The Other Lynching in Duluth |
Skrivet av Chris Julin | ||||
2006-04-15 10:49 | ||||
The other
lynching in Duluth
By Chris Julin, Minnesota Public Radio June 2001
THIS WEEK, PEOPLE IN DULUTH ARE HONORING THREE BLACK MEN
lynched by a huge mob in 1920. The story is getting a lot of
attention after decades of silence. But Duluth is still quiet about its other
lynching. Two years earlier, at the tail end of World War I, a small mob tarred
and feathered a Finnish working man in Duluth, and hanged him from a tree. To
this day, few people in Duluth know the story. In September 1918, the end
of World War I was only two months away, but fighting was still fierce in
Europe. The Duluth News Tribune and the Duluth Herald were filled with
dispatches from the front lines, and full-page ads for war bonds, and long lists
of servicemen who'd been killed. The papers were also full of tough talk about
"slackers," a term for men who refused to join the military. Toward the
end of September, the tough talk turned to action. A headline in the Duluth
Herald read, "Knights Of Liberty Tar And Feather Slacker." The story told of a
Finnish immigrant, Olli Kinkkonen, who'd been dragged from a Duluth boarding
house the night before, and not seen again. A phone call, and a letter delivered
to the paper, took credit for the abduction in the name of a group calling
itself the "Knights of Liberty." The letter said Kinkkonen had been tarred and
feathered to serve as a warning to all slackers. Kinkkonen never showed up again
at his boarding house, and his body was discovered almost two weeks later,
dangling from a tree just outside of town, near Lester Park - covered with tar
and feathers. Duluth authorities declared the death a suicide. They said
Kinkkonen was humiliated by the tarring, and hanged himself. Donald Wirtanen
disagrees. "He was lynched," says Wirtanen, a retired businessman from Duluth,
and the former honorary Finnish consul here. Wirtanen grew up in a small
Iron Range town called Markham, and moved to Duluth as a young man. He says most
Finnish people in northern Minnesota in 1918 believed Olli Kinkkonen was
murdered. Wirtanen was only five years old at the time, but he remembers his
parents talking about it.
"Here was a Finnish man who was tarred and
feathered. That was terrible news for a five-year-old," recalls Wirtanen. "And
then of course, there was much more said about this in 1920 because of the
lynching of the three young black men here." Historian Joel Sipress from
the University of Wisconsin-Superior says it was a violent time. "If you were
the right kind of person, who killed the right kind of person, you could get
away with murder," says Sipress. Newspapers of the era tell of many
attacks on union leaders and immigrants. But old-timers in Duluth's Finnish
community say Olli Kinkkonen didn't belong to any labor organizations or
anti-war groups. They say he was a quiet working man - a logger and a dock
worker - who didn't want to fight in the war, and decided to go back to Finland.
They think his attackers believed he was someone else - a more vocal and radical
Finn. But it's possible the people who tarred and feathered Olli
Kinkkonen didn't care whether he was a leader. Historian Joel Sipress says
anti-Finnish sentiment was powerful in this region in 1918. "He was a
Finn," Sipress says of Kinkkonen, "and he clearly was an anti-war Finn. In
northeast Minnesota, to be an anti-war Finn at that time was to be perceived as
a subversive. Finnish workers were among the most active in the radical labor
organizing of those days, and the union efforts on the Iron Range. Mr. Kinkkonen
probably received this less for what he did, than what he symbolized in the eyes
of so-called patriotic Americans." No one faced charges for Olli Kinkkonen's abduction and death. Kinkkonen was buried in an unmarked
grave in a poor people's section of Park Hill Cemetery, just a few rows away
from the graves of the three victims of the 1920 Duluth lynching. The Tyomies
Society, a Finnish cultural group, placed a marker on Kinkkonen's grave in 1993.
It reads, "Olli Kinkkonen, 1881 to 1918, Victim of Warmongers."
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Senast uppdaterad 2006-04-15 10:53 |