This Week in Texas Methodist History August 6
Houston Trinity Sponsors
City Wide Revival Two Weeks Before Camp Logan
Riots
August , 1917
As Houston prepares to mark the centennial of
the worst racial violence in its history, we should remember that only two
weeks prior to the Camp Logan Riots, Houston Trinity MEC sponsored a city wide
revival in which both races participated.
The story of the Camp Logan Riots is
well known. Soon after US entry into World War I the War Department
authorized two new facilities in Harris
County, Ellington Field and Camp Logan. The Camp Logan
site is now occupied by Memorial Park.
The 24th US Infantry was ordered
to Houston to
guard the construction site. The guards
were an all African American unit. Tensions between these soldiers from the
North and the Jim Crow restrictions in place in Houston eventually boiled over into a riot in
which almost 20 people were killed.
Eventually 19 mutineers were hanged and 41 were given life sentences.
Only two weeks earlier, an event of
racial amity in Houston occurred. Trinity MEC
sponsored a city wide revival in Emancipation
Park. The evangelist, Rev. Chinn preached at day
break, 11:00, 3:00, and again at 8:00
to audiences estimated as reaching 4000 on Sunday night and 2000 on week
nights. In accordance with the Jim Crow
laws then in place, white attendees were accommodated with a separate seating
section. As was typical of the era,
each night of the revival had a different theme. On night was tuberculosis night with the
collection being devoted to the tuberculosis sanitarium. Another was Galveston night. Another night was devoted to raising money to
build a home for delinquent Negro children.
One night only men came, and another only women. Still another day was “Old Folks Day.”
Rev. John E. Green (see post for July
16) preached another night. Perhaps
Chinn’s most noted sermon was “Why Should the Devil Rule Houston?” That sermon concentrated on the evils of
dancing and card playing. On Friday,
August 10, the revival moved indoors to the City Auditorium so that more
attendees could hear the sermon for which had made Chinn nationally known, “After the Ball is Over” from Matthew 24:7(For
nation shall rise against nation, and kingdom against kingdom: and there shall
be famines, and pestilences, and earthquakes, in divers places.) The sermon title was taken from a popular
1891 song. The service held in the City Auditorium was
specifically advertised in white newspapers and promised, in addition to the
sermon, a motion picture and a chorus of “jubilee and plantation” songs.
The pastor at Trinity at the time was Rev. J. O. Williams. He, and the other organizers, knew of the
all black 24 Infantry and extended a special invitation to them and asked their
officers for leave so they could attend.
Only two weeks after these bi-racial
revival services came the worst racial incident in Houston’s history.
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home