attached. He made a desperate assault upon one of the officers of the Sixteenth, the bayonet cutting through the coat- sleeve and just missing the arm ; withdrawing it and about to make another and more successful thrust, he was felled to the earth by members of this command, and died soon after. The carbine was so firmly clutched that it was with great difficulty taken from his grasp. He was accompanied from the building by a lad who clung to his coat. One of the officers caught him up, carried him out of harm's way, and he ran shrieking off to a bevy of women who had been urging on the rioters. Tuesday evening the Sixteenth repaired to the City Hall, and were sent, under Captain Hedden, to Thomas Street, near West Broadway, where, coming upon a mob destroying the dwellings of colored people, they made a charge and scattered it. Before daylight, Wednesday, were on duty protecting Western Hotel, Courtlandt Street; the mob here fled to Greenwich Street, and, re-collecting, attempted to break in and rob a shoe store there ; this precinct followed and beat them off; in the course of the melee pistols were used by the mob, but without effect. This force also repaired to the U. S. Bonded Warehouse, Greenwich Street, which was being attacked ; on nearing it they received a volley of shots from the rioters, but made a bold charge, and, after a brisk fight, drove them off. The mob had broken into the building and were about setting fire to it when Captain Hedden and his command assailed them. On Wednesday evening Sergeant Wright and ten men were detailed to the United States Marshal's office, where they remained till Saturday. The balance of the force, on Wednesday, did escort duty at the funeral of Brig.-Gen. Weed, and afterward were sent to Hudson and North Moore Streets, where a crowd threatening a mission school was punished and driven off; thence a march was taken through the Fifth Precinct, and all gatherings dispersed ; in the evening they visited Pier No. 4, North River, and prevented a renewal of the outrages there. This closed the active duty of the Sixteenth ; it remained in reserve at the Hall until Saturday morning, when ordered to its own quarters. The Sixteenth, officers and men, emulated each other in effectively doing all they had to do, and found no risks too great to encounter, no duties too arduous to perform. DURING THE RIOT WEEK, JULY, 1863, 63 Seventeenth Precinct. Capt. S. Brower, First Avenue, corner of Fifth Street. Early on Monday morning the Captain, with his force, reported to Capt. Porter, at Forty-sixth Street and Third Avenue. When reaching there the crowd was not large, but soon the rioters assembled in force, coming in fifties and hundreds from different sections, until swelled to thousands of excited men armed with clubs and other weapons. The first overt act was the stoppage of the Third Avenue cars, the taking off of the driver and horses* and compelling the passengers to get out. The force at- tempted to prevent this, but were driven back. Then ensued an attack on the Marshal's office, a shower of stones breaking doors and windows, and finally the mob rushed into the building, beating back the small force who valiantly opposed them, until flight or death were the alterna- tives. The force retreated into Forty -sixth Street, where they were en- gaged in saving the occupants of the building and their property — the premises having been fired — until they were again beaten back by over- whelming numbers. Sergeant Finch arrived about this time and took command, Capt. Brower going to the station-house. ■ The Sergeant made, with his force, a charge upon the mob, but failed to disperse them, and received a severe gash from a blow on the forehead, which subse- quently laid him up, and his force was compelled to retreat. The mob was a huge one, thousands composing it, and the opposing force, bravely as they did, were entirely inadequate. After the discomfiture here, they reported to headquarters, and in the evening, under Capt. Brower, were at the Park with Inspector Carpenter, where they made havoc upon the mob in the grand charge heretofore detailed ; thence through Fourth Ward and to Central Office for the night. On Tuesday this precinct joined Capt. Petty's command in the visit to the soap factory in Six- teenth Street, and aided in restoring order in that section. They were also with Capt. Helme's hazardous expedition in the Second Avenue, and took a liberal hand in the severe fight there ; they were among those storming the building in which the stolen guns were stored, taking it after a savage fight, and recovering a large number of arms. At night Sergt. Slote and ten men were detailed for duty to Gen. Wool, re- maining until quiet was restored. At midnight Capt. Brower took com- mand of one hundred and fifty men, marching through the Eleventh, Thirteenth, and Seventeenth Precincts, returning to headquarters Wednesday morning. At 9 A. M., in command of his own and the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Precinct forces, he proceeded to the scene of riot and murder in Thirty-second Street, between Sixth and Seventh 64 SERVICES OF THE METROPOLITAN POLICE Avenues, dispersing the crowd and recovering the body of the colored man hung there, bringing it to headquarters. This was the last of the active duties. In the Forty-sixth Street battle Sergeant Finch was severely injured ; Sergeant Slote was, sub- sequently, the only officer acting with Capt. Brower, Sergeant Griffith being deputed to the telegraph office, and Sergeant Weith left in charge of the station-house. The conduct of every man was, throughout, of the most creditable character, and the Captain alleges that he wants to lead no better men in any emergency, never mind how great. At the fight on Forty-sixth Street, the force were, of course, power- less. Officer Hill was badly hurt ; officer Weill was so badly injured as long to be unable to resume duty ; and some four or five others were wounded. On this occasion women were active in urging on the rioters. The fight was hand to hand, and the force did bravely against over- powering numbers. When the force was in Second Avenue fight under Capt. Helme, after the charge upon and capture of the building where the stolen arms were secreted, officer Tyler secured a gun ; he coolly went into the street, and procuring from a soldier, whom he found in the vicinity, several rounds of ammunition, loaded his piece, and then started, alone, down Twenty-second Street toward First Avenue, where the mob had retreated, firing upon them until his ammunition was exhausted. He was all this while made a target of from the mob and from houses on the street, but escaped unharmed. Officer Tyler had been under fire at Bull Run, and brought the experience of " shot and shell " home with him. His bravery was the subject of laudation among the officers and men of his precinct. Eighteenth Precinct. Capt. John Cameron, No. 163 East Twenty-second Street. This precinct is in the heart of the lately infected district, and the station- house was destroyed by the mob. On Monday the Captain had great trouble in calling in his men, because of the many who had individual interests to look after in the care of their families and property, both, from their connection, being threatened. Early in the morning Sergt. Vosburgh, with a section of men, was sent to the riot at Forty-sixth Street and Third Avenue. Here, with the overpowering mob, they had a severe fight, in which officer Wynne was severely beaten about the head and stabbed in the arm — was hurt the worst of any of the force, and was conveyed to the hospital ; officer Larue, so injured as to be laid up for several days; officer Sanderson beaten, and his clothes DURING THE RIOT WEEK, JULY, 1863. 65 nearly all torn off, and others more or less injured. The force, when at. tacked, was on its way to join Capt. Porter, but found it impossible to do so ; after a brave struggle, they were compelled to retreat and scatter, making their way back to the station as best they could. In the after- noon a number of the force, under Sergeant Banfield, took charge of the Armory on Second Avenue, until relieved by the Broadway Squad. At 5.30 P. M. Capt. Cameron reported with force at Central Office, Sergeant Buckman and three men being left at station. Remained at headquarters over night, and on Tuesday were engaged with the com- mand under Inspector Dilks, in the attack on the mob at the Second Avenue factory, and the storming of the building filled with armed rioters. Subsequently, the Captain, with his force, was on the expedi- tion to the soap factory in Sixteenth Street, which had been threatened, and then, with Capt. Helme's command, to Second Avenue and Twenty- second Street again, where such severe fighting and such perils, as al- ready described, occurred and were encountered. At night, held in re- serve at headquarters. On Wednesday Sergeant Vosburgh, with the force, formed part of Capt. Brower's command, which visited Thirty-second Street, near Sixth Avenue, and recovered the body of the negro hung there. On the same day the force was divided — a portion ordered to report to Capt. Speight, Twenty-ninth Precinct, and a portion to Capt. Hutchings, Yorkville. Capt. Cameron remained at headquarters, where his services were active and valuable. On Wednesday night Officers McCort and McVay, of this precinct, did guide duty for the military on the march through First Avenue, and were in the disastrous conflict in which Col. Jardine was so seriously injured and the military driven back. On Thursday, what few of the force remained at headquarters as- sisted the detectives in arresting one of the ringlea'ders of the mobs — the notorious Andrews — in a colored rendezvous in East Eleventh Street. On Friday the force sent to Yorkville returned, as did those sent to Capt. Speight, and went on guard duty in the vicinity of headquarters. On Saturday the force were detailed to usual duty in their own precinct ; their own quarters had been burned down, and they found temporary ones at the Central Office. Sergeant Buckman, with three men, were left in charge of the station- house on Monday. An immense mob, the accumulations from down- town and up along the East River, had passed and threatened it in the morning, but made no serious demonstrations against it that day. On Tuesday Sergeant Burden relieved Sergeant Buckman, and about 4| o'clock P. M. received a visit from the mob ; with his men he barricaded the windows and doors as best he could, and then they made their escape 5 66 SERVICES OF THE METROPOLITAN POLICE through the prison in the rear, having to pry off the iron bars of a win- dow, and into Twenty-third Street. The mob soon after broke in and set fire to the station ; the bellringer on the adjacent tower struck the alarm once, but was threatened with instant death if he did not cease and abdicate ; both of which he very sensibly consented to do. When the Broadway Squad were attacked, and likely to be over- whelmed in the gun factory, Sergeant Buckman, in citizen's dress, made his way to the building, and, by direction of Capt. Cameron, advised their retreat from it, which was successfully made. After the fight with the Broadway Squad at this armory — and the record, when reached, will show how bravely this squad behaved — Capt. Cameron sent a number of his men, in police uniform, with sedan chairs, to take charge of the killed and wounded of the rioters. The mob allowed the police to en- ter into their very midst, offered them, on their errand of mercy, no molestation, and three of the misguided victims were taken by them to Belle vue Hospital. The Captain placed his faith for the safety of his men on the " sedans," and he was right. In this fight some seven or eight of the rioters, who, on the mob gaining entrance, had rushed up stairs, were burned to death, their comrades having fired the building from below. On returning from the hospital, to which he had been aiding in carrying one of the rioters, officer Grubelstein was, set upon and chased by a mob in Twenty-fourth Street ; he jumped over divers fences, and reached Twenty-third Street — here again met, he ran for Third Ave- nue, thence to Twenty-first street, and into a lager-bier saloon, where he was for a while secreted ; came out and was again recognized and given chase to ; managed to evade his pursuers and jump into a cellar, where he remained until dark, when he made his way to his home. He was much hurt by the pelting from stones, sprained his ankle in getting over the fences, and was laid up for several days. This was his return for carrying the wounded of the mob to the hospital. Since early Monday morning it was unsafe for a policeman to show himself. While on post Monday, before riot had developed, officer Ar- noux was attacked by a gang ; he managed to escape to the station minus hat, club, and portions of his clothing. The officers and men of this precinct lost, in the destruction of the station-house, from $3,000 to $4,000 in bedding, clothing, and other personal property. Not an article was saved. The record of the Eighteenth shows hard and constant duty and much personal loss and injury. They were in critical positions fre- quently, but were always equal to them, and throughout contributed largely to the honorable repute which the entire force has made for itself. DURING THE RIOT WEEK, JULY, 1863. 67 Nineteenth Precinct. Capt. G. T. Porter, East Fifty -ninth Street, near Third Avenue. The riots commenced in this precinct, an excited crowd collecting, about 9 o'clock A. M., at the Provost Marshal's office, corner of Forty-sixth Street and Third Avenue. This was soon swelled by arrivals from all directions, until thousands had assembled, many of them armed with clubs and other weapons, and all demonstrative of mischief. Capt. Por- ter repaired to the office, stationing a portion of his force — in all sixty men — in front, and the balance inside of the building. The drafting commenced at 10^ A. M., and was uninterrupted for some twenty min- utes. Meantime the mob outside, increased to huge proportions, were feeding their excitement with threats and execrations, and suddenly turned their attention to the Third Avenue cars, one of which was pass- ing down. The cry " Stop the cars ! " was raised, a rush was made, the drivers taken off, horses detached, and the passengers compelled to abdi- cate, two of them relieved of their watches ; a section of the police went to the rescue, and were assailed with clubs and stones, overpowered and driven back. Having committed the first overt act the mob became frenzied, and at once made a rush on to the Marshal's office, assailing the force on the street, driving them into the building, and showering into the windows stones and all kinds of missiles. To fight or to keep at bay the thousands was an impossibility. The Marshal and his clerks, with the police, were driven back with clubs through the building, and escaped from the rear. In a few moments the furniture was destroyed, piled up and fired, and the building was in flames so speedily that two families living up stairs barely escaped with their lives. The police repaired to the adjoining buildings and attempted .to save the property in them. They were fiercely attacked and driven away. The firemen reached the scene, but were prevented from doing anything. The Chief Engineer was present, and addressed the mob, urging them to allow the firemen to go to work. Meantime the fire had spread rapidly, and three of a row of brick buildings were in flames ; the mob yielded to Chief Decker's appeal, the companies went to work, and the fourth house was saved. It was about this time that the rioters made the first serious demonstrations against the police. Hitherto, in the progress to arson and pillage, they had driven them away, but had not concentrated against them ; now they massed on the Third Avenue, and made a furious attack on the force with pistols, clubs, and stones. Very soon officer Cook was knocked down and seriously injured, and several others badly hurt. The aid sent to Capt. Porter from below could not reach him, and were 68 SERVICES OF THE METROPOLITAN POLICE themselves engaged with another portion of the mob ; resistance against the overwhelming numbers was madness, and, after a brief but gallant fight, the force broke and fled, the mob masters of the situation. The men recollected at the station-house, and, in citizens' dress, revisited the section where they were defeated, and succeeded in bringing off those of the injured who had remained there. In the evening the entire force were ordered to headquarters, and with Sergeant Copeland's command visited Clarkson Street, for the recovery of the body of a colored man murdered there. Tuesday, a portion of the Nineteenth, under Sergts. Bumstead and Holmes, were, with Inspector Dilks' command, on its expedition to Second Avenue and Twenty-second Street, and were engaged in the severe and obstinate fight there. Subsequently, under Sergts. Bumstead and Fulmer, a portion revisited that vicinity with Capt. Helme's com- mand, and were again participants in another severe engagement, and were of the storming party which carried the building filled with rioters. About daylight on Wednesday, Capt. Porter took his command, and made a tour through the Thirteenth and Seventeenth Wards, and later they were with force sent to recover the body of the colored man mur- dered at Seventh Avenue and Thirty-second Street. About noon, Sergt. Bumstead, with squad, made an onslaught upon a gang at Bleecker and Thompson, who were bent on destruction of dwellings thereabouts. A brisk charge and liberal use of the locusts sent them in all directions. On Thursday the force was returned to its own precinct, where Ser- geant Decker had, with two or three men, been left in command. The Nineteenth was the force first attacked by the rioters, and they were in all the principal engagements. The officers and men exhibited an alacrity in responding to calls upon them, and a steady courage throughout which rendered them reliable and valuable. Twentieth Precinct. Capt. G. W. Walling, No. 352 West Thirty-fifth Street. Early Monday the reserve of the Twentieth were sent to the Seventh Avenue Arsenal, where it remained till noon, and in the afternoon Capt. Wal- ling, with Sergeants Rooney and Carey, reported at headquarters with force. In the evening made an expedition to the Eighth Ward, which was found quiet, and thence reported to Inspector Leonard, at the City Hall. Were engaged in the scouting expeditions sent out by the In- spector, and in the guard duty done in the vicinity of the Hall. Tuesday morning were returned to Central Office. From here made an expedi- DURING THE RIOT WEEK, JULY, 1863. 