Forgotten history: The Battle of Athens, Tennessee [long]

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seamusTX
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Forgotten history: The Battle of Athens, Tennessee [long]

Post by seamusTX »

in 1946, the citizens of McMinn County, Tennessee, rose up against a crooked county government that had stayed in power by stuffing ballot boxes. They seized weapons from the National Guard Armory, including a machine gun, and at the climax of the battle dynamited the jail in the county seat of Athens.

It was arguably the last armed rebellion in the United States, an exercise in the true purpose of the Second Amendment.
When World War II came along, McMinn's boys answered the call willingly, which is a particular characteristic of East Tennessee. Only this time there was a difference. When the boys over there began to get letters from back home, there was disturbing news. The political machine in the county had run amuck.

It was a time of the fee system for politicians. Poll taxes were the rule. Stuffing ballot boxes was an ordinary event on Election Day. Even the dead voted by proxy.

The county was run by machine politics tied to the tendrils of the powerful E.H. "Boss" Crump organization of Shelby County, nearly 400 miles away in Memphis. There has been nothing like Crump, the mayor of Memphis, since Reconstruction. He ran the state like lord over vassal. When the boys returned home, McMinn County went through one of its most spectacular moments in history and one that may not have an equal anywhere else in the state or nation.

Not since the Civil War had anything resembling the event taken place. There was an armed insurrection by the returning veterans, rising up against corrupt politicians. They took over the town to save the election - and the people. It was a turning point in the county's history. To set the scene, the story begins a few years prior to what is now known as the "Battle of Athens"

In the 1930's, Boss Crump rose to extraordinary power in the state. As the state's political don, through patronage he virtually owned the legislature. His people always won. Not always fairly. They just won.

In McMinn County during this era, it was a time of sheriff's gangs who strong armed citizens and tourists. Gambling and bootlegging blossomed. The sheriff was paid a meager salary but earned thousands of dollars on expenses based on the number of people arrested and jailed.

For a decade, the system and the machine of state Senator Paul Cantrell and Sheriff Pat Mansfield, both Crump men, worked with dedicated efficiency. But by 1946, when the boys came home from fighting for democracy, freedom and a way of life, they discovered their county was as far from being democratic as the fields of death the had just left.

The veterans decided to go to battle once more. This time though the battle was at the ballot box. At first…

The soldiers turned politicians put up a bipartisan slate of candidates in the 1946 elections in Athens. They vowed that any citizen who cast his vote would have his vote counted as it was cast.

The situation could not have been more explosive. One who saw it all and broadcast it to McMinn County and eventually to the world was C.C. "Chuck" Redfern. Today [1999] he is county trustee, but in 1946 he was station manager and announcer for WLAR in Athens. He had ringside seat perched on a fire escape outside a building facing the McMinn County jail.

Trouble began early in the voting when ex-GI's, who were poll watchers, asked to see ballot boxes and were refused. A black man, another veteran, was shot by a hired deputy. Later, ballot boxes were taken to the jail and late in the evening, the veterans, fresh from the battlefields of Europe and the Pacific, broke into the National Guard Armory, and began handing out guns and ammunition. No one had to tell them what to do next.

They surrounded the jail and were on a high bank looking down into the building. Strategically, they had placed a .30 caliber machine gun atop a building overlooking the jail. When shooting broke out it lasted all night. Early in the morning, a soldier slithered underneath parked cars near the jail and tossed dynamite onto the jail porch. The explosion blew away part of the porch and collapsed a portion of it supported overhang. That did it. The deputies came out with their hands over their heads. They were hustled to the corner of Washington and White streets. A huge crowd gathered.

It was dramatic. Some wanted to hang the deputies. One deputy's throat was slashed. By now, it was not only the veterans who were gathered and doing the shouting. Through out the all-night war in the streets no one was killed, although several were wounded.

"But no one died. That is the miracle of the battle and in fact it change politics in this county forever," says Redfern. "We went to a county council form of government with a county manager after that. Later, in the 1980's, we changed to a county executive system. But what happened that night has been a good thing. It brought about a sound two party system. People have paid attention to the elective process."

Redfern pauses, reviewing the terrible moments of that night. "When I first came here from Illinois, just after the war, people told me that they took two things seriously here - religion and politics. I found out real quick about the politics. I was a Marine in the South Pacific, but I came closer to getting killed that night than I did in the war," he says as he inches to the edge of his chair. " I will never forget. I used to sign off the air 'This is the friendly voice of the friendly city. When I signed off that night you could hear the shots bang, bang, bang in the background. That broke me up."

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Re: Forgotten history: The Battle of Athens, Tennessee [long]

Post by KBCraig »

Thanks for the reminder. This is also the anniversary week of the largest armed uprising outside the War for Southern Independence, known as the Battle of Blair Mountain.

Two excellent examples of the last recourse against tyranny. In the coal field wars, the tyrants were quasi-government, but had full support of the government.
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Re: Forgotten history: The Battle of Athens, Tennessee [long]

Post by TDDude »

Quite a bit of that Vassal type of government was going on in South Texas around Duval county as late as the 50's. I believer the family in charge down there went by the name of Parr.

