The Great Riots of New York, 1712 to 1873

audiobook

The Great Riots of New York, 1712 to 1873

by Joel Tyler Headley

EN·~8 hours·26 chapters

Chapters

26 total
1

THE GREAT RIOTS OF NEW YORK 1712 to 1873 - INCLUDING A FULL AND COMPLETE ACCOUNT OF THE FOUR DAYS' DRAFT RIOT OF 1863

0:07
2

By Hon. J.T. Headley

0:01
3

TO - THE METROPOLITAN POLICE, - WHOSE - UNWAVERING FIDELITY AND COURAGE IN THE PAST, - ARE A SURE GUARANTEE OF WHAT THEY WILL DO - FOR - NEW YORK CITY IN THE FUTURE, - THIS WORK - IS RESPECTFULLY INSCRIBED - BY - THE AUTHOR.

0:14
4

PREFACE.

1:24
5

THE GREAT RIOTS OF NEW YORK CITY.

0:02
6

CHAPTER I.

10:18
7

CHAPTER II. — THE NEGRO RIOTS OF 1712-1741.

38:53
8

CHAPTER III. — THE STAMP-ACT RIOT OF 1765.

16:49
9

CHAPTER IV. — DOCTORS' RIOT, 1788.

16:38
10

CHAPTER V. — SPRING ELECTION RIOTS OF 1834.

21:09

Description

From the town’s earliest days to the post‑war era, the city’s streets have repeatedly turned into stages for restless crowds, each upheaval a mirror of shifting economic, ethnic, and political currents. By drawing on archives, contemporary newspapers, and first‑hand testimonies, the narrative weaves together the Negro Riot, the Doctors’ Riot, the Astor‑Place opera clash and other flashpoints, revealing how ordinary citizens could surge into violent protest when the pressures of poverty, prejudice, or fear become unbearable. The author treats each disturbance as both a symptom and a catalyst, showing how the city’s growth was accompanied by a volatile undercurrent that shaped its identity.

The centerpiece is the four‑day Draft Riots of 1863, portrayed through the eyes of police commissioners, military leaders and everyday witnesses who faced a sudden, city‑wide rebellion. Their desperate struggle to protect banks, homes and supply lines underscores how a single urban upheaval threatened the nation’s war effort and financial stability. The account balances vivid scene‑setting with careful analysis, offering listeners a compelling glimpse into a pivotal moment when the fate of a city—and perhaps a nation—hung in the balance.

Details

Language

en

Duration

~8 hours (461K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Text file produced by Richard Prairie, David Moynihan, Charles Franks and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team HTML file produced by David Widger

Release date

2004-11-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Joel Tyler Headley

Joel Tyler Headley

1813–1897

A 19th-century American writer who turned history, travel, and the outdoors into lively popular reading. Best known for works on Revolutionary heroes, Napoleon, and the Adirondacks, he also moved through public life as a minister, editor, and New York politician.

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