69 tion to Pitt Street, but too late to have a hand in punishing the mob, the military, a short time before, having met, fired upon and killed a number of them. On return to headquarters this force were sent to the upper part of the city, in the vicinity of the Twentieth Ward, where the mobs were reported as having it all their own way. Allerton's Hotel, Eleventh Avenue, between Fortieth and Forty-first Street, had been sacked and burned ; a body of military had been beaten,' many of the soldiers wounded, and a number, of their guns taken away. Hearing that the Sixth Avenue Railroad stables were being attacked, Capt. Walling hurried with his force to them. The report proved untrue, but he re- ceived information that the rioters were in Forty-seventh Street, near Fifth Avenue, attacking the fine private residences there. Thither the force went on the double quick, coming with a rush upon the mob, a portion of which had just forced an entrance into the basement of Dr. Ward's residence, while other portions were at work on other dwellings. The rioters ran on the first charge. The force broke into squads of threes and fours, giving vigorous chase ; every man with a club or other weapon who was overtaken was clubbed to the sidewalk, and laid there. The streets were speckled with the carcasses of such. Many dropped their weapons, but did not escape the penalty for carrying them. The route was complete ; the punishment inflicted severe. The sole purpose of this mob was robbery. They were interrupted just as the spoils were thought secure. Up to this period they had undisputed sway, had been doing an immense amount of damage, and kept that entire section of the city in a state of terror. The force reunited at Forty-seventh Street and Fifth Avenue. It was here ascertained that when Capt. Putnam's regu- lars were in that vicinity, one of them, who was sick, had fallen behind and been set upon by the mob ; he was knocked down, beaten, kicked, and then thrown senseless over a fence into a lot on the Fifth Avenue. Capt. Walling and his force hunted him up, and he was conveyed to Bellevue Hospital. The force returned to the Twentieth Precinct Sta- tion-house, where, matters looking threateningly, on Ninth Avenue, dis- patches for military aid were sent by Capt. Walling. The mob had cut down the telegraph poles on Ninth Avenue from Thirty-seventh to Forty-third Street, and had used the wire in fastening wagons and carts together, making barricades of them across the avenue at Thirty-seventh and Forty -third Streets, and at the junctions of the intervening streets. At 6 P. M. Capt. Wesson's regulars arrived at the station-house. Capt. Slott (of the Twenty-second Precinct) took command of a body of the police, and, with the military in the rear, marched to the avenue and Thirty-seventh Street. Here the force made an attempt to remove the barricades, but were met with a discharge of firearms and stones from 70 SERVICES OF THE METROPOLITAN POLICE the rioters beyond. They had to fall back ; the military advanced to the right and fired several volleys ; the mob retreated, and the police, again advancing, removed the barricade. Soon after they were again rallied on by the mob, and the military again took the right, loading and firing as they advanced, the mob falling back, finally fleeing, and the police removing each barricade as it was reached. This work done and the force returned to the station-house, where it was held in reserve. At 9 P. M. an attack was made upon a gun and hardware store in Thirty- seventh Street, between Eighth and Ninth Avenues ; Sergt. Petty, with a force, was soon there, and soon had the thieves flying, save three who were left senseless on the sidewalk. At midnight a mob attacked the colored church in Thirtieth Street, between Seventh and Eighth Avenues. Capt. Walling, with his entire force, came upon them while busily en- gaged with axes in the work of destruction ; they had concluded not to burn the church lest some premises thereabout occupied by their friends would be injured ; so the axe was brought into requisition, and right actively being used. The force charged upon the mob unexpectedly, but were met with a discharge of guns and pistols from the street, alleys, and doorways. The fire was returned, and the clubs resorted to; scores of heads were cracked, many of the lawless were stretched at length, and in a few moments there was not an " upright " rioter to be seen. This was the last of the more active duties of the Twentieth ; they continued at the station-house doing scouting duty, and making some expeditions until Saturday, then resuming regular patrol. The services of this force were of the greatest value ; they were in a badly infected vicinity, had hazardous and arduous duty to perform, and have made for themselves, by their faithful and brave discharge of it, an honorable name in and out of the department. Sergeant Petty was left in charge of the station, and, just as the force on Monday evening was leaving for headquarters, Superintendent Davis, of the Colored Orphan Asylum, led into the station two hundred and sixteen of the children, none over twelve years of age, who had escaped from their home by the rear as the dastardly and infamous mob forced an entrance in front and fired the building. These little ones would undoubtedly have been assailed had they not been hurriedly guided away. They were sadly terrified on reaching the station, but were re- assured, housed and kindly cared for by Sergeant Petty until sent to the Island. When the force were returning to the station from the severe usage of the thieves at Forty-seventh Street and Fifth Avenue, sundry women on Fifth Avenue, on Thirty-fifth Street, and on Sixth Avenue, assailed them as " bloody murderers," &c, &c. DURING THE RIOT WEEK, JULY, 1863. 71 On Wednesday evening some women visited the station, stating that they had soldiers secreted in their houses, who had thus escaped the fury of the mob on Tuesday, when the military were defeated in the vicinity of Allerton's Hotel. Capt. Walling sent a coach, with an officer in citizen's dress, and collected three, returning them to the Arsenal. The coach, while on Fortieth Street, was attacked by the mob, the windows and doors broken in with stones, but, with a courageous driver and good horses, got off without further, damage. When the force hurried to Forty-seventh Street and Fifth Avenue, on the mob about to sack residences there, they met crowds of women and children with bags and baskets, waiting on Sixth Avenue, above Forty-sixth Street, for the word to join in and gather the plunder. After the fight these women were busy attending the wounded. On Thursday morning at 2 o'clock, a party of four or five of the force discovered a gang which had broken into a pawnbroker's shop in Thirty- ninth Street, near Eighth Avenue, and were rifling it ; they had secured a number of guns and sabres, when this small force made a dash upon them, beat them badly, and recovered all the property. On Tuesday afternoon, Capt. Walling, while alone and reconnoiter- ing at Thirty-fifth Street and Eighth Avenue, saw three men staving in the door of Mr. Heiser's hardware store, Eighth Avenue, above Thirty- fifth Street. He ran up and grappled one of them, and, dealing a pow- erful blow with his club, knocked him down ; an officer came to his aid, and disarmed another, who, with his companion, escaped. The fellow knocked down was got on to his feet by some friends, and helped, stag- gering along, to Thirty -sixth Street, where he fell senseless ; he was bundled into a wagon and carted off. When the Captain made this attack, a mob was awaiting, at the corner of Thirty-sixth Street, the success of their comrades' attempt to break open the store, when they would have rushed to its pillage. Sergeant Petty several times, during the absence of the force, was threatened with destruction of the station-house, but made excellent preparations for a sturdy defence, by barricading, &c. At one time he had over four hundred refugees under his charge, and all were made comfortable, and given an abundance to eat. t Twenty-first Precinct. Capt. A. M. Palmer, No. 120 East Thirty-fifth Street, The Cap- tain, with his command, was in the battle with the mob on the morning of Monday, at the Provost Marshal's office, Forty-sixth street and Third Avenue. All the forces engaged, it will be recollected, were repulsed. 72 SERVICES OF THE METROPOLITAN POLICE On the return to the station, the Captain went home, and, in consequence of the stoppage of the Third Avenue cars, could not get back again until Tuesday morning, when he reported with his command to the Central Office. The force was with Capt. Petty's command on that morning at the disturbance in the vicinity of Sixteenth Street and Tenth Avenue, and the balance of the day and night on general duty at the Central Office. On Wednesday morning they were returned to their own precinct, and in the afternoon the Captain, being sick, went home, and Sergeant Brack- ets took command. The force were kept in reserve in the precinct, por- tions being constantly on valuable scouting and picket duty. All that night and all Thursday were gangs around, armed with clubs and other weapons, threatening dwellings, howling, hooting, and terrifying citizens ; the stores were all closed and terror reigned. Sergeant Brackett's well- arranged plans of operating in detail, boldly seconded by his men, pre- vented any concentration or more serious demonstration during this period. At 7 P. M. Thursday, officer Chandler was brought to the station badly beaten, and was thence conveyed to the Bellevue Hospital. He had been attacked at Thirty-fourth Street and Second Avenue by a gang, against which he made manful fight, but uselessly. During the night the Sergeant and his force continued on the qui vive, and no out- rages occurred. They were in squads, here, there, everywhere, and, although in an infected district, by their promptness, activity and intelli- gent movements, frustrated attempts at outrage. On Friday morning Sergeant Brackett in command, with Sergeant Hastings and thirty-five men, repaired to Thirty-ninth Street and Second Avenue ; the Seventh Regiment was their escort ; the block between Thir- ty-ninth and Fortieth Streets, and the First and Second Avenues, were surrounded by the military. This was a thoroughly riotous district, and the police went to work entering every house and searching it for goods stolen during the riots, from the cellar to and on the roof. Not a room, a closet, a cubby-hole, or a " between beds" was missed : every nook, corner and hole was investigated ; sometimes the inmates were searched with success ; the explorations were continued in similar manner to Thir- ty-third Street, each block being surrounded by the military. At 4 P. M. the military were unfortunately withdrawn and the search had to cease. But an immense amount of property had been recovered, among it a full wagon load of fire-arms, bayonets, pikes, &c, in all 173 pieces; furniture, groceries, dry goods, &c, &c, comprised the rest. Among con- traband articles taken were five steel-headed clubs, villainous and mur- derous weapons, which the owners had prepared for their work of murder and robbery. On Friday search by squads was renewed and another large amount recovered, among it some $400 worth of the property of DURING THE RIOT WEEK, JULY, 1863. 73 the slaughtered Col. O'Brien, found at a house in E. Thirty -fourth Street, where the thieves secreted it. This active work was kept up for several days, and with constant success. Sergeant Vaughan with fourteen men, and Roundsman Moore with six, each in different portions of the precinct, recovered thousands of dollars' worth. The catalogue of the goods re- taken by the Twenty-first would make a large volume. Although this force had but one encounter with the mob, their services in their precinct were invaluable. They prevented many serious demon- strations, and in the duty of recovering goods were zealous and unflinching, notwithstanding its hazardous and unpleasant character. They have saved many thousands of dollars, by their efficient discharge of this duty, to the treasury. Sergeant Brackett, on whom the command devolved, is entitled to great credit for. the sagacity characterizing his action throughout, while his associate officers and the men have won a full share of the honors on the record. Twenty-second Precinct. Capt. J. C. Slott, Forty-seventh Street, between Eighth and Ninth Avenues. On Monday morning Sergeant William M. Gross and twelve men reported to Capt. Porter, at the Marshal's Office, Forty- sixth Street and Third Avenue. Here was the first serious demonstra- tion of the mob, and the first attack upon the police, in which the latter were defeated by overwhelming numbers ; this force returned soon after noon" to the station. Capt. Slott, with Sergeants Aldis, Potter, and Murphy, and the command, reported at headquarters in the evening, from whence they accompanied Inspector Carpenter and force to the Park ; participated in the charge upon the Printing-house Square mob, and contributed to the strewing of the ground with the bodies of the lawless and riotous. Thence were on the tour through the Fourth Ward, at the fight in Roosevelt Street, and the subsequent skirmishes, At midnight were at headquarters again, but soon after sent to the Twen- tieth Precinct Station to protect it and its hundreds of refugees. They remained here until Thursday, when ordered to their own precinct. Meantime, however, they had participated with the Twentieth in the ac- tive, vigorous fight with the mob which, at midnight Tuesday, were at- tempting to destroy the colored church in Thirtieth Street, between Seventh and Eighth Avenues. They \vent into this under " shot and shell," but every man with a will and determination that largely aided in the speedy and, to the rioters, costly victory. This command was also in the storming of the barricades in Ninth Avenue, from Thirty- 74 SERVICES OF THE METROPOLITAN POLICE seventh to Forty-third Street. Capt. Slott, of the Twenty-second, was in command of the police here, and, after a charge made under a shower of bricks and shot, only withdrew his men long enough to let the mili- tary discharge a volley, when the force pressed forward again, took and removed them. So, nearly all the way up, on approaching each barri- cade, were they under fire from street or house-tops, but made a clean sweep of all the obstructions. Several of the rioters were killed in this engagement. The force returned to the Twentieth Station. In the af- ternoon of Wednesday, Capt. Slott made an expedition to Forty-second Street and Tenth Avenue, clearing the coast there ; subsequently, Sergt. Alms was sent with command to Twenty-seventh Street and Seventh Avenue, where rioters were rampant, did the work of dispersal thor- oughly; on returning, when near the arsenal, was ordered by Gen. Sandford to take his force and a company of military, then awaiting him, to Forty-second Street and Tenth Avenue, where the mob had again gathered, and were threatening to burn the residence of Mr. Campbell. He at once wheeled, and with the added force of military, hurried up. The force was, on arrival, greeted with shouts of defiance, and with shots and missiles from doors, windows, and house-tops, as well as from the street. He halted, and tried a little moral suasion, begged of the rioters to desist and to retire ; they gave him no heed, and the officer in command of the military made a similar appeal. The only responses, save from a few who got out of the way, were renewed yells and volleys. The military then wheeled into sections on the avenue, one facing up the other down, the police in the center, and opened fire. Men were shot down in the street, some picked off from the house-tops, and others from the windows, where they had been actively firing. In a few moments the mob was entirely dispersed, leaving their dead lying in the streets uncared for. This ended the " battle-field " operation of the Twenty-second, who were relieved from the Twentieth Precinct on Thursday, retiring to their own on ordinary duty. Capt. Walling, of the Twentieth, speaks in eulogistic terms of the valuable services of this command while at his precinct, and the history of their arduous and re- sponsible duties, so well performed, more than justify him. Every call was promptly, cheerfully, and bravely met, and more honor won by them for an organization which is now laden with honors. Twenty-third Precinct. Capt. Henry Hutchings, East Eighty-sixth Street, near Fifth Ave- nue. The force of this precinct were, on Monday, left without orders, in consequence of the cutting of telegraph wires, until about 6 P. M., DURING THE RIOT WEEK, JULY, 1863. 75 when a special messenger brought orders to report at the Central Office. Promptly starting, they were in time to be with Inspector Carpen- ter's command on its visit to the mob in the Park and Printing-house Square, and to join in the compliments so liberally bestowed upon the heads of the fleeing rascals. The force were on duty with the Inspector until returned to headquarters at midnight, and soon after were ordered, under Sergt. Copeland, to the recovery of the body of the negro hung in Clarkson Street. This duty was performed in a rain drenching every man to the skin, and, as they were returning to headquarters, the com- mand received the information that Mr. Wakeman's house, on Eighty- seventh Street, opposite their station, had been sacked and fired, that the station-house had also been consumed, and every article belonging to the force stolen or burned. Doorman Ebling, who was left in charge, managed to save the telegraph instrument, but that was all. This en- tailed heavy loss upon officers and men. Before they had breakfasted on Tuesday, this force were with Inspect tor Carpenter on the expedition in Second Avenue. At Thirty-fifth Street an assault was made on the rear, and simultaneously, with guns and missiles, from the tops and windows of a block of tenement houses on the avenue. Here the charge was ordered by Inspector Carpenter upon the houses, and during it fierce hand-to-hand fighting ensued. A portion of the Twenty-third were among the assaulting party — the bal- ance being busily engaged with the mob on the street. On this occa- sion a large number of the rioters were so punished as never to be able again to participate in similar scenes ; they fought desperately when finding themselves cornered in the houses, and the orders were " no pris- oners." In the afternoon a portion of the force, under Sergeant Hicks, was ordered to Broadway, by Commissioner Acton, to employ or press into service for the Commissioners thirty-two stages. The force secured fourteen, being all they could find running. During the night the men were repeatedly called in readiness for duty, but were not required. On Wednesday morning it was thought necessary for the force to return to Yorkville to their own precinct, which they did, reaching it by steam- boat at 1 P. M. On landing, arriving at Fourth Avenue and Eighty- sixth Street, they were greeted by the citizens enthusiastically. The mob had, for two days and nights, been rioting there, unrestrained ; uni- versal alarm prevailed, and neither lives nor property were safe. Where the excesses would end no one could tell, and this opportune arrival of those who would and could protect them caused the greatest relief and a general joy. All was quiet in the precinct after their arrival ; active patrol and scouting duty were performed during the balance of the week. A portion of the force was at once engaged in making search for stolen 76 SERVICES OF THE METROPOLITAN POLICE property, and succeeded in recovering a large amount — among it most of Mr. Wakeman's valuable library. A number of the rioters and thieves were also arrested, while the search was being prosecuted. During the absence of the force the rioters had sacked and burned Mr. Wakeman's residence, had sacked and burned Mr. Grey's, and had sacked the dwelling of Provost-Marshal Nugent ; the station-house had been burned, as had the large grocery store of Messrs. Metter & Dem- arest, which was pillaged of a very large amount of goods ere it was given to the flames. The rioters and thieves had no opposition offered them for the first forty-eight hours, and much money had been obtained from citizens, on whom they called and demanded certain amounts under threat of destruction of their persons or their property. All this the presence of the force promptly put an end to. While acting from headquarters, the Twenty-third were prompt, ac- tive, gallant, and their efficiency was felt in all the services in which they •were engaged. In what repute they are held at home is evidenced by the cordial reception on their return, and by the immediate fleeing of the villains whom their absence had encouraged to acts of outrage and plunder. Twenty-fourth Precinct. Captain James Todd, Steamboat No. 1. The force of this precinct con- stitute the Harbor Police. On the morning of Monday Captain Todd, on hearing of the riot, volunteered his command for service in any way useful. The first order received was about noon, from Major-Gen. Wool, to collect all the military at Governor's Island, and bring them to the city, which was promptly obeyed, and the troops landed at North Moore Street at 2£ P. M. In the afternoon special duties were per- formed between the city and the island ; arms and ammunition were brought over for the Custom House, Sub-Treasury, and other Govern- ment buildings ; others were furnished by this force for the defence of the ram Bunderberg, lying near Webb's ship-yard, and which had been threatened with destruction ; muskets were also brought for the defence of the buildings threatened at Printing-house Square. Patrolman Blackwell performed a hazardous duty in the conveyance of the arms from the landing to their destination, but did it with a sagacity which prevented suspicion, and prevented in every case interference. At mid- night, by request of Col. O'Brien, this force went to Governor's Island, procured arms and ammunition, and conveyed them to four hundred men of his command then at Staten Island Ferry; thus at 4 A. M., armed and equipped, they were enabled to be in the city. DURING THE RIOT WEEK, JULY, 1863. 