When New Orleans Police Chief David Hennessy was gunned down in 1890, the city demanded justice. What followed exposed deep prejudice against Italian immigrants and ended in a tragedy that still haunts the Crescent City more than a century later. In this episode of Southern Mysteries,, discover how fear, rumor, and mob power turned suspicion into one of the darkest chapters in Southern history.
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Episode Sources
- New Orleans Public Library – Records of the Board of Police Commissioners, 1890–1891 (detailing Hennessy’s murder, police leadership changes, and subsequent arrests).
- Library of Congress – Historic photographs of New Orleans docks and immigrant labor, 1891.
- Smithsonian Magazine – “New Orleans Apologizes for 1891 Lynching of Italian Americans” (April 2019).
- History.com – “The Grisly Story of America’s Largest Lynching” (2019).
- American Italian Cultural Center, New Orleans – Archival material on Italian immigration and the 2019 mayoral apology.
- New Orleans Times-Democrat, October 1890–March 1891 coverage (contemporary reporting on Hennessy’s murder, the trial, and the mob attack).
- United States Department of State – Papers Relating to the Foreign Relations of the United States, 1891 (diplomatic correspondence with Italy following the lynchings).
- Reimagining Migration – “The Lynching of Italian Immigrants” (educational resource on anti-immigrant violence).
- Order Sons & Daughters of Italy in America (OSDIA) – The 1891 New Orleans Project (materials on commemoration and memorial efforts).
- John V. Baiamonte Jr. – “The Mafia and the 1891 New Orleans Lynching: The Question of Criminal Conspiracy” (Louisiana History: The Journal of the Louisiana Historical Association, Vol. 21, No. 3, 1980).
- Italian Sons and Daughters of America – “Our Darkest Hour: Anarchy, a Lynch Mob and 11 Souls Lost.”
- All That’s Interesting – “The Tragic Story of the 1891 New Orleans’ Lynchings of Italians.”
Episode Music
Out of the Mines, courtesy of Ross Gentry, Asheville, North Carolina.
