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VIGILANCE COMMITTEE , in the See also: United States, a self-constituted judicial See also: body, occasionally organized in the western frontier districts for the See also: protection of See also: life and See also: property
.
The first committee of prominence bearing the name was organized in See also: San Francisco in See also: June 1851, when the crimes of desperadoes who had immigrated to the gold-See also: fields were rapidly increasing in numbers and it was said that there were venal See also: judges, packed juries and false witnesses
.
At first this committee was 'composed of about 200 members; afterwards it was much larger
.
The general committee was governed by an executive committee and the city was policed by sub-committees
.
Within about See also: thirty days four desperadoes were arrested, tried by the executive committee and hanged, and about thirty others were banished
.
Satisfied with the results, ' the committee then quietly adjourned, but it was revived five years later
.
Similar committees were See also: common in other parts of California and in the See also: mining districts of See also: Idaho and See also: Montana
.
That in Montana exterminated in 1863—64 a See also: band of outlaws organized under See also: Henry Plummer, the
See also: sheriff of Montana City; twenty-four of the outlaws were hanged within a few months
.
Committees or See also: societies of somewhat the same nature were formed in the See also: Southern states during the Reconstruction See also: period (1865—72) to protect See also: white families from negroes and "
See also: carpet-baggers," and besides these there were the Ku-Klux-Klan (q.v.) and its branches; the Knights of the White Camelia, the Pale Faces, and the Invisible See also: Empire of the See also: South, the See also: principal See also: object of which was to control the negroes by striking them with terror
.
1 The 35th See also: canon of the council of See also: Elvira (305) forbids —omen to attend them
.
See H
.
H
.
See also: Bancroft, Popular Tribunals (2 vols., San Francisco, 1887) ; and T
.
J
.
Dimsdale, The Vigilantes of Montana (Virginia City, 1866)
.
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