77 Tuesday the force started to Eiker's Island to bring down five hundred of the military from that place ; carried an artillery company to Gov- ernor's Island, where it was provided with guns and ammunition, and thence to the city. The balance of the day and until Wednesday morn- ing, constantly and rapidly steaming from point to point on the river, keeping watchful eyes on all quarters. On Wednesday morning large bodies of police and soldiers were carried to Yorkville and to Harlem ; in the afternoon Captain Wilson and his force were conveyed to Washing- ton Heights. At all these places the appearance of" Police Boat No. 1," with its freight, was joyously hailed. At 10.30 P. M., while patrolling the river, the fire at the Atlantic Dock Elevators was discovered. Capt. Todd at once ran his boat to the spot, and commenced throwing water from the engine on board upon it ; it was of no use ; the force fought the fire until they were driven off by the heat, their own safety endangered; then attention was turned to saving other property ; three Government prizes loaded with cotton were in proximity to the flames ; the force, speedily grappled them and towed them into the bay, where they were anchored. Returning to the scene of the fire, again were in service there attempting to extinguish it, until daylight, when offto Riker's Island, from whence more troops were brought to the city. Thursday was occupied, by order of General Sandford, in bringing troops from the islands, con- veying some four hundred colored refugees — the orphans among them — to Blackwell's Island ; carrying arms and ammunition to Harlem for a vol- unteer corps there, and patrolling the river. On this day this force were parties to the rescue of the colored man beaten and thrown over- board at Pier No. 4, North River ; the man was taken on board the police boat and brought ashore. On Friday a large number of " con- trabands " were taken to Blackwell's Island, and active patrol duty per- formed. WKe^i Captain Todd took his first and largest cargo of contra- bands on board, the excitement against them being high, he adopted every expedient to keep them out of sight. They were stowed on the boat in most admirable style, and not a " woolly head " would have been re- cognized as on board. How he did it ; how he compressed so much flesh and blood in the limited space at his disposal, was as much a matter of curiosity to him as to others. While the Twenty-fourth was not in any of the conflicts of the week, the services of the force were active, arduous, and wearisome ; they were, too, of the utmost value, especially in the rapid pouring of troops into the city, and in the prompt supplies of arms and ammunition. The saving of the Government prizes at the Atlantic Docks was important service. Captain Todd and his men have established the great value of this arm of the service, and the public acknowledge their obligations for services so willingly, faithfully performed, and so preservative of its safety. 78 SERVICES OF THE METROPOLITAN POLICE Twenty-fifth Precinct, Captain Mills, No. 300 Mulberry Street. The force of this precinct is popularly known as the " Broadway Squad." The Captain was absent on leave during the Riot Week, and the command devolved on Sergeant Burdick. At noon the Sergeant, Roundsmen Ferris and Sherwood, with thirty-two men, reported to Captain Cameron, of the Eighteenth, and were ordered to the care of the gun factory at Twenty-first Street and Second Avenue, with orders to hold it at all hazards until aid ar- rived. The men reached the establishment by going singly or in pairs, thus escaping the serious attention of the mob, which was rapidly gather- ing around it — concentrating from all quarters, in gangs from the tens and twenties to the hundreds. But thirty -five officers and men were in the building. A request was made by the Sergeant, of those in charge, to stop work and close up the factory, but was declined because of the absence of the proprietors and consequent want of orders. Very soon the mob made demonstrations by word and act, but were warned off by Sergeant Burdick, who notified them that any one making an assault would do so at his peril. The mob left, retiring up the avenue, but after an absence of some fifteen minutes, returned reinforced to thrice the original number, and instantly surrounded the building, yelling like demons ; they were armed with all kinds of weapons. The force determ- ined to hold the building, and an attempt to fire it was defeated ; each of the squad was armed with a carbine, furnished by the factory, and was judiciously stationed. But now stones began to be hurled through the many and low windows ; the mob, constantly increasing and encouraged, made an assault ; entrance was demanded and refused ; the squad kept cool and determined ; but a sledge-hammer in the hands of a brawny rioter was at work on the door ; the lower panel was broken in ; a shout of exultation from those around, and down on his knees he went and crawled partially through ; an instant and well-directed shot from one of the force strewed his brains in all directions, and he was hastily dragged back by his friends, dead. This sudden catastrophe to their leader staggered the mob, but only temporarily, for in a few moments the attack was renewed with the greatest violence ; the windows were showered through with stones, and shot came thick and fast. Sergeant Burdick sent to Captain Cameron, and called for the aid expected ; the Captain sent word that it was impossible for his force to reach them, and that the expected aid had not arrived ; soon orders were received to save his men and retreat from the building. By this time the thousands were pressing on to success ; the " Broadway Squad," by a determined front, had, for four hours, held them in check, but to do so longer was im- DURING THE RIOT WEEK, JULY, 1863. 19 possible, and to remain was certain death ; the order was given to retreat. There was but one way in which to do so and escape the infuriated crowd ; neither to the front or the sides was it possible ; and the only way of safe exit was through a smoke hole in the rear wall, about twelve by eighteen inches, and some eighteen feet from the ground ; this led into the yards from Twenty-first Street. Not a moment was to be lost. Boxes were piled up to reach the spot, and the men, one at a time, squeezed in and through, feet foremost, performing rapid gymnastic feats outside in swinging to and dropping from a gutter-trough to the yard below. Thus the entire force made their escape, and the last man was only out when the mob were in, and the work of pillage and arson com- menced. From the yard into which the men had dropped they had to climb over into a stone yard, and through that go on a keen run to the Eighteenth Precinct Station in Twenty-second St., reaching it unharmed. Here their stay was short ; the mob, enraged at the obstinate holding of the factory, had got scent of them, and would have made short work of the station and all in it. So Sergeant Burdick sent the force off singly or in squads of two and three ; but about all had to seek shelter under kindly roofs, and doff their uniforms ere they could reach headquarters in safety. But they all did reach the Central Office unharmed, and at 5J P. M. were sent on picket duty in the vicinity, which was performed until Tuesday morning. On Tuesday morning the force was with In- spector Carpenter's command in the Second Avenue, and were parties to the severe fights there, having a serviceable hand in the exemplary punishment meted out to the rioters. The " Squad " had the right of the line, and made the charge on the liquor store, at Thirty-first Street, from which the rioters were firing and hurling stones. They forced the doors and were in and through it ; in the course of the clear- ing process that ensued, one man, who was freely using his gun, and fought savagely, was knocked square out of the window, and was dead before he reached the ground. Seven blows from the locusts were his portion. In the afternoon they were again under Inspector Carpenter in the tour through Third Street, First Avenue, and Houston Street. At 5£ P. M., with Captain Bogart's command, the "Broadway Squad" proceeded to Twenty -ninth Street and Eighth Avenue, where a mob was sacking the residence of Mr. J. S. Gibbons, No. 19 Lamartine Place. The force came upon the rioters, made a bold, steady charge, and drove through them to the house, strewing the way with bodies as they went. A large number of rioters and thieves were inside of the building, and while a portion of the command went in, others remained at the front, to receive with the locusts the villains driven out. It was here that the unfortunate Dipple, of the Twenty-fifth, received the wound which 80 SERVICES OF THE METROPOLITAN POLICE caused his death. A fellow came rushing from the house, laden with plunder, was caught by Sergeant Burdick and knocked down ; he had not released his hold of the thief ere a score of bullets whistled around his head, two of them lodging in the body of his prisoner, and six of the police fell at the discharge. It appeared that the military, who were stationed a short distance away from the house, on seeing the rush of the rioters from it, had fired recklessly and without orders, injuring more friends than foes. Officer Dipple was shot in the leg, the ball shattering the bone, and splitting, part passed into and up through the marrow ; he was conveyed to the City Hospital, but the peculiar character of the in- jury induced inflammation of the brain, and he died on the following Sun- day. Officer Hodgson was shot in the right arm, a ball and three buckshot passing through the fleshy portions. Officer Robinson received a severe flesh wound in his thigh. The work being accomplished here, the force returned to headquar- ters, where they were held in reserve until Wednesday morning, when they reported to Captain Helme, Twenty-seventh Precinct, remaining with him until Thursday A. M. ; returning to Central Office, they were ordered to patrol Broadway in force, from Canal to Twenty-fifth Street. In the evening dismissed, and next day on regular duty. The "Broadway Squad" is composed of the tallest men in the force, none being under six feet, and most of them over. They afforded good targets, and how the heavier proportioned ones ever squeezed out of the gun factory, as described, is as much a mystery to them as it undoubt- edly is to the reader. It shows what marvelous feats men can perform when under the propulsive influence created by the thousands of a mur- derous mob close on to their heels. The defence of the factory was nobly, though uselessly, attempted, and persistently made until orders from headquarters came to withdraw. The " squad " acted here, and on all occasions where true courage was necessary, as became brave men ; and Sergeant Burdick speaks with just pride of a command of which any man might be proud. Popular as the " Broadway Squad " has always been, its efficiency during " Riot Week " has enhanced its reputation. The military, at the defence of Gibbons' house, made a charge after their unfortunate Volley, and the man whom Sergeant Burdick was hold- ing had two bayonets run through and through him. Officer Morris, of the Twenty-fifth, was the first to enter Gibbons', and, meeting a rioter, broke his club at the first blow, but knocked senseless his man. Rounds- men Benson Sherwood and Jerome H. Ferris are entitled to mention as having been most courageous and valuable. They were the associate officers of Sergeant Burdick, and their courageous and intelligent ser- vices were largely instrumental in winning for the force the proud name DURING THE RIOT WEEK, JULY, 1863. 81 it has acquired, neither of them understand the word "flinch," and they were ever first in duty and in danger. Both are brave, chivalrous men. Captain N. R. Mills was at Sangersfield Center, Oneida County. So soon as he heard of the riot he telegraphed to know its proportions, and whether he should return. After waiting for reply he took the first train and came directly through, reporting at Central Office for duty on Thursday evening, and took command of his force. He was off on sick leave. On Monday officer Wells, of this force, while on duty in the vicinity of the Astor House, heard the cry of " Nigger, nigger !" and hastening to Park Row, met a mob chasing a car and endeavoring to enter it. Sin- gle-handed he kept them back, and went in, finding a colored man, fright- ened nigh to death, and bleeding from a blow on the head. When the cars reached the terminus, opposite the Astor House, he took the man out ; the mob closed on him, but he threatened death to the first who made an assault ; getting to the Astor House steps, with the aid of citizens the man was concealed from the sight of his pursuers behind one of the pillars, and the poor fellow was subsequently taken home by some gentlemen present. A few minutes after, an Amity stage came down with a negro on the box ; the mob caught sight of him, came back and attacked the omnibus and all inside and out with stone ; the driver was compelled to stop, and put the negro off. Officer Wells went to his aid as the rioters were about to seize him ; the mob threatened mur- der to both; a citizen came to the rescue, drew a revolver, and, with officer Wells, kept the cowards at bay. They were followed by the mob down Barclay Street to Church, where, just as a rush and overthrow was about being made, a squad of the Third Precinct appeared, who rat- tled the skulls of the ruffians and sent them flying -in all directions. Twenty-sixth Precinct. Capt. Thomas W. Thorne, City Hall. Early on Monday thousands of excited people were gathered in the Park and Printing-house Square. Incendiary harangues were made, and threats uttered ; every colored man met in the vicinity was attacked and beaten. Capt. Thorne detailed five of his force, in citizens' dress, who mingled with the different crowds, and reported every fifteen minutes. At 5£ o'clock P. M. the force with Capt. Warlow's command reported to headquarters, and were sent thence to the First Precinct, through which tour was made. On return- ing at dusk, met by citizens at the Post-office, who informed them of attack on Tribune Building. Started up Nassau Street at double-quick, came 6 82 SERVICES OF THE METROPOLITAN POLICE on the crowd of five or six thousand, the work of destruction having been commenced, the office entered, gutted, and fired. Capt. Thorne gave the word to his men to keep together. The order to charge was given, and on they went, without waiting to estimate odds, the handful, with a ringing cheer, against the thousands ; the first blow was received by the Captain, a bludgeon on the head, knocking him back six feet ; down went the man who gave it by the locust of officer Cowen ; on went the men, dealing blows right and left, desperately and with fearful effect ; the mob, even with its proportions, could not stand the impetuous charge ; they fought a few moments, surged back, and then again swung forward, as though to crush out the force ; it was too late ; on and among them were the com- mand, nearly every blow bringing to the ground a rioter ; in one place, six lay so close as almost to touch each other ; it was too much for the lawless, and, after hard and hand-to-hand fighting to Frankfort Street, they broke, fleeing in wild confusion. That portion which went up Chat- ham and Center Streets were closely followed for a while, and severely clubbed by this force ; that portion which fled across the Park were met by Inspector Carpenter and his men, and scores knocked down. No mercy was shown, and over a hundred lay in the square and Park, the well-punished victims of their own folly and crime. While the mob were being thus terribly handled in the street, some of the force turned their attention to the Tribune Building, fighting their way to and entering it. The fire had but just been lighted, and was readily extinguished. Officer Mc Waters, on entering the door, was assaulted by a burly ruffian, armed with a hay-rung, who, by a powerful blow on the shoulder, knocked him down ; instantly on his feet again, he more than repaid on the heads of the rioters the blow. The building was cleared speedily, and not a man found in it escaped without severe punishment. This good work being in detail so bravely and thoroughly accomplished, Capt. Thorne ordered his force to cover Spruce Street and the square at Frankfort. Sergeant Devoursney took command. What of the crowd had returned from Chatham Street and Center were pushed back to Frank- fort, and the space below entirely cleared. Meantime rumors were con- stant of mobs accumulating up-town to come down and finish a work which had been so disastrously for the rioters foiled. About eleven o'clock the mob had reassembled above Frankfort Street, though not in the old proportions, and were pressing sharply upon the police thrown across the square. Sergeant Devoursney used every argument to induce them to retire, and these failing, ordered, " Now, men, go in and give it to them !" Go in they did forthwith, and, where moral suasion had failed, the locusts succeeded. It was a quick, severe fight, and a number were so badly punished as to be unable to get away. This was the last seri- DURING THE RIOT WEEK, JULY, 1863. 