The New York Silent Protest Parade in Photographs (1917)

The New York Silent Protest Parade in Photographs (1917)

Topic 3.6

Grace Nail Johnson, James Weldon Johnson, and Carl Van Vechten, Photographs from the New York Silent Protest Parade (1917)

Source: Photographs by Grace Nail Johnson, James Weldon Johnson, and Carl Van Vechten. New York - Silent Protest Parade, July 28, 1917. (Photographs of prominent African Americans, Series I: Photographs of Blacks Collected Chiefly by James Weldon Johnson and Carl Van Vechten, 1893-1954, Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Yale University)

On July 28, 1917, in response to white supremacist violence in Waco, Texas; Memphis, Tennessee; and East St. Louis, Missouri, a coalition of civil rights groups led by the NAACP (National Association for the Advancement of Colored People) led a silent protest down New York’s Fifth Avenue, calling for a federal anti-lynching law. The protesters marched in total silence, save for a drumbeat.