Louisiana politics wasn’t always dirty; sometimes it was
just deadly.
In Shakespeare’s
Henry the Sixth, a largely forgotten character utters one of the writer’s most
memorable lines: “First, let’s kill all the lawyers.” The oft-misinterpreted
line was meant to praise attorneys and judges who impart justice in society. But
in the Reconstruction Era after the Civil War, a Louisiana lawyer served in
government at his own risk.
Politics today
could be considered downright nasty with plenty of mudslinging and vitriolic
name-calling. But even Louisiana’s notoriously scandal-plagued politics of the
20th century does not compare to the violence of Reconstruction. After the war,
Republicans, with control of the federal bureaucracy, took charge of local and
state government in Louisiana and most of the South, even though the majority
of the populace was Democrat. Once the sole purview of the white Democrats,
control of local politics was largely in the hands of those holding newfound
power gained through the Union victory.
Serving in the
Republican-controlled Reconstruction government could be deadly. Political
assassinations were common as the Democrats saw their domain coming to an end.
They did not take kindly to outsiders—carpetbaggers—coming in to run local
government. The scalawags—locals who allied themselves with the Radical
Republicans—were especially despised. Even those who had excellent
relationships with the populace before and during the war were now considered
pariahs by their longtime friends and associates.
The White League
used violence against officeholders, running some out of town and killing
others, and suppressed election turnout among black and white Republicans. In
August 1874, a mob assassinated virtually every government official in Red
River Parish. An insurrection by 5,000 White Leaguers against Metropolitan
Police and state militia supporting the state government in New Orleans on
September 14, 1874, killed dozens. The insurgents held the statehouse, armory,
and downtown for three days, retreating before arrival of Federal troops that
restored the Radical Republican government. A memorial commemorating the
Democratic view of the Battle of Liberty Place is currently the focus of a
contentious fight over the removal of purported racist symbols in New Orleans.
Sometimes the
attack on government officials had more to do with outright lawlessness than
political opposition. Such may be the case with the murder of a district judge
and district attorney near Winnsboro in September 1873. The Ouachita Telegraph
called the apparent ambush killing of District Judge Thomas H. Crawford and
District Attorney Arthur H. Harris “a great crime, exciting our horror and
strongest condemnation.”
Harris and
Crawford had participated in court proceedings in Winnsboro for a week before
returning to their homes in Columbia in Caldwell Parish. On Monday, September
8, they set out for Winnsboro for a second week of court. Along the route, an
ambush cut them down. Another attorney, Thomas J. Hough, who left Columbia two
or three hours after the two officials, discovered the bodies fourteen miles
down the road near the Boeuf River swamps. Hough spurred his horse back to
Columbia to collect a posse.
Judge Crawford
lay in the road, the victim of what the Ouachita Telegraph termed “murderous
fire.” The paper’s description was gruesome: “He was shot so often as to leave
no distinct marks of the number of shots he received. His head was literally
torn to pieces, the parts being gathered up in a handkerchief for interment.
His horse was shot in the neck, but not killed.”
District Attorney
Harris had opportunity to flee the first onslaught. His horse was shot down in
the road but Harris’s body was found some distance away, indicating he briefly
fled on foot. According to the Telegraph, “his body exhibited wounds in the
knee, thigh, side and head, from which it is believed he was killed in flight,
and even shot while down and several paces from his horse. The character of the
wounds leads to the belief that the fire was delivered from both sides of the
road, and that after having shot the two men down, they were shot while down,
and Judge Crawford even after he was dead. His chest received a number of
bullets, and underneath his head a large hole in the ground was seen, while the
upper portion of this head was entirely blown asunder.”
As a Unionist who
opposed Louisiana’s secession, Crawford’s alliance with the Republicans meant
losing friends and gaining many enemies. He had fled to New York during the
conflict. Attempts had been made on his life since his return to Louisiana.
Many drew the conclusion that his office was gained through subterfuge with the
help of the Republican-controlled election returning board as the vote count
had been decidedly against him. Harris, it was supposed, was killed because he
was in company with Crawford, and no witnesses could be left alive.
Some suggested a
different and more likely motive. Crawford and Harris had been threatened by a
Caldwell Parish man named Winn, a fugitive facing a murder charge.
Harris had no
known enemies. As a Democrat, the Telegraph reported, “he was thoroughly and
strongly opposed to Crawford politically, and was even beloved by the people of
his district. Nothing but strong personal enmity can account for his death and
that of Judge Crawford in the way recited. And this fact — admitted to be such
by every one — points more strongly than anything else to the accusation of
Winn as the guilty party.”
Judge Crawford
was buried in Columbia, and forty-one year old Arthur Harris in his family’s
burial plot in City Cemetery in Monroe. The Telegraph described a massive
outpouring of sympathy for both men, but especially Harris, saying he
“possessed fine social qualities, a cultivated mind, popular manners and a good
heart. He loved his country, and set
duty above all sense of fear.” His tombstone is marked with a similar
sentiment. Crawford was named “one of the best criminal lawyers of the State.”
Governor Kellogg
offered a $5,000 reward but no one was ever brought to justice in the case.
Rewards announced in response to political killings in Reconstruction Louisiana
almost never produced the desired results.