83 ous demonstration in that section, the determined action and success of the police furnishing a lesson which was laid to heart. After the attack at the Tribune those laying in the street were allowed to be carried off by their friends returning for them, and the square looked somewhat like a field of battle. In the charge ordered by Capt. Thorne, very many of the loeusts were broken by the men of this precinct ; pretty good evidence that when they hit they meant to hurt. When the mob was being driven off, the writer of the " Record" came very near experi- encing the locusts while attempting to reach the Times Building. But for the prompt recognition of officer Frank Brown, of the Twenty-sixth Precinct, who rushed forward and warded off three well- raised and well- aimed clubs, he would have had a serious and practical experience where- with to speak of " locusts." Sergeant Devoursney was in the crowd alone and edging his way to the Tribune office just before the mob broke into it ; he had got on to the sidewalk, and drawing his revolver was about to shoot the man cheering on the crowd, and who was also engaged in breaking in the door ; several bold and good citizens were there, en- deavoring to dissuade the rioters from their work, and they crowded around the Sergeant, one of them seizing his arm and begging him to desist, that he would do no good, would sacrifice his own life, besides ex- citing the crowd to a frenzy ; heeding the wise advice he forced his way back, got to the station, found Capt. Thorne had been telegraphed to, hurried back, heard the cheer of the gallant force on its charge from Nassau, went in with his locust and fought his way through and to them, joining in the general fight. When it is remembered that the Sergeant was in uniform, his conduct exhibits the truest courage. Officer McCord was in citizen's dress, and going to the assistance of his comrades was hit and hurt by mistake. Officer Gardner received a serious blow from a brick on the leg. An elderly gentleman, who was among those at the Tribune office, attempting to dissuade the mob, was hurt on the head by the police, who, of course, were ignorant of his purpose in being there. He was taken to the station-house, had his wound dressed, and asked if it would leave a scar. On being told it would, he said he should wear it proudly. The wounded who were not carried off by their friends were conveyed to the Twenty-sixth Precinct station-house, where Police Sur- geon Kennedy, with two assistants and half-a-dozen attendants, were busily engaged in washing, bandaging, sewing and strapping. The room had all the appearance of an army hospital after a battle — the floor cov- ered with blood, bandages, lint, surgical instruments, pails of bloody water, with Surgeon Kennedy, his shirt-sleeves rolled up, examining, dressing, and ordering. His cool, systematic and quick appliances showed him to be master of the situation. There were wounds of all descrip- 84 SERVICES OF THE METROPOLITAN POLICE tions — the incised, contused, lascerated, punctured, and pistol-shot. All were cared for, and the Doctor's kindness of heart glistened through the cool exterior of the skillful surgeon. On Tuesday morning this force, Sergeant Devoursney in command, with Sergeants Van Hagan, Pell and Townsend, reported to Central Office, and, with Capt. Walling's command, made tour through Tenth and Thirteenth Wards ; Capt. Walling's command were heartily cheered at several points on the march. Subsequently, with the force under In- spector Dilks, they were in the engagement at Second Avenue and Twen- ty-second Street, where Capt. Helme's command were met ; here the Eighteenth Precinct was detached to visit their station-house on Twenty- second Street, near First Avenue, and the Twenty-sixth were ordered to accompany ; many of the mob, which had been dispersed, had fled into the houses below, and the force marched down under a heavy fire from roofs, doors, and windows ; when about half way they halted, but stood firm, and Inspector Dilks sent down the military to their support ; taking the right, they at once commenced firing, clearing house-tops, windows, and doors, pouring in shot wherever a head was shown, and thus pro- gressed down the street, clearing it also of a reassembled mob ; thus was the march had to the station-house and to First Avenue. It was a severe ordeal for the police, who had no weapons with which they could retali- ate. On the return from First Avenue, Sergeant Devoursney hung back, reconnoitering. He was fired at from a window, the bullet grazing his head. An officer of some other precinct, who had a musket, was with the Sergeant, and he deliberately loaded and discharged his piece, with care- ful aim, several times. The subsequent march with Inspector Dilks was had and risks incurred, all the men eager for the fray ; but with the police there was no further collision, though they were, until below Twenty -first Street, pretty constantly under fire. Soon after reaching headquarters, this precinct, with Capt. Bogart's command, visited the Sixteenth Ward, thence to Mr. Gibbons' house, No. 19 Lamartine Place, which they then found safe, and started on return. From here Sergeant Devoursney, with officer Gardner, fell back to recon- noiter, and were stoned by different gangs ; many women assured them that they " would all be killed like rats before they left the ward," and vituperation was constant. At Twenty-eighth Street and Eighth Avenue Devoursney was informed that a mob, on disappearance of the force, had again speedily collected at Mr. Gibbons' house and were sacking it. Promptly notifying Capt. Bogart, the force were wheeled, and, some mil- itary accompanying, were, on the double-quick, speedily at the spot. The military were held in reserve, the force, part of it, rushed in the house, the balance kept in front and a portion to the rear ; the caged plunderers, DURING THE RIOT WEEK, JULY, 1863. 85 men, women, and half-grown children, were all badly punished save the last, who were spared ; not one of the men escaped ; those who rushed out were all loaded with spoils, and were met by the police in waiting^ only to go to the ground. One rioter made a rush from the door, pistol in hand, and was caught and clubbed by officer Hill ; the fellow fired, the ball inflicting a serious wound in the officer's thigh. At this time it was that the military most unaccountably fired upon those in front of the house, wounding six of the police — one since dead — and killing two riot- ers. The man who had shot officer Hill was riddled with balls. Officer Rice was shot in the groin, and had two slugs through the thigh. He had been doing good battle. A ball passed through the sleeve of Sergeant Pell. One great, burly ruffian, covered with blood, jumped down from the parlor window. Officer Hanifer met him, and a fierce, brief fight ensued, in which the locust seemed to have no effect ; he escaped to the street, and there a multiplicity of them brought him to the ground. One woman, of goodly size, rushed out loaded with stolen goods ; she made fight like a tigress, seized an officer by the throat and attempted to strangle and bite him ; it was necessary to punish her before she re- leased her hold and spoils. Many women who were in the house were caught, and from a rather respectable looking one was recovered shawls and other articles stowed around her person ; one grim-visaged, brutal looking fellow rushed out with a bundle of music as his plunder ; despite the good taste of the selection he marched to the music of the locusts. This was a trying occasion for the police ; at one time they were under two fires, one from the military, and the other from the rioters in the house. The unfortunate Dipple, of the Broadway Squad, was the only one who lost his life ; officers Rice and Hill were long unfit for duty. In the ordeal there was no quivering or flinching, fearful as it was. At the conclusion of this exciting affair an attempt was made to close up the house, but as it had been sacked of everything portable, and the doors and windows all smashed and useless, it was impossible to do so. The command returned to headquarters and were the recipients, from Com- missioner Acton, of a handsome and appreciative speech. The Twenty- sixth were held in reserve at Central Office until Wednesday morning, when they were returned to the City Hall, and were in active service until Friday, on the various scouting expeditions sent from thence by order of Inspector Leonard, and on the duties of guard and picket. On Friday returned to station and resumed usual duty. It will be noticed that Capt. Thorne was not with his command on Tuesday. On the arrival of Inspector Leonard, on Monday night, with his large force at City Hall, he appointed Capt. Thorne his Aid, in the many onerous and responsible duties which the protection of the 86 SERVICES OF THE METROPOLITAN POLICE lower part of the City entailed. It was on Tuesday that constant vigi- lance had to be exercised to prevent the concentration of the crowds in and around the Park ; from an early hour great excitement existed among the rabble gathering there, and, in checking it, the police experienced the utmost difficulty ; but despite any and all they succeeded. During the morning the Inspector and his Aid had been responding to orders from headquarters, sending off detachments to different sections, and by noon they were stripped of the entire command, and were left with but one door- man. On the disappearance of the force the mob quickly concentrated, and made demonstrations against the station-house. Inspector Leonard at once ordered it closed and secured, and, with Capt. Thorne, hurried to the Central Office, promptly returning with a sufficient force to again dis- perse the crowd, though not without some trouble and hard knocks. From this time until Friday, when Inspector Leonard dismissed his command, Capt. Thorne was constantly under his orders, and executed them with an intelligence and promptitude which more than justified the sagacity of the Inspector in selecting him. Of the conduct of the officers and men of this force, from the com- mencement of the disturbances down town to conclusion of the riots, but little need be said. The record shows what they did, and how officers and men emulated each other in fidelity to the public interests, and in the gallantry with which they defended them. Their duties were wearying and almost unceasing, yet performed at all times with cheerfulness and alacrity. The " Twenty-sixth" can carry with honest pride their desig- nating number, and justly can Capt. Thorne say, as he does, " I am proud to sign myself their Captain." Twenty-seventh Precinct. Capt. John C. Helme, No. 1 17 Cedar Street. On -Monday after- noon the entire force, except Sergt. Rockwell and four men, reported to Central Office. Sergt. Barnett, with three sections, was with the com- mand under Inspector Carpenter in the fight with the mob at Broadway and Amity. Officer Doyle knocked down the standard-bearer, and offi- cer Thompson secured the Stars and Stripes ; they were subsequently presented to Inspector Carpenter, and were borne in the center of the command. Officer Rhodes was struck with a bar of iron on the head ; continued the fight and was on duty until Wednesday, participating in the Twenty-second Street battle ; the serious nature of the wound compelled him to retire. In the evening and until Tuesday morning the force was in reserve at Central Office. On Tuesday morning Capt. Helme, with his command, proceeded ta DURING THE RIOT WEEK, JULY, 1863. 87 the Mayor's house, in Fifth Avenue, which was being attacked ; the mob fled at the approach ; a pile of bricks near the dwelling, used in some alterations and repairs, was removed by the force to a place where they could be of no service to a mob, and a pile, which the neighbor friends of his Honor had placed on the stoop for defence, were also removed, so as to be out of reach of rioters should another attack be made. Soon after Capt. Helme, in command of his own precinct and others, was ordered to the Second Avenue, to recover arms stolen and stored in the wire factory, corner of Twenty-second Street. The " Twenty-seventh " was on the right ; on wheeling into the avenue from Twenty-first Street the order to charge was given, and the mob driven back, despite a des- perate resistance ; some fifty were placed hors du combat, and by the time Twenty-second Street was reached all was clear, save the building, which was full of rioters stealing and distributing the guns ; they were unawares caught at their work. Sergeant Wilson, with a portion of the command, was ordered to, and at once did, rush in the building, the rest held in front ; it was five stories high. On every floor were the ruffians busy at their work ; and on every floor were they met and at- tacked ; they fought desperately, but were driven from rooms and hall- ways, from windows and roof-top ; those who were not knocked sense- less inside or killed themselves by jumping to the ground, rushed down stairs and into the street to receive the welcome of the locusts there. Not one man, it is thought, escaped. The rioters used in the fight the carbines, clubbing them, but the unexpected attack prevented any suc- cessful battle ; those who prostrate encumbered the building were dragged out and left lying in the street for their friends to carry off. The police then went to work to remove some one thousand guns; a horse and wagon was pressed into the service, much against the owner's will, and the weapons loaded into it. The delay caused by the work of removing so many muskets gave an opportunity to the rioters to reas- semble, and they did so, pouring in from all quarters above and below on the avenue, and on Twenty -second Street. By the time the wagon was loaded and the force in line, they were completely surrounded by an overwhelming and infuriated mob ; not a man flinched ; all felt their critical situation, but were determined to fight their way out. Just at this juncture, when they were showered with stone and shot, and when the mob, reinforced by that which had murdered Col. O'Brien, were about rallying for an attack, Inspector Dilks, with his command of po- lice and military, wheeled into the avenue from Twenty-first Street. The appearance of the force was hailed by Capt. Helme's command with the most enthusiastic cheers ; the mob was assaulted in the rear, and, staggered by the impetuosity of the charge, instantly gave way. Capt. 88 SERVICES OF THE METROPOLITAN POLICE Helme's command joined in the fight, and soon the mob were driven in all directions. The force at once wheeled into line with Inspector Dilks' command, and accompanied him, with their spoils, in the subsequent march, incurring all the risks of what was a most hazardous tour. In the fight at the wire factory the women were very desperate, re- fusing to move, and throwing stones as well as using clubs and other weapons. The men were demoniac, apparently insane with malignity and fury. After the charge into the building, officer Follis was assault- ed on the stairway by a man armed with a gun and a bar of iron ; the fellow struck Follis on the arm, badly injuring him, but was knocked senseless and disarmed. On the charge to Twenty-second Street, Rounds- man Wetmore left the command and singly chased the flyers down that street, knocked down a man who was armed with a loaded pistol, taking it from him. The Captain was at the head of his men in the fight, ask- ing no one to go where he was not willing to lead. On reaching the door of the wire factory, he wrenched a gun from the hands of the first rioter and thief rushing out, swung him to the ground, where the locusts of those among whom he had fallen did the rest. On return to headquarters Captain Helme left for a personal inspection of his precinct. At 10 P. M. Sergeant Barnett, who remained with force at Central Office (Sergeants Wilson and Peck, who had been until Tuesday evening with the force, being detailed to telegraph duty), went to Thirty-fourth Street and Lexington Avenue, to recover the body of the murdered Col. O'Brien, but it had been removed. On Wednesday afternoon Capt. Helme and his command were re- turned to their own precinct ; a great alarm existed in the vicinity, mobs had been visiting and threatening several buildings and hotels there- abouts. He succeeded in restoring confidence and order. Scouts in parties of four were sent out, who reported as occasion required. A number of crowds were dispersed during the night. On Wednesday P. M. the command, under Sergt. Barnett, with Capt. Hutching's com- mand, proceeded to Yorkville. Here patrol duty was performed during balance of the day and night. The next and succeeding days Sergeant Barnett occupied himself and his command in visiting shanties and re- covering stolen goods. The force recovered a very large amount. They remained in this precinct until Saturday, and then returned to their own. On Thursday morning word was received that the colored man who had been beaten and thrown overboard from Pier No. 4, North River, was living and under the pier. Officers Hey, McClusker, and Darrow, having disguised themselves as sailors, went down, hired a boat and commenced a search. At the pier, officer McClusker stript, plunged in DURING THE RIOT WEEK, JULY, 1863. 89 and swam under ; after a search of full an hour and a half in the dark- ness, he found the poor fellow crouching on the stone-work, nearly naked, all blood and half insane ; he had a large stone clutched in his hand ; it was a long while before the officer could convince him he was a friend and come to rescue him, but finally succeeded ; this accomplished, Mc- Clusker swam out and had the boat rowed under ; the alarm of the negro was again aroused, and it was almost by main force that he was got into the boat. The three manly-hearted officers then rowed with him to the police-boat No. 1, near by, where he was taken on board and kindly cared for. Saturday evening Sergt. Barnett, having returned from Yorkville with Roundsman Eigne y and Fourth Section, reported at the Central Office, and next (Sunday) morning went with Capt. Dickson to Hastings, Dobbs' Ferry, Tarrytown, and Sing Sing. The particulars of this ex- pedition will be given in the record of the Twenty-ninth. They were on this expedition three days, and did ably and cheerfully all the duties consequent upon it. Sergt. M. B. Wilson was left alone in the station on the morning of the Riot Week. A colored man was brought in for safety, and the station was at once the object of the mob's attention. The Sergeant closed and barricaded the doors, and awaited an attack. The mob cooled off and left, and the negro was sent away in safety. Officer Carroll was, while reconnoitering at Liberty and Greenwich Streets, twice knocked down by a mob, but escaped without serious injury. When the Captain re- turned temporarily to his own precinct, on Tuesday, he heard of a mob attacking a man who was mistaken for one Smith, the proprietor of a drinking house in Greenwich Street. The house of this Smith had, the night before, been attacked and sacked, and he had shot a party whom he considered among those engaged, killing him on the spot, and then escaped. The man attacked was one of his employes. Capt. Helme and officer Carroll repaired to the scene and succeeded in rescuing the man, who was quite severely injured. On Wednesday, Thursday and Friday nights, officers Carroll, Hey, and McClusker were on scouting duty, in citizens' dress, throughout the precinct — a duty of no little haz- ard, and, as they performed it, of great value. Sergeant Barnett at- tracted the attention of his officers and men', as he did the attention of the Commissioners and Superintendents, during the entire week of the riots, by his unwearying activity, his indomitable courage, and his manly, intelligent performance of all duties. There was nothing required of him that was not thoroughly performed. He is literally a noble fellow and excellent officer. The more such men as Barnett the higher the repute of the force. 