My dad was a DPS trooper in Alice Texas way back when and would tell some wild stories. His "AR" of the day was his M-1 Carbine which according to him, got lots of use when dealing with those "good ole boys". Gunfights at 100 mph were fairly common when they got a line on someone running moonshine or doing whatever they weren't really supposed to.

That ballot box stuffing down in Duval Co. is basically what got Lyndon Johnson into the congress back when he was just getting started. Or so the story goes.

And in the 80's, the area north of Humble on 59 was also someplace that the Sherriff ran like his own little kingdom. He mostly just picked off drivers and extorted money without ever filing any charges. People would be thrown in jail and had to pay "bail" to get out. The bail bondsman and the judge were quite often the same person. When the unlucky people got their car back quite often expensive stereos and other belongings were missing. That Sherriff eventually ran roughshod over the wrong guys, like a couple FBI agents the book says, and he eventually ended up in prison along with a lot of his staff.

Man, I love this state!!!!!!!!

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Re: Forgotten history: The Battle of Athens, Tennessee [long]

Post by casingpoint »

the area north of Humble on 59
You are referring to Porter, of course. Same Sheriff whose deputies beat a black motorist to death in his cell while incarcerated for a traffic violation on 59 such as you describe. About the same time a black motorist from Louisiana was beaten to death in his cell with a blackjack in Hemphill, TX. These incidents are mostly forgotten by the general public. There were a lot of dirty cops back then in East Texas. Witness the Orange County Sheriff who took a meth lab from the evidence room and put it into production in nearby with Hardin County. With the assistance of two of his deputies. The guy was a former DPS trooper no less. Gays that frequented a nearby rest area on I-10 used to complain he solicited sexual favors from them out there for years. After the meth lab bust, everybody thought, "You don't reckon..." Seems like the new breed cops are more interested now in the SWAT/military routine than in ripping people off.
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seamusTX
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Re: Forgotten history: The Battle of Athens, Tennessee [long

Post by seamusTX »

Lest we forget.

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Re: Forgotten history: The Battle of Athens, Tennessee [long

Post by jimlongley »

Mchine politics and ballot stuffing were not confined to the south by any means, just look at Chicago today, NY with Big Tim Sullivan, and even upstate Albany NY with the Big Dan O'Connell machine, which I became intimately familiar with.

The first time I voted at as a newly married resident of the city of Albany NY, my bride and I walked over to the Ward Leader's business, where the voting machines were set up in the lobby, to do our civic duty.

The Ward Leader, "Uncle Jack" to just about everyone, but moreso to my wife because he really was her ex-husband's uncle, stood on the font steps of the polling place greeting all and sundry, glad handing and "kissing babies" right next to the signs that said no electioneering within 100 feet.

We voted and as we came out, Uncle Jack thanked each of us, by name, for voting, and shook each of our hands. After the handshake, a $5.00 bill had miraculously appeared in each of our hands. I, perhaps naively, assumed that each voter got a fiver, but my wife reeducated me on our walk home.

We got paid because we voted "right" not because we voted. I objected, of course, this was, after all, a secret ballot, with machines and curtains and I hadn't seen any indication that anyone could see past the curtains, and she couldn't explain how they knew how we voted, but she had warned me on the way over that I should vote the way the machine wanted me to, and I had.

Telephone men are almost entirely invisible when on the job, and so it was, a couple of years later when the next election came around, that I happened to be in the right place at the right time and found out how they knew how each voter voted. I had been "promoted" to work in the state capital and its environs, which meant that I had a security clearance from the BCI (the state version of the FBI, just ask them) and I got assigned to put in the phones for the election commission.

The voting machines were provided and maintained by a company that, not obviously, was owned by the machine, and leased to the state. The election commission had the responsibility to test all of the machines prior to the election and certify and seal each one so the the election would be totally fair. Notwithstanding the number of persons on the commission who were members of the machine, the process was tacitly fair, there was no obvious cheating, but I discovered one thing while working in the back room.

The levers on the voting machines made very distinct noises when they were pressed into position, and the technicians maintaining them set them up so that when you pressed the lever for the right candidate, they went "clink" and for the wrong candidate they went "clunk" and thus it was that when you voted, the person standing next to the machine, who threw the lever on the back to ready the machine for the next voter, didn't necessarily know exactly who you voted for, but knew by the clinks and clunks if you had voted correctly, and would give "Uncle Jack" who was standing in sight, a high sign to indicate whether you earned your $5.00 or not.

I never earned another fiver.
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seamusTX
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Re: Forgotten history: The Battle of Athens, Tennessee [long

Post by seamusTX »

In ancient times, there was a practice called voting by division. All the eligible voters could fit in one room, or a stadium in the case of Rome. The people who favored candidate X would go to the left, and the people who favored Y would go to the right. The results of the voting were honest and obvious to everyone, including the winners, who could exact retribution on those who did not vote for them.

Eventually the electorate was too large for such methods, and paper ballots were invented. No one has been confident of the results of an election ever since.

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