Online Encyclopedia

VIGILANCE COMMITTEE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V28, Page 60 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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VIGILANCE

COMMITTEE  , in the
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United States, a self-constituted judicial
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body, occasionally organized in the western frontier districts for the
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protection of
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life and
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property . The first committee of prominence bearing the name was organized in
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San Francisco in
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June 1851, when the crimes of desperadoes who had immigrated to the gold-fields were rapidly increasing in numbers and it was said that there were venal 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
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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
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common in other parts of California and in the
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mining districts of
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Idaho and
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Montana . That in Montana exterminated in 1863—64 a
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band of outlaws organized under Henry Plummer, the
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sheriff of Montana City; twenty-four of the outlaws were hanged within a few months . Committees or societies of somewhat the same nature were formed in the
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Southern states during the Reconstruction period (1865—72) to protect white families from negroes and "
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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
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Empire of the South, the
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principal
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object of which was to control the negroes by striking them with terror . 1 The 35th
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canon of the council of Elvira (305) forbids —omen to attend them . See H . H .

Bancroft, Popular Tribunals (2 vols., San Francisco, 1887) ; and T . J . Dimsdale, The Vigilantes of Montana (Virginia City, 1866) .

End of Article: VIGILANCE COMMITTEE
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VIGILANTIUS (fl. c. 400)

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