90 SERVICES OF THE METROPOLITAN POLICE The services of this force were of an almost constant and certainly arduous and hazardous character. They did faithfully and manfully all duties which they were called on to perform, and have placed themselves in an honorable light before the higher officers of the Department and the public. Twenty-eighth Precinct. Captain John F. Dickson, No. 550 Greenwich Street. In the morn- ing of Monday Sergeant Wolfe and ten men were ordered to report to Captain Speight, at Marshal's office, No. 1190 Broadway, but finding the office closed, and no one to report to, repaired to Fortieth Street and Third Avenue, in which vicinity it was heard a riot was raging. On reaching Third Avenue from Forty-third Street, meantime being joined by more police, a charge was made on the mob, which, fighting desper- ately, was driven back to and beyond Forty-sixth Street, where they broke. The rioters seemed seized with terror at the determined character of the charge, and fled in all directions ; the entire force did not exceed fifty — their opponents thousands — and the punishment inflicted was of the most severe character, the rioters laying thick as the force advanced ; the force had penetrated to the front of the Marshal's office at Forty-sixth Street, which was in flames, but received no support, the police which had been on the ground having been beaten off. The mob rallied, hurled themselves upon the Twenty-eighth and their associates, and in a brief time broke them, every man looking out for himself ; stones and brick- bats and shot were showered on them like hail, and, in the close pursuit, clubs fell' upon them with damaging effect. Some ran into dwellings, were secreted, subsequently escaping in disguise ; others ran the gaunt- let of the guns, clubs, and missiles, but all reported as soon as possible after the disaster to the station. In this battle, officer Dapke, on the retreat, was seriously injured, but got away, and was secreted in a dwelling ; officer Holley had a finger broken; officer Siebert was set upon by a number of men, and his arm broken ; officers Polhamus, Bryan, and Bassford had severe scalp wounds ; officer Knight was badly injured in the chest, and Sergeant Wolfe, who was the last to retreat, had to fight his way out, and was badly injured on the head. Officers Knight and Bolman were saved by some women, who afforded them refuge in their houses, whence they escaped in disguise. At 11.40 A.M. Roundsman Mangles reported, with eleven men, to Capt. Porter, Forty-sixth Street and Third Avenue ; had been there but a short time ere the mob made an overwhelming charge, scattering the DURING THE RIOT WEEK, JULY, 1863. 91 force in all directions. Capt. Porter, unwilling to sacrifice his men, gave the order to retreat, and it was wise that he did so ; he saved many valuable lives. This force of the precinct reported as soon as possible after the defeat to Capt. Dickson, at the station. In the afternoon Capt. Dickson, with Sergeants O'Connor and Groat, reported at the Central Office. In the evening they were under the com- mand of Inspector Carpenter in the crushing of the mob in the Park, and their locusts flew well and effectively. Sergeant O'Connor had his head badly cut here, and was compelled to retire from duty. All through the Fourth Precinct were they with the Inspector, moving the mobs from pillar to post, eventually dispersing all of them and restoring order to a section which was alive with riot and pillage. On return to Central Office, were held in reserve until Tuesday A. M., when, at 2 o'clock, they accompanied Sergeant Copeland to Clarkson Street, where the body of the murdered negro was recovered. Soon after ordered to the fire at the packing-house, corner Houston and Washington Streets, where they re- mained till 5 A. M. ; thence to Leroy Street, where Capt. Dickson res- cued the negro who had been knocked down by a crowd, and beaten on the head by a rioter, with a stone weighing twenty pounds, until he was thought dead. This fiend stood over the poor fellow when he laid on the street, deliberately lifted and brought down the stone upon his head five or six times, gritting his teeth, yelling his execrations, and reveling in his cowardly and hellish deed of blood. The negro, in defending himself before this, had knocked his murderer down several times. The rioter had fled from him, leaving it to a score of others to render him defenceless, and, when the poor fellow was insensible, he returned to complete the work of murder. Capt. Dickson pressed into service a wagon, and, put- ting the sufferer into it, conveyed him to the hospital. No horse could be had, and the men turned in, drawing the wagon. The poor fellow died soon after, but meantime was able to whisper his name — Williams — to the Captain. ' Three persons charged with the murder have since been arrested by this force. On Tuesday, at 10.30 A. M., Capt. Dickson and his command were, under Inspector Dilks, of those who visited the factory where stolen arms were stored at Twenty-second Street and Second Avenue. The Twenty- eighth Precinct had the right. Inspector Dilks' command drove, it will be remembered, after severe fighting, the mob before them, then entered, and took the well-defended building, and recovered a large number of arms. It was one of the most severe fights of the entire campaign, and thoroughly tested the " mettle " of the police. Sergeant Groat had a desperate encounter with a well-armed, courageous, and muscular fellow ; he fought him, with reckless courage, some two hundred yards up the 92 SERVICES OF THE METROPOLITAN POLICE avenue and away from the command, but succeeded in bringing him to the ground ; on the running fight the fellow turned, and a blow on the back of his head produced the phenomenon of a full set of teeth flying out of his mouth, and pirouetting in the air, falling some ten feet distant ; they were evidently false, as was the heart of the fellow wearing them. In this battle not one innocent man was punished, but the avenue was literally strewn with the bodies of the rioters. Many were picked up and hastily removed ; carried off, no one knows and few care where, and others were carried to their homes to live or die, as the nature of their wounds permitted. So soon as returned to Central Office, Capt. Dickson and his com- mand were ordered to report to Inspector Leonard, at City Hall, and were on guard in Printing-house Square and Park, doing active and valuable duty in preventing concentration of inflamed and inflammatory crowds. They remained here until Saturday, Inspector Leonard bear- ing cheerful testimony to their vigilance and efficiency, when they were returned to their own precinct. On Sunday morning this precinct, with others, Capt. Dickson in command, were detailed to visit the different villages and towns up the river so far as Peekskill. They were accompanied by Companies A and B, Seventy-fourth Regiment New York Volunteers, of Buffalo, Lieut. Nagle in command, and were everywhere received with the utmost en- thusiasm. Residents threw open their houses to them, and volunteered every hospitality. Capt. Dickson in most cases declined, because of the numbers of his command, and his hesitancy in accepting hospitalities which, however well meant, might prove onerous. The force were gone until Wednesday, the 22d, disembarking en route and on return at every place, restoring confidence and assuring the residents of protection and assistance. Capt. Dickson and his command speak in glowing terms of Lieut. Nagle and his command of the Seventy-fourth Regiment. Fresh from the duties of the war and noble service, their time had expired on Sat- urday, but they at once volunteered for the expedition. During it they won the admiration and respect of the citizens of every place visited, by their manly bearing and deportment. They co-operated cordially with the police, emulated them in considerate conduct at all places visited, and, while they proved themselves soldiers, proved also that they were gal- lant and chivalrous gentlemen. On the return of the force they had but a brief respite, for, on Thurs- day, Capt. Dickson was ordered to Port Richmond. Reaching there he marched to Quarantine ; thence to Vanderbilt's Landing. Here the riot had occurred in which two citizens had been killed ; he marched his command through all the infected section, meeting with none but peace- DURING THE RIOT WEEK, JULY, 1868. 93 able demonstrations ; the force during the day had marched eleven miles under a burning sun ; two were prostrated and carried back to the boat. At 5 P. M. the command returned to New York. On reaching the dock they were met with orders to go to Flushing, L. I., and were joined by Lieut. Bird and company, Seventh Regiment, who were in waiting. Off at once they went, arriving at 8-J- P. M., landed, marched through the village, and, finding all quiet, returned to the boat. Here they remained all night, and, in the morning, after another tour through the village, returned to the city, arriving at 3 P. M. Well fagged out, the force marched to its own precinct. No force had more arduous and more prolonged duties than the " Twenty-eighth," and from first to last every call upon Capt. Dickson and his command was obeyed with alacrity. In every engagement to which they were parties they evinced the utmost courage, and their escutcheon is unstained by a single unworthy act. For a week and a half they were on constant duty, and have won full honors by the man- ner in which all requirements were performed. To Capt. Dickson, whose example and endurance encouraged his men, the greatest credit is due. Sergeant William Groat and detective Henry Jay, during the entire period of service, were unwearying, active, and courageous. Ser- geant Van Deusen was left in charge of the station. On two occasions he was threatened by the mob, but coolly prepared for them, and, with but four men, not only managed to save the building, but the refugees in it. In the battle on the Second Avenue, under Inspector Dilks, one of this force disposed of four of the worst of the rioters. He went into the fight on his own hook. His favorite cry was, when he brought a villain down, " Hallo ! Johnny Roach, how are you 1" Twenty-ninth Precinct. Capt. F. C. Speight, East Twenty-ninth Street, near Fourth Avenue. Except when detailed in squads, the Twenty-ninth was always under the immediate command of the Captain. Saturday, before the riot, Sergt. Van Orden, with fifteen men, took charge of the Seventh Avenue Arse- nal, remaining until Monday afternoon. Many manifestations were made against the building, but the force determined to defend it to the last. Early on Monday Capt. Speight, with twenty men, reported at the Mar- shal's Office, No. 1190 Broadway, where the drafting proceeded quietly until adjournment at noon. Capt. Speight withdrew his men at 4 P. M. having, during his stay, dispersed several crowds, and reported at Central Office. Ten minutes after he left, the mob reassembled, and the Mar- shal's Office was in flames. The entire block from Twenty-eighth to 94 SERVICES OF THE METROPOLITAN POLICE Twenty-ninth Street was destroyed. During the morning word was re- ceived that Superintendent Kennedy had been killed, and Capt. Speight, without waiting for orders, sent off Sergt. Young with a force to the Nineteenth Ward to recover him ; meantime he had been rescued. On Monday evening the entire command was with Inspector Carpenter in the Park, and were active participants in the battle there with those who had attempted to fire the Tribune Buildings. Subsequently were with Inspector Carpenter in the tour through the Fourth Ward and in the several engagements ; in this section houses occupied by colored people had been fired from below, driving the inmates up stairs, whose only escape was by jumping into the street ; some of them were clinging to window.-sills, some to the eaves, and the clothes of some, while thus sus- pended, had caught fire. The police did all in their power to rescue them, but in many instances, for want of ladders, were unable to. A num- ber were, in falling, seriously injured, and one killed. Thence Captain Speight and command were ordered to Inspector Leonard's command at City Hall, and were constantly on the different expeditions of the night. Officer O'Byrne was attacked in Chatham Street, near the Park, his club wrenched from him and he badly beaten with it ; he recovered the locust, fought his men, and succeeded in bringing one into the Twenty-sixth Pre- cinct station-house, who was in a condition which required immediate attention of the surgeon. This fellow's name was Dermott ; he was afterwards sent to the City Hospital, but escaped on Wednesday. Tuesday morning reported to Inspector Carpenter, at Central Office, and with his command marched to Second Avenue and Thirty-fourth Street. Capt. Speight and command were on the rear, and upon this portion of the battalion an attack was made on the avenue soon after passing above Thirty-fourth street. From the streets and houses shots and missiles of all kinds were poured thick and fast ; Capt. Speight at once faced the rear ranks about, and ordered a charge on the mob closing up from below. But the men were momentarily staggered and bewil- dered by the sudden and desperate character of the attack ; Capt. Speight had on giving the word dashed ahead, and was far in advance, the target for hundreds, when he was knocked down with a brick. His fall recov- ered the men, and they came on "with a rush. The Captain was on his feet ere they reached him, and joined in an onslaught on the mob. The clubs foil mercilessly, and men fell under them. The mob were beaten and fled. Meantime the fire from the houses continued. Inspector Car- penter sent orders from the front to charge, take, and clear them. On went the force to the work. The houses were stormed and entered, and cleared, from the cellar to the roof, of every one save women and children, and those whom Capt. Speight, from a prior Captaincy in that vicinity, DURING THE RIOT WEEK, JULY, 1863. 95 knew to be peaceable men. The fighting inside was of the severest char- acter, the rioters well armed, and fighting for their lives. Few of them, if any, escaped without serious injury. In Graham's liquor store, corner Thirty-fourth Street and Second Avenue, eight or ten rioters had fallen and lay wedged in between the liquor casks. Although the houses were filled with women and children — many of the former urging the men on to their riotous work — not one of either was hurt ; the children were carried by the officers out of harm's way. Roundsman Roberts carried three little ones, placing them in rooms where they would be safe from danger and out of sight of the painful scenes. Capt. Speight in one of the houses met an old man on the stairs : " For God's sake, Captain, save my life !" A rioter above aimed a blow at the Captain, but it would have struck the old man had not Speight caught it on his own arm. He placed the old gentleman in a place of safety, and hurried up stairs ; in one room saw a woman with her crinoline well spread out, sitting in a corner ; she asked him to save her child, and he carried it to another room for safety ; returning queried of her what she had behind her, and compelling her to remove, a lusty, fierce looking fellow, with club in hand, was revealed ; a brisk combat ensued, but the rioter fared the worst and was sent down stairs to the mercies of those below. On one floor a woman was in the hall holding a door to prevent the man within from getting out ; the Captain removed her, and from the room sprang a fellow making an onslaught with his club, but striking wild in his frenzy ; soon down stairs he went, not to return again. The work of clearing being complete, the force — this was the battle of the rear ranks — reformed and joined the balance of the command. This was considered one of the sharpest engagements of the campaign. The force engaged suffered considerably, but it was estimated that over thirty of the rioters were seriously punished. After returning to Central Office, Capt. Speight and command re- ported to Inspector Leonard at City Hall, where they remained all night ; were engaged in the different tours of the Fourth, Fifth, and Eighth Wards, and in the divers skirmishes with, and dispersal of, the mobs. On Wednesday morning, reported to the Central Office, from whence they were almost unceasingly engaged in expeditions and special duties until Saturday, when ordered to their own precinct. This force numbers thirty men more than any other, and, consequently, were al- ways in demand and performed extra duty. " Fall in, Twenty-ninth," became a by-word, so constantly was the order given. Sergeants Van Orden and Young were active in the service. Ser- geant Ward was very ill, but reported himself before expiration of leave for duty, and was assigned to care of the station, relieving Sergt. Jones, 96 SERVICES OF THE METROPOLITAN POLICE who had been ill for a long while. The station-house was made the hos- pital for policemen and others for the upper portion of the city. Four- teen of the Twenty-ninth had been severely injured, one since dead and two yet in hospital. The Captain also received a severe injury on the leg, from which he will long be a sufferer. Surgeon Griscom was un- wearying and skillful in his attentions to all the injured. The labor of this precinct was uninterrupted for five days and nights. Capt. Speight is a bold and valuable officer, a veteran in the matter of handling mobs, and he had, in the devotion to duty of his men, their bravery and willingness to respond to any call, a force which made them of signal service. Thirtieth Precinct. Capt. J. Hartt, One Hundred and Thirty-first Street, Manhattan- ville. On Monday the whole force of this precinct was held in reserve, and on Tuesday morning reported at Central Office. At noon were re- turned to their own precinct, where disturbances were apprehended, and where numerous dwellings had been threatened. Capt. Hartt, soon as reaching his station, made admirable arrangements for preservation of peace and property, so disposing his force as to be able to use them effectively. After their return there were no violent demonstrations, the rioters in that section evidently not caring to come into collision with them. One of the dwellings which had been especially threatened, the Captain, with a force, took charge of, remaining there till apprehen- sions no longer existed. Meantime, intimations were given that his own would be burned, but he said that his first duty was to the public, and that he had not force enough to spare any to look after his own interests. The family of the house he was protecting had left ; when asked by a body of rioters what he intended to do, he said he intended to fight, and to give the Coroner, if it was made necessary, more jobs in a day than he had had in a year. The determined conduct of the force had the best effect in cooling down the riotously disposed. Special protection was afforded several dwellings, beside the one above referred to, and there is no doubt that but for the return of the force, this precinct would have been the scene of arson and pillage to a great extent. Although the Thirtieth had no opportunity to participate in the more active and exciting scenes of the week, they were of the first importance in their own precinct, and have the acknowledgment of the inhabitants for their valuable and intelligent services. On Tuesday night Sergeant Blake was in charge of the station- house, with two sick officers ; a mob passed, but did nothing more than DURING THE RIOT WEEK, JULY, 1863. . 97 throw a few stones. While the force were away, on Tuesday, two men, armed, drove around notifying certain residents — among them the Captain's family — to move out, for on Wednesday the dwellings would be burned down. The appearance of the force, as shown, however, put a stop both to threats and consummation. A few of the riots in which Capt. Hartt has had a schooling, are the 'Long-shore, the Riot of 1857, and the famous Bone Riot. The experience gained in these and others would have operated badly for the lawless had they evoked it. Thirty-first Precinct. Capt. James Z. Bogart, Eighty-sixth Street, Bloomingdale Road. On Monday a portion of the force held in reserve at their own sta- tion, and a portion under the Captain, with Sergts. Ten Eyck and Bar- rett, reported at Central Office, remained until Tuesday morning, when the command, with others, under Inspector Carpenter, marched to Second Avenue and Thirty-fourth Street. The fight and capture of the houses here by the rear ranks, of which the Thirty -first were one, has been described in the record of the " Twenty-ninth." Capt. Bogart and his men were in the buildings, and had many a hand-to-hand encoun- ter, never flinching from their work, but doing it manfully — zealously. Sergt. Ten Eyck and officers Thompson, Stevenson, and Stoddard, were especially noticeable during this exciting affair for the courage they dis- played. Indeed, the force, none of them, evaded any hazard, but per- formed their duty vigorously and thoroughly, as many of the victims of their locusts will, if they can at all, regretfully testify. This force was also, of course, under the heavy fire from the houses and the street, and were a portion of those assailing and beating the mob on the ave- nue. After return to Central Office, 'they were ordered to Inspector Dilks' command, which, at Twenty-second Street and Second Avenue, had such a severe fight. Here the mob were vastly superior in numbers, were well armed, and well contested the charge made upon them. It was a close fight, the crowd falling back slowly at first, but the persistent locusts were dropping upon them with telling effect, and when they did break, it was in terror and confusion. Their wounded laid along the street, and many were promptly cared for by the women, but the most of them were not attended to or moved until the force had left the ground. In the evening Capt. Bogart, in charge of a force, including his own command, and a body of military, visited the Sixteenth Ward ; a crowd was dispersed from Mr. Gibbons' house in Twenty-ninth Street, near Eighth Avenue, the command moving on. No sooner were they out of sight than the rioters rallied, broke into the house, having stoned the front 7 98 SERVICES OF THE METROPOLITAN" POLICE almost to ruin, and commenced sacking it. Capt. Bogart had not marched far ere he heard of this, and at once took his command back ; a portion of the rioters were caught in the street, but a large number in the house. A charge to the front produced the speedy flight of the rioters in the street, and then a portion of the force were ordered into the building. Nearly everything that could be carried had been taken away ; closets, trunks, and drawers had been broken open and general pillage had been the order. Parties were at work when the police entered ; they were caught in the halls, parlors, on the stairways, and in the cham- bers, each ladened ; the men thieves were shown no mercy, but received their full deserts. In order not to encumber the house a number were hauled Out to the sidewalk. On this occasion it was, when a number of police were engaged on and about the stoop with the thieves who came rushing out, that the military fired without orders, wounding six of the police, one fatally and others seriously, and riddling one of the rioters with balls ; subsequently, some of the military made a charge, one of the thieves being transfixed with bayonets. The punishments here were among the most severe the rioters, in proportion to their numbers, anywhere received. Not much of property was recovered, the sacking having been done in a remarkably short time. So soon as the house was broken into it was literally filled with men and boys, women and girls ; some of the women fought the police savagely. On return to Central Office, the force were in reserve until Wednes- day, when it returned to its own precinct to meet emergencies there, doing special duty until Saturday, but without having to suppress any disturbances. This force were in the two severe battles in Second Avenue, and in the disastrous one, so far as injury to the police was concerned, at Mr. Gibbons' house. They were well tested as to courage, endurance, and discipline, and sustained themselves bravely, being important auxil- iaries in the suppression of the riots and the restoration of order. The quiet in their own precinct, which was likely to be disturbed just about the time they returned, was preserved by the judicious management of Capt. Bogart and the faithfulness with which all orders were promptly and thoroughly obeyed. Thirty-second Precinct. Capt. A. S. Wilson, Fort Washington. The Captain and his force re- ported at Central Office on Tuesday morning, with Sergts. Huff, White- man, and Castle, coming down by Hudson River Railroad ; were soon after en route, with Inspector Dilks' command, to Twenty-second Street DURING THE RIOT WEEK, JULY, 1863. 99 and Second Avenue, where the mob was driven off, the building in which stolen arms were secreted entered, and a general clubbing given to the lawless outside and in the building. The " Thirty-second " were active and gallant in this affair, and seemed to relish infantry duty after their uninterrupted duty as mounted police. Eeturning to headquarters, there was but a brief respite ere again, under Inspector Dilks, they marched to the same vicinity, engaged in another conflict, where their command was again conspicuous, and were parties to another victory. It was at this time that Capt. Helme's Qommand was being hemmed in from all quar- ters, and its safety, bravely as his men would have fought, was largely due to the opportune arrival of Inspector Dilks. The hazardous return march, and the stubborn persistence of the mob in their assaults, have already been fully described. On reaching headquarters Capt. Wilson and his command were sent through the infected districts of the Eleventh and Seventeenth Wards, and on return reported to Inspector Leonard at the City Hall ; from here, aside of the day duties, were sent at night to the Western Hotel, and had a hand in the dispersion of the mob which had threatened it, several of the parties being cracked on the head somewhat severely ; thence to Cedar Street, and the Government Stores ; to the Twenty-seventh Precinct, and a march through it, and, 4 A. M. Wednesday, after nearly twenty-four hours of continuous march, interrupt- ed only to give battle, returned to the City Hall, and stretching out on the marble floor the members were allowed a brief rest. On Tuesday night the men had a short respite, and the Captain found them a gen- uine friend in Mr. Crook, of Chatham Street. On hearing that they had been nearly all day without food, he aroused his servants, opened his establishment, and had the force brought in, furnishing them with an excellent, substantial, and, of course, most welcome repast. They re- solved him to be a whole-souled man. On Wednesday, at 3 P. M., Capt. Wilson and his command were ordered to the First Precinct Station-house, and thence proceeded to Pier No. 4, North River, dispersing a crowd there ; subsequently the vicinity was patroled, and quiet entirely restored. Soon after, in conse- quence of apprehensions at Carmansville, they were ordered there. They arrived at Fort Washington by boat at 6^ P. M. The Captain at once took a force and started for Carmansville, where a large number of peo- ple were met, threatening mischief. He used " moral suasion " with them in preference to the locust, as they did not appear to be of a very vicious class, and they soon dispersed. The force were kept together until Sunday A. M., but had no disturbances to subdue. Sergeant Flandreau was left in charge of the station-house, having under his command one officer, two doormen, and two hostlers. On Tues- 100 SERVICES OF THE METROPOLITAN POLICE day, when the force had left for Central Office, a number of ladies and gen- tlemen residing at Carmansville, Fort Washington, and Tubby Hook, came to the station, and expressed their fears in regard to the destruction of their dwellings ; the gentlemen offered their services. Sergeant Flan- dreau allayed their apprehensions. At night he dispatched Patrolman Crosby and Doorman Malone on different reconnoitering duties, which they did most faithfully. Fresh horses were constantly kept on hand, and the few men at his disposal were actively scouting. When not doing this, they made a bold front at the station, demeaning themselves as though the whole force were on hand, and could be brought at once into service. During the night a man living in the neighborhood, one of doubtful character, repeatedly reconnoitered the station, and was inquisi- tive as to the number of men and the means of defence and offence. He received discreet answers and communicated them to a gang ready for arson and pillage, who thereupon skedaddled. On Wednesday, during the morning, the Sergeant was run down with the terrified residents of the vicinity ; he endeavored to allay their fears, told them how thoroughly the precinct had been patroled, but all in vain so far as a large number were concerned, who packed up their valuables and removed with their families to Westchester County. Confident of his own ability, with his few men and the volunteer force he could raise, to preserve order, yet the alarm and absquatulating induced the Sergeant to telegraph for Capt. Wilson and his force. Their return on Wednesday was the signal for a general jubilation. They arrived just in time to check the crowd at Car- mansville, above referred to. This force, although from the " rural districts," were most active in duty. They performed an immense amount of labor, were in some of the worst fights of the Riot Week, and exhibited an endurance, fidelity, and courage which covers them with credit. Capt. Wilson never sought for himself or men rest or respite ; and every one of the force, from Capt. Wilson down, were up to every requirement promptly and cheerfully. Sergeant Flandreau also won honor by his cool, discreet course, while left alone in the precinct, and which, undoubtedly, prevented demonstra- tions by the inhabitants so dreaded. The Sanitary Police, The Sanitary Police, Capt. B. G. Lord, Rooms Nos. 37 and 38 Cen- tral Office, have as their especial duties the reporting of all nuisances, ex- amination of tenement houses, and of unsafe buildings, the care of the Public Schools, but, more especially and important, the examination of steam boilers and the licensing of persons qualified to run steam-engines. DURING THE RIOT WEEK, 'JULY,' t&S. '' ' T01 This last it will be seen involves the intelligent and scientific examination of parties applicant, and, as a consequence, the force is composed in large proportion of scientific men. Their duties, although not constantly before the public, are of a most responsible character, and have been most com- petently performed. During " Riot Week" their ordinary routine was broken, and they were most valuable aids in the restoration of order. The Sanitary Company was called to the Central Office, on Monday afternoon, July 13 ; in the evening, with the force under Inspector Car- penter, proceeded to Printing-house Square, and also patroled through a portion of the Fourth Ward ; returning to Central Office, were in reserve during the balance of the night. On Tuesday morning Captain Lord and company proceeded to Prince and Crosby Streets and dispersed a large collection of rioters assembled with the intention of burning a colored church situated at that corner. On the return to Central Office, they were ordered to the fac- tory at Twenty-second Street and Second Avenue. The force sent on this expedition (which was the first attack made on the rioters at that point) numbered about two hundred regular policemen, under the com- mand of Inspector G. W. Dilks, who led them on through Twenty-first Street ; on arriving at the corner of Twenty-first Street and Second Av- enue, the order of double-quick was given, when the whole force charged up to and through the mob and on the building ; forced the doors, and found the stairs leading to the upper floors filled with rioters armed with carbines, which they used as clubs. A portion of the command were ordered to enter the building and get to the rear of the rioters, which was done after hard fighting, and as they were driven out they were com- pelled to run the gauntlet through the force outside, but few escaping. Each one of the command secured a carbine, and on the order being given to fall in, they returned to the Central' Office. After the return, the San- itary Qompany were again dispatched under command of Inspector Car- penter, with Capt. Lord as aid, accompanied by about one hundred and fifty police and a detachment of military, to patrol the Seventeenth Ward. On their return officers McTaggart and Jaquins were detailed to accom- pany a detachment of police, under command of Capt. Bogart, and a company of Regulars under command of Capt. Franklin. This force proceeded in eleven stages, and the above-named officers were ordered to take charge of the drivers, many of whom had refused to drive through the crowds of rioters. The stages having stopped on the corner of Thir- tieth Street and Eighth Avenue, while the militaiy and police proceeded down Twenty-ninth Street toward Tenth Avenue, the officers left in charge of them were in imminent danger of being attacked ; but they flinched not; and, on being ordered to take the stages over to the Fifth Avenue and ll'l SERVICES OF THE METROPOLITAN POLICE Twenty-ninth Street and await the coming of the police and military, they started on the perilous trip ; although attacked with stones and other mis- siles by the mob, they succeeded in reaching that point, and were joined by the force. The Sanitary Company were held at the Central Office until Wednes- day morning, when a portion of it, with the entire force of the Twelfth Precinct, accompanied by Capt. Franklin's Regulars, were ordered to Harlem, where there had been riotous demonstrations during the absence of the police. On Wednesday night they assisted in arresting a number of rioters who had assembled to fire the house of some colored people residing in One Hundred and Twenty-second Street. They patrol ed the precinct -through the night. On Thursday morning officer James Mont- gomery, of the Sanitary, assisted by a portion of the Company then at Harlem, arrested a party charged with riot, arson and highway robbery. On the same morning a portion of the company arrested, in his place of business, a person accused of aiding and abetting the rioters, and inciting them to burn the house of Mr. Edgar Ketchum, collector of Internal Revenue for the Government. On Thursday night the Company, and members of the Twelfth Pre- cinct, patroled the precinct. On Friday they proceeded with some pris- oners, whom they had assisted in arresting at Mott Haven previously, and took them to Melrose, where they were committed to await their trial. The stable of Abraham Brown, City Marshal, on 124th Street, was fired on this day ; the force was promptly on the spot and the flames speedily extinguished. On Saturday evening the portion of the Sanitary Company at Harlem returned to the Central Office. On Wednesday afternoon, after a portion of his Company had been or- dered to Harlem, Capt. Lord, with the balance of the Sanitary Company and other force, was ordered to take charge of the Sixteenth Precinct. After his arrival, he deputized about one hundred and fifty citizens as special policemen, who, with the police under his command, patroled the precinct. During the command of Captain Lord in the Sixteenth Precinct, there were several attempts at arson, which were frustrated by the vigilance of the men, and only one fire occurred, which was immedi- ately extinguished by the Fire Department, aided by the force. On Sat- urday, after having returned to the Central Office, and his whole Company (the Sanitary) being again together, he was intrusted with the charge and protection of the Central Office, which duty the Company fulfilled day and night until Monday the 27th July. During the guard of the Central Office, officers Johns, Van Orden, and McTaggart, arrested three persons charged with entering the house of Isaac Stephens (colored) and beating him. Officer McTaggart arrested a man charged with assault on colored DURING THE RIOT WEEK, JULY, 1863. 103 persons. Officers Coffee and Van Orden arrested three others for assault and battery on three soldiers stationed at the Central Office. On Monday, July 27, the Sanitary Company returned to their ^regu- lar duties. On Monday morning, July 13, about 10 A. M., officer Mc- Taggart was present at the riot and burning of the buildings on Third Avenue and Forty-sixth Street. There saw Superintendent Kennedy beaten by the mob, and assisted in his rescue from them. While Mr. Kennedy was being taken away, McTaggart was struck with a stone in the back of his head, and also with a club on the shoulder. He aided in conveying the Superintendent to headquarters. On Monday afternoon, as the same officer was in an office in West Thirty-ninth Street, he heard one of the persons present boast that he had taken a prominent part in the mobs' proceedings of the day, and that they intended to burn several slaughter-houses and Allerton's Hotel. The man also stated that he would put a ball through Henry Albohn, who has since died from the effects of a pistol-shot wound. The jury subsequently con- vened at the inquest charged this man with the murder of Albohn, and he was arrested by officer McTaggart, and committed for trial. This force, as will be noticed, performed miscellaneous and prolonged duty, " fleshed their locusts," and encountered perils in common with others of the Department. Capt. Lord, ever zealous and possessing moral courage which is infectious, incited his men, and was emulated by them, to a full performance of duty and the attaining of a most hon- orable name upon the " Record." DRILL-OFFICER T. S. COPELAND. Sergeant T. S. Copeland, whose services as drill-officer to the force have been of the utmost value, was one of the most efficient of the offi- cers during Riot W^eek. His first duty was organizing the command of Inspector Carpenter, which, on Monday afternoon, met the mob at Broadway and Amity Street, and he had the second blow in what was a gallant fight, and a quick and complete victory. It was here that the police, by their bravery, extorted from the citizens gathered at the spot, cheer on cheer of approval — something unusual for the force to hear given them, but which will be nothing novel hereafter. This mob was the one which had been doing so much damage in the upper part of the city, and they came down ladened with plunder. In the evening Sergeant Copeland formed another large command, which, under Inspector Carpenter, marched to the Park, and gave the rioters fleeing from Printing-house Square a reception such as they little expected, and largely suffered from. The Sergeant was here also amongst the most 104 SERVICES OF THE METROPOLITAN POLICE conspicuous and foremost. Thence he was on the march through the Fourth Ward. Here were witnessed shocking scenes ; the sacking of housed occupied by negroes, the piling up and burning of their furniture, the firing of their dwellings, and, in some cases, the actual burning alive of the inmates. In one instance a dwelling was fired where seven negroes had taken refuge ; they escaped by jumping from the windows, a distance of twenty feet ; one broke his leg, another his arm, and it was only by the prompt and decisive action of the police that any of them escaped death, the mob standing ready, like so many wolves, to jump upon them the moment they reached the ground. In this march the various mobs were met and dispersed, the greater portion fleeing back into their- dens. At midnight the force returned to the Park in time to receive the large mob coming down Broadway to finish the interrupted work at the Tribune Building. It was here that Inspector Carpenter ■exhibited strategy and generalship, massing his force at the east side of the Park, and, covered by the darkness, coolly awaiting the mob which came on, singing " We'll hang old Greeley to a sour apple tree," and rushed into the grasp of the force ere their presence was suspected. Exemplary, sudden, thorough was their punishment after the force sprang upon them. " Up, Guards, and at them," was the word ; the song ceased, and the ringing of the locusts and cries for mercy of the rene- gades supplied its place. Here, too, was Sergeant Copeland brave and efficient. Returning to headquarters, but a brief respite was had, for, at 2 A. M., Tuesday, Sergeant C. formed a battalion of 100 men, and proceeded to Clarkson Street, to recover the body of the negro hung there. It was recovered and brought to the Central Office. On Tues day the Sergeant formed the battalion of police which, under In- spector Carpenter, visited Second Avenue and Thirty-fourth Street, where the severe battle, heretofore described, was had. The force used their revolvers to clear the tops of the houses of their assailants, but ul- timately had to charge the houses, take and " clean " them. The rioters most of them boldly met the assault, others were found secreted in beds, boxes, closets, &c, &c, but were hunted out, receiving lessons which those of them who can remember anything, are not likely to forget. The force returned to headquarters at noon, and during the balance of the day the military knowledge of the Sergeant was in constant requisition in the organizing of the different commands constantly being required and sent off. In the evening he was with the command which, under Inspector Carpenter, marched to Brooks Brothers' clothing store, and subsequently through the infected districts thereabouts, dispersing all mobs and administering, on several occasions, severe punishment ; thence to the Fifth Ward, where valuable service was done and quiet restored, DURING THE RIOT WEEK, JULY, 1863. 105 and thence to headquarters. During the balance of the week, until Saturday, Sergeant Copeland was occupied in organizing companies, as they were required, for special service. In hastily giving a record of the duties and doings of this officer we have omitted many instances connected therewith, but which have been given in connection with the record of divers precincts. His con- duct had elicited the hearty encomiums of his superior officers, and he was not only valuable because of his military knowledge and the promptness and ability with which he formed commands, but also as a cool, gallant, and faithful officer. The Honorable Record would be incomplete without reference to three gentlemen — Daniel B.' Hasbrouck, First Deputy Clerk ; George Hop- craft, Clerk to Superintendent ; and Horace A. Bliss, Clerk to In- spectors. The two former, during Riot Week, were occupied day and night, unceasingly, in the performance of varied duties, neither of them making note of hours or weariness, but lending their whole time and energies to the intelligent and valuable services they were called upon to perform. When the immense amount of business centralizing at head- quarters, and the responsible character of what devolved on them to do, is remembered, that they were the right men in the right places will be promptly and cheerfully conceded. Mr. Bliss was temporarily absent at the burial of a brother, but returned in time to make available to the department the intelligence and energy which he is so well known to Alexander Stewart, Messenger to the Inspectors, was among the faithful and unwearying during the period of unceasing work and ex- citement. The Brooklyn Precincts. There are ten Precincts in Brooklyn. The force is a portion of the the Metropolitan Police. Its movements in this city on the first day of the riots is detailed in the Record of its own Chief officer, Inspector Folk, herein given, as are also the valuable duties subsequently performed in Brooklyn. That city owes its exemption to the constant vigilance of the force, its intelligent and courageous action. 106 SERVICES OF THE METROPOLITAN POLICE Conclusion. In concluding the " Honorable Record " of the Metropolitan Police, it can be reiterated that the safety of the city, its exemption from unpre- cedented scenes of murdei> arson, and pillage was first due to the force. It should be borne in mind that of the 2,000 men composing it, the Commis- sioners at no one time could avail themselves of over 800, and on Mon- day of the outbreak of not more than half that number. The balance, on reporting at headquarters, were sent in detachments to all sections of the city ; and to some precincts it was found necessary not only to return its force but to strengthen them with others ; nor were the 800 available in a body, for they were being constantly sent off under different com- mands to attack mobs in diverse sections of the city. The largest num- ber in one command was 350. It is a noticeable fact that, in every engagement where the police were in force, they were victorious ; it mattered not how many they had to meet or how they had to meet them— whether in the streets or in houses, or in both at once ; on all occasions they were entirely successful. This result is due to what very many citizens have considered an unnecessary regulation of the Department, and which many of the force have objected to as onerous, annoying and useless. We refer to the drilling and dis- ciplining of the men, which has been an imperative rule. Its wisdom and necessity received a triumphant confirmation from the very outset of the riots ; for, in their steady discipline, prompt military movements and obedience to command, was the strength and safety of the force. Acting together, moving as one man, they, numerically weak, overcame odds counting by thousands. This discipline is mainly due to General James Bowen, who, as one of the Commissioners, early saw its necessity and devoted himself to its enforcement. Gen. Bowen was in New Orleans during the riots, but has had the gratification of hearing that what he initiated has been valuably perfected. The conduct of the force exceeded the expectations of Commissioners Acton and Bergen. They did expect much from them, but their readi- ness and willingness on all occasions and at all hours, their uncomplain- ing response to every call, their cheerful endurance of fatigue, and a gal- lantry which knew no hesitancy, are subjects of their enthusiastic pride and encomiums. In testimony of the invaluable services of the police have been scores of complimentary letters from prominent sources. As one of the hand- somest acknowledgments, because from one who had full opportunity of judging, is the following from Brig.-Gen. Harvey Brown. He was in command of the military from Tuesday until Saturday of Riot DURING THE RIOT WEEK, JULY, 1863. 107 Week. It is a manly, frank, and generous acknowledgment from a gallant and accomplished officer. The extract is from a letter in response to one from a large number of prominent citizens complimentary to the judg- ment and energy displayed and the great services rendered by the Gen- eral during the crisis : Fort Hamilton, August 6, 1863. To Shepherd Knapp, George Opdyhe, Leonard W. Jerome, Moses Taylor, Esqs., and others : Gentlemen : I beg you to accept my grateful thanks for the kind and flattering letter with which you have honored me. The only merit I can claim, in the performance of the duty which has given me the high distinction of your approbation, is that of an honest singleness of purpose in seconding the very able and energetic efforts of the President of the Metropolitan Police, Mr. Acton, to whom, in my opinion, more than to any other one man is due the credit of the early sup- pression of the riot. I never for a moment forgot that to the police was confided the conservation of the peace of the City; and that only in conjunction with the city authorities, and on their requisition, could the United States forces be lawfully and properly employed in suppressing the riot, and in restoring that peace and good order which had been so lawlessly broken. Acting in accordance with this principle, and as aids to the gal- lant City Police, the officers and soldiers of my command performed the most unpleasant and arduous duty, with that prompt energy and fearless patriotism which may ever be expected from the soldiers of the Republic. On the week after the riot the Board of Police Commissioners issued the following Address to the force, in which a well-earned tribute is paid to the Military. To the Metropolitan Police Force. On the morning of Monday, the 13th inst., the peace and good order of the city was broken by a mob collected in several quarters of the city, for the avowed purpose of resisting the process of drafting names to re- cruit the armies of the Union. Vast crowds of men collected and fired the offices where drafting was in progress, beating and driving the officers from duty. From the beginning, these violent proceedings were accompanied by arson, robbery, and murder. Private property, unofficial persons of all ages, sexes, and conditions, were indiscriminately assailed — none were spared, except those who were supposed by the mob to sympathize with their proceedings. Early in the day the Superintendent was assaulted, cruelly beaten, robbed and disabled by the mob which was engaged in burning the Pro- vost Marshal's office in Third Avenue, thus in a manner disarranging the organization at the Central Department, throwing new, unwonted, and responsible duties upon the Board. • At this juncture the telegraph wires of the department were cut, and 108 SERVICES OF THE METROPOLITAN POLICE the movement of forces by the railroads and stages violently interrupted, interfering seriously with our accustomed means of transmitting orders and concentrating forces. , The militia of the city were absent at the seat of war, fighting the bat- tles of the nation against treason and secession, and there was no adequate force in the city for the first twelve hours to resist at all points the vast and infuriated mob. The police force was not strong enough in any pre- cinct to make head, unaided, against the overwhelming force. No course was left but to concentrate the whole force at the Central Department, and thence send detachments able to encounter and conquer the rioters. This course was promptly adopted on Monday morning. The military were called upon to act in aid of the civil force to subdue the treasonable mob, protect life and property, and restore public order. Under such adverse circumstances you were called upon to encounter a mob of such strength as have never before been seen in this country. The force of militia under General Sandford, who were called into service by the authority of this Board, were concentrated by him at and held the Arsenal in Seventh Avenue, throughout the contest. The military forces in command of Brevet Brigadier-General Harvey Brown reported at the Central Department, and there General Brown established his head-quar- ters, and from there expeditions, combined of police and military force, were sent out that in all cases conquered, defeated or dispersed the mob force, and subjected them to severe chastisement. In no instance did these detachments from the Central Department, whether of police alone, or police and military combined, meet with defeat or serious check. In all cases they achieved prompt and decisive victories. The contest continued through Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, and till 11 o'clock on Thursday night, like a continuous battle, when it ended by a total and sanguinary route of the insurgents. During the whole of those anxious days and nights, Brig.-Gen. Brown remained at the Central Department, ordering the movements of the mili- tary in carefully considered combinations with the police force, and throughout the struggle, and until its close, commanded the admiration and gratitude of the Police Department and all who witnessed his firm intelligence and soldierly conduct. It is understood that he had at no time under his immediate command more than three hundred troops, but they were of the highest order, and were commanded by officers of courage and ability. They cordially acted with, supported, and were supported by the police, and victory in every contest against fearful odds was the result of brave fighting and intelligent command. In the judgment of this Board, the escape of the city from the power of an infuriated mob is due to the aid furnished the police by Brig.-Gen. Brown and the small military force under his command. No one can doubt, who saw him as we did, that during those anxious and eventful days and nights Brig.-Gen. Harvey Brown was equal to the situation, and was the right man in the right place. We avail ourselves of this occasion to tender to him in the most earnest and public manner the thanks of the department and our own. To the soldiers under his command we are grateful as to brave men who periled all to save the city from a reign of terror. To Captains Put- DURING THE RIOT WEEK, JULY, 1863. 10£ nam, Franklin and Shelly, Lieut. Ryer and Lieut.-Col. Berens, officers of corps under the command of Brig.-Gen. Brown, we are especially in- debted, and we only discharge a duty when we commend them to their superiors in rank and to the War Department for their courageous and effective service. Of the Inspectors, Captains, and Sergeants of police who led parties in the fearful contest, we are proud to say that none faltered or failed. Each was equal to the hour and the emergency. Not one failed to overcome the danger, however imminent, or to defeat the enemy, however numer- ous. Especial commendation is' due to Drill-Sergeant Copeland for his most valuable aid in commanding the movements of larger detachments of the police. The patrolmen who were on duty fought through the numerous and fierce conflicts with the steady courage of veteran soldiers, and have won, as they deserve, the highest commendations from the public and from this Board. In their ranks there was neither faltering nor straggling. Devotion to duty and courage in the performance of it were universal. The public and the department owe a debt of gratitude to the' citizens who voluntarily became special patrolmen, some three thousand of whom, for several days and nights, did regular patrolman's duty with great effect. In the name of the public and of the department in which they were volunteers we thank them. Mr. Crowley, the Superintendent of the police telegraph, and the attaches of his department, by untiring and sleepless vigilance in trans- mitting information by telegraph unceasingly through more than ten days and nights, have more than sustained the high reputation they have always possessed. Through all these bloody contests, through all the wearing fatigue and wasting labor, you have demeaned yourselves like worthy members of the Metropolitan Police. The public judgment will commend and reward you. A kind Provi- dence has permitted you to escape with less casualties than could have been expected. You have lost one comrade, whom you have buried with honor. Your wounded will, it is hoped, all recover, to join you and share your honors. It is hoped that the severe, but just, chastisement which has been inflicted upon those guilty of riot, pillage, arson and murder, will deter further attempts of that character. But if, arising out of political or other causes, there should be another attempt to interrupt public order, we shall call on you again to crush its authors, confident that you will respond like brave men, as you ever have, to the calls of duty ; and in future, whenever the attempt may be made, you will have to aid you large forces of military, ably commanded, and thus be enabled to crush in the bud any attempted riot or revolution. To General Canby, who, on the morning of Friday, the 17th inst., took command of the military, relieving Brig.-Gen. Brown, and to Gen. Dix, who succeeded Gen. Wool, the public are indebted for prompt, vigorous and willing aid to the police force in all the expeditions which have been called for since they assumed their commands. Charged particularly with the protection of the immense amount of Federal property and interests in the Metropolitan district, and the police force charged with the main- tenance of public order, the duties of the two forces are always coincident. 110 SERVICES OF THE METROPOLITAN POLICE Whatever menaces or disturbs one equally menaces and disturbs the other. We are happy to know that at all times the several authorities have co-operated with that concert and harmony which is necessary to secure vigor and efficiency in action. Sergeant Young of the detective force, aided by Mr. Newcomb and other special patrolmen, rendered most effective service in arranging the commissary supplies for the large number of police, military, special patrolmen, and destitute colored refugees, whose subsistence was thrown unexpectedly on the department. The duty was arduous and responsible, and was performed with vigor and fidelity. All the clerks of the depart- ment, each in his sphere, performed a manly share of the heavy duties growing out of these extraordinary circumstances. The Central Depart- ment became a home of refuge for large numbers of poor, persecuted colored men, women, and children, many of whom were wounded and sick, and all of whom were helpless, exposed, and poor. Mr. John H. Keyser, with his accustomed philanthropy, volunteered, and was appointed to superintend these wretched victims of violence and prejudice, and has devoted unwearied days to the duty. The pitiable condition of these poor people appeals in the strongest terms to the Christian charity of the benevolent and humane. The members of the force will do an accepta- ble service by calling the attention to their condition of those who are able and willing to contribute in charity to their relief. On the 10th of August, the Inspectors, after receipt of the reports from the different Captains, submitted the following to the Police Com- missioners, with which the " Record" will close. Office of Inspectors, ) New York, August 10th, 1863. J John A. Kennedy, Esq., Superintendent: Sir, — The undersigned respectfully beg leave to submit the reports of the several Captains of the Metropolitan Police who were in command of precincts within the City of New York during the memorable Week of Riot, viz. : from July 13th to July 18th, both inclusive. Also, reports of several Sergeants, comprising a detailed account of the duty performed by their respective commands during the same week ; one by Sergeant Brackett of the Twenty-first Precinct, who, by the order of President Acton, had command of that precinct from the morning of the 16th of July, Captain Palmer having reported sick on the afternoon of the preceding day ; others who had separate commands requiring a separate report. The reports of the Captains and Sergeants are so elaborate and full in detail that the undersigned do not deem it necessary to make separate reports. Each report is a truthful record of the arduous duties most cheer- fully and heroically performed by their commands, and in the aggregate will form a most creditable and honorable epoch in the history of the Metropolitan Police. The undersigned take this occasion to tender their sincere thanks DURING THE RIOT WEEK, JULY, 1863. Ill to the Captains, Sergeants, and Patrolmen of the Metropolitan Police for the faithful manner in which they performed the most trying duty that was ever performed by any police force in this country, and was probably never excelled by the police force of any city in the world. We cannot, in a report of this kind point out single instances of bravery, cool- ness and endurance, where it was shown so universally : And besides, while single instances came under our immediate observation which would be in consonance with our feelings to refer to them, yet we fear would be doing injustice to others equally entitled to receive the same meed of praise. We were placed in a position where the whole field had to be looked over, hence we refer you to the reports alluded to, and where in many instances special mention is made of meritorious conduct. Two of the undersigned, however (viz. : Inspectors Carpenter and Dilks — Inspector Leonard, having command of the force at the City Hall, did not have the opportunity of witnessing what we did) cannot in justice pass unnoticed the faithful and valuable services of Drill-Instructor Ser- geant T. S. Copeland. He was with us at the Central Office from the commencement to the termination of the riot, and greatly facilitated us in forming battalions to send to meet the mob. He accompanied one of the undersigned (Inspector Carpenter) in all the attacks he made upon the rioters, and in which he displayed great coolness and courage, being always in advance, and demonstrated the excellent state of discipline he had drilled the force up to. In closing, the undersigned wish to state that in all cases where they were ordered to proceed with large bodies of the force to meet and repel the mob, whether accompanied with military or not, the officers and men performed their whole duty, far exceeding our most sanguine expectations. The undersigned cannot close this brief report without calling your particular attention to this significant fact, that out of a body of a little over two thousand men that comprise this force but few, very few, in any manner shrank from their trying duties. This, we think, will stand out as a most honorable mark of distinction for the members of the Metropolitan Police. DANIEL CARPENTER, ) GEO. W. DILKS, [ Inspectors. JAS. LEONARD. Note. — The Captains of the several precincts made full and interesting reports to the Commis- sioners of the duties performed, during Riot Week, by their several commands. These reports have been referred to for the purposes of this compilation, and have been of great value in perfecting it. 112 SERVICES OF THE METROPOLITAN POLICE THE COURT, JURIES, AND PROSECUTING OFFICERS. Reference to the course of Recorder Hoffman, the Grand and Petit Juries, and the Prosecuting officers, on the indictment and trial of rioters, at the August Term of the Court of General Sessions — the only Court in session to the date of this publication at which the Riot cases could be tried — forms an appropriate sequel to the " Record." The Court met on Monday, August Sd, and on the following day Re- corder Hoffman delivered his charge. It was eloquent and earnest ; he used no modifying language in speaking of the crimes which had been committed ; no shady words in characterizing the criminals. Those who burn asylums, dwellings, stores, are guilty of arson ; those who plunder are thieves; aj-ioter is an enemy of society, and the punishment due a mur- derer is death. To each and all of these classes the penalty which the law affixes, would, he said, be sternly meted out. In calling the atten- tion of the Grand Jury to the riots, and urging them to a thorough, fear- less examination of all cases of participation brought before them, the Recorder used the following language : " We stand here, to-day, not as individuals, but as public officers charged with grave responsibilities. Let us not shrink from them. Let us remember that we are not partisans, but sworn officers of the law, de- termined at all hazards to enforce law and preserve order, to protect the innocent and punish the guilty." The Grand Jury entered upon their laborious duties with the same spirit which characterized the charge, and performed them fearlessly and faithfully. The District Attorney and his associates, Samuel B. Garvin, in Court, and Orlando L. Stewart, conducted the prosecutions, and urged them to success with unwearying energy and zeal. Of the twenty persons tried on charge of being concerned in the riots, nineteen were convicted. The Petit Juries participated in the determination pervading the officials of the Court to thoroughly discharge their duty, and, by their un- hesitating action and just findings, relieved the Jury Box of the imputa- tions so often made against it. Recorder Hoffman was stern and inflexible in his sentences. The aggregate time of imprisonment for the rioters sentenced at this v term, which continued but ten days, was nearly one hundred years. The action of this Court has satisfied the lawless that for them there is no more license, and has done more to encourage the police, to strengthen them in the discharge of their duty, than even the approval and laudations which have been showered upon them. It has also renewed the confi- dence of the community, and assured them that for crime there is pun- ishment, and for criminals its certainty. APPENDIX. The following are some of the most atrocious cases of murder perpe- trated by the rioters. The facts relating to some of the colored victims are condensed from the interesting Report of the Secretary of the Mer- chant's Relief Committee : MURDER OF COL. O'BRIEN. The murder of Col. H. J. O'Brien, by the mob, on the afternoon of Tuesday of Riot Week, was characterized by appalling barbarities. After the battle between the police under Inspector Carpenter, in the Second Avenue, and after the police had left, Col. O'Brien, in command of two companies, 11th Regiment, N. Y. Vols., arrived at Thirty-fourth Street and Second Avenue. The rioters had reassembled, a collision en- sued, and the military opened fire. The mob dispersed, and Col. O'Brien, leaving his command, walked up the avenue a short distance, entering a drug store. Returning to the street in a few moments, he was instantly surrounded by a vengeful and relentless crowd, which had re-collected, at once knocked down, beaten and mutilated shockingly till insensible. He thus lay for upwards of an hour, breathing heavily, and on any move- ment receiving kicks and stones. He was then taken by the heels, dragged around the street, and again left lying in it. For some four hours did he thus lay, subjected to infamous outrages, among them the occasional thrusting of a stick down his throat when gasping for breath. No one who did, not seek to feed his brutality upon him was allowed to approach him. One man who sought to give him a drop of water was instantly set upon and barely escaped with his life. While still breathing, he was taken into the yard of his own house, near the scene, and there the most revolting atrocities were perpetrated, underneath which the life, that had so tenaciously clung to him, fled. No one could have recognized his remains. The murderers, satiated with their excess of fiendishness, left, and the body was allowed to be removed to Bellevue Hospital. COLORED VICTIMS OF THE RIOT. Wm. Henry Nichols (colored). Nichols resided at No. 147 East Twenty -eighth St. Mrs. Staat, his mother, was visiting him. On Wednes- day, July 15th, at 3 o'clock, the house was attacked by a mob with showers of bricks and stones. In one of the rooms was a woman with a child but 114 APPENDIX. three days old. The rioters broke open the door with axes and rushed in. Nichols and his mother fled to the basement ; in a few moments the babe referred to was dashed by the rioters from the upper window into the yard, and instantly killed. The mob cut the water pipes above, and the basement was being deluged ; ten persons, mostly women and children, were there, and they fled to the yard ; in attempting to climb the fence Mrs. Staats fell back from exhaustion ; the rioters were instantly upon her ; her son sprang to her rescue, exclaiming, " Save my mother, if you kill me." Two ruffians instantly seized him, each taking hold of an arm, while a third, armed with a crow-bar, calling upon them to hold his arms apart, deliberately struck him a savage blow on the head, felling him like a bullock. He died in the N. Y. Hospital two days after. James Costello (col'd). — James Costello, No. 97 West Thirty-third Street, killed on Tuesday morning, July 14th. Costello was a shoe- maker, an active man in his business, industrious and sober. He went out early in the morning upon an errand, was accosted, and finally was pur- sued by a powerful man. He ran down the street ; endeavored to make his escape ; was nearly overtaken by his pursuer ; in self-defence he turned and shot the rioter with a revolver. The shot proved to be mor- tal ; he died two days after. Costello was immediately set upon by the mob. They first mangled his body, then hanged it. They then cut down his body and dragged it through the gutters, smashing it with stones, and finally burnt it. The mob then attempted to kill Mrs. Costello and her children, but she escaped by climbing fences and taking refuge in a police station-house. Abraham Franklin (colored). — This young man, who was murdered by the mob on the corner of Twenty-seventh Street and Seventh Avenue, was a quiet, inoffensive man, of unexceptionable character. He was a cripple, but supported himself and his mother, being employed as a coachman. A short time previous to the assault, he called upon his mother to see if anything could be done by him for her safety. The old lady said she considered herself perfectly safe ; but if her time to die had come, she was ready to die. Her son then knelt down by her side, and implored the protection of Heaven in behalf of his mother. The old lady said that it seemed to her that good angels were present in the room. Scarcely had the supplicant risen from his knees, when the mob broke down the door, seized him, beat him over the head and face with fists and clubs, and then hanged him in the presence of his parent. While they were thus engaged the military came and drove them away, cutting down the body of Franklin, who raised his arm once slightly and gave a few signs of life. The military then moved on to quell other riots, when the mob returned and again suspended the now probably lifeless body of Franklin, cutting out pieces of flesh, and otherwise shock- ingly mutilating it. Augustus Stuart (colored). — Died at Hospital, Blackwell's Island, July 22, from the effects of a blow received at the hands of the mob, on Wednesday evening of Riot Week. He had been badly beaten previously by a band of rioters, and was frightened and insane from the effects of the blows which he had received. He was running toward the Arsenal APPENDIX. 115 (State), Seventh Avenue and Thirty-seventh Street, for safety, when he was overtaken by the mob, from whom he received his death blow. Peter Heuston. — Peter Heuston, sixty -three years of age, a Mohawk Indian, dark complexion, but straight hair, and for several years a resident of New York, proved a victim to the riots. Heuston served with the New York Volunteers in the Mexican war. He was brutally attacked and shockingly beaten, on the 13th of July, by a gang of ruffians, who thought him to be of the African race because of his dark complexion. He died within four days, at Bellevue Hospital, from his injuries. Jeremiah Robinson (colored). — He was killed in Madison near Catharine Street. His widow stated that her husband, in order to es- cape, dressed himself in some of her clothes, and, in company with her- self and one other woman, left their residence and went toward one of the Brooklyn ferries. Robinson wore a hood, which failed to hide his beard. Some boys, seeing his beard, lifted up the skirts of his dress, which exposed his heavy boots. Immediately the mob set upon him, and the atrocities they perpetrated are so revolting that they are unfit for publication. They finally killed him, and threw his body into the river. His wife and her companion ran up Madison street, and escaped across the Grand Street Ferry to Brooklyn. William Jones (colored).- — A crowd of rioters in Clarkson Street, in pursuit of a negro, who in self-defence had fired on some rowdies, met an inoffensive colored man returning from a bakery with a loaf of bread under his arm. They instantly set upon and beat him and, after nearly killing him, hung him to a lamp-post. His body was left suspended for several hours. A fire was made underneath him, and he was literally roasted as he hung, the mob reveling in their demoniac act. Recog- nition of the remains, on their being recovered, was impossible ; and two women mourned for upwards of two weeks, in the case of this man, for the loss of their husbands. At the end of that time, the husband of one of the mourners, to her great joy, returned like one recovered from the grave. The principal evidence which the widow, Mary Jones, had to identify the murdered man as her husband, was the fact of his having a loaf of bread under his arm, he having left the house to get a loaf of bread a few minutes before the attack. Joseph Reed (colored). — This was a lad of seven years of age, re- siding at No. 147 East Twenty-eighth Street, with an aged grandmother and widowed mother. On Wednesday morning of the fearful week, a crowd of ruffians gathered in the neighborhood, determined on a work of plunder and death. They attacked the house, stole everything they could carry with them, and, after threatening the inmates, set fire to it. The colored people, who had the sole occupancy of the building, fled in con- fusion into the midst of the gathering crowd. And then the child was separated from his guardians. His youth and evident illness, even from the devils around him, it would be thought, should have insured his safety. But no sooner did they see his unprotected, defenceless condition, than a gang of fiendish men seized him, beat him with sticks, and bruised him with heavy cobble-stones. But one, ten-fold more the servant 116 APPENDIX. of Satan than the rest, rushed at the child, and with the stock of a pistol struck him on the temple and felled him to the ground. A noble young fireman, by the name of John F. Govern, of No. 39 Hose Company, in- stantly came to the rescue, and, single-handed, held the crowd at bay. Taking the wounded and unconscious boy in his arms, he carried him to a place of safety. The terrible beating and the great fright the poor lad had undergone was too much for his feeble frame ; he died on the follow- ing Tuesday. Joseph Jackson (colored), aged 19 years, living in West Fifty-third Street, near Sixth Avenue, was in the industrious pursuit of his humble occupation of gathering provender for a herd of cattle, and when near the foot of Thirty-fourth Street, East River, July 15, was set upon by the mob, killed, and his body thrown into the river. Samuel Johnson (colored). — On Tuesday night Johnson was attacked near Fulton Ferry by a gang who mercilessly beat and left him for dead. A proposition was made to throw him into the river, but for some reason the murderers took fright and fled. He was taken by some citi- zens to his home, and died the next day. Williams (colored). — He was attacked on the corner of Le Roy and Washington Streets, on Tuesday morning, July 14th, knocked down, a number of men jumped upon, kicked, and stamped upon him until in- sensible. One of the murderers knelt on the body and drove a knife into it ; the blade being too small he threw it away and resorted to his fists. Another seized a huge stone, weighing near twenty pounds, and deliberately crushed it again and again on to the victim. A force of police, under Captain Dickson, arrived and rescued the man, who was con- veyed to the New York Hospital. He was only able to articulate " Williams " in response to a question as to his name, and remained in- sensible thereafter, dying in a few days. Ann Derrickson. — This was a white woman, the wife of a colored man, and lived at No. 11 York Street. On Wednesday, July 15th, the rioters seized a son of deceased, a lad of about twelve years, saturated his clothes and hair with camphene, and then procuring a rope, fastened one end to a lamp-post, the other around his neck, and were about to set him on fire, and hang him ; they were interfered with by some citizens and by the police of the First Ward, and their diaboli- cal attempt at murder frustrated. While Mrs. Derrickson was at- tempting to save the life of her son she was horribly bruised and beaten with a cart rung. The victim, after lingering three or four weeks, died from the effects of her injuries. APPENDIX. 117 BURNING OF THE COLORED ORPHAN ASYLUM. About 4 o'clock on the afternoon of Monday, July 13th, a mob of some three thousand attacked the Asylum for Colored Orphans on Fifth Avenue. The main building was four stories, with wings of three sto- ries, and was capable of accommodating five hundred children. With the grounds, it extended from Forty-third to Forty-fourth Street. At the time the mob came upon it, there were, besides the officers and mat- rons, over two hundred children in it, from infancy to twelve years of age. Superintendent Wm. E. Davis hurriedly fastened the doors, and while the mob were breaking them in the children were collected, and then escaped by the rear just as the ruffians had effected their entrance in front. Those entering at once proceeded to ransack and pillage every room in the building. Everything that could be was stolen, even to the dresses and trinkets of the orphans. What could not be carried off was destroyed. Meantime Chief Engineer Decker reached the scene, and forced his way to the building. In attempting to address the mob, he was twice knocked down and finally forced into Fifth Avenue. Here some ten firemen joined him, and it was resolved to save the Asylum if possible. They boldly forced their way to and into the building. Here they were joined by Assistant Engineers Lamb and Lewis. The chairs, desks, &c, had' been broken up, piled in different parts of the building, and fires had been kindled on the first and second floors. The firemen scattered and extinguished all of them, and intimidated the rioters. Meanwhile some of the latter had succeeded in effectually firing the loft in every part ; the demonstration against the chief and his small band of associates had become too formidable ; to save the building was im- possible, and they reluctantly yielded it to the mob, who, with exulting yells, soon saw the Asylum wrapped in flames. In an hour and a half only a small portion of the walls remained. The firemen who acted so gallantly with the Chief and his Assistants were members of Hook and Ladder Company No. 2, Hose Company No. 31, Engine Companies Nos. 7, 9, and 10. After their escape from the building, the Orphans were hurried in mournful procession to the Twentieth Precinct, Captain Walling, where they were sheltered and provided for until their removal to Blackwell's Island. Except the clothes they wore, not an article was saved for them. The loss to the Society in building, furniture, and clothing was estimated at $80,000. INDEX PAGE Commissioners 7 Chief Clerk 9 Superintendent , 9 Inspectors 12, 17, 20, 23 Telegraph Bureau 25 Detective Force '. 29 First Precinct 32 Second Precinct 34 Third Precinct 36 Fourth Precinct 38 Fifth Precinct 40 Sixth Precinct 42 Seventh Precinct 44 Eighth Precinct 46 Ninth Precinct 48 Tenth Precinct 49 Eleventh Precinct 50 Twelfth Precinct 52 Thirteenth Precinct 54 Fourteenth Precinct 55 Fifteenth Precinct 5*7 Sixteenth Precinct 61 Seventeenth Precinct , 63 Eighteenth Precinct 64 Nineteenth Precinct 67 Twentieth Precinct 68 Twenty-first Precinct VI Twenty-second Precinct : 73 Twenty -third Precinct 74 Twenty-fourth Precinct 76 Twenty-fifth Precinct 78 Twenty-sixth Precinct 81 Twenty-seventh Precinct 86 Twenty-eighth Precinct 90 Twenty -ninth Precinct 93 Thirtieth Precinct . 96 Thirty-first Precinct 97 Thirty-second Precinct 98 Sanitary Police , 100 Drill Officer 103 Superintendent and Inspectors' Offices 105 Brooklyn Precincts 105 Brig.-Gen. Harvey Brown 107 Commissioners' Address to Force, and acknowledgment to the Military . . . . , 107 Inspectors' Report 110 Court, Juries, and Prosecuting Officers 112 The Murders 113 Burning of the Colored Orphan Asylum 117 . , ■ ; ' - "".'.-I ........ • -A. \\\ ■■ . \\ ■ - ■ \ \ S i v( - ■• V - '■ ■ " > ' . . •■> ' . •. . I • v * \ ' t * . \ . 11 ■ 11 •: • ■* '