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A
MICROCOSM OF AMERICA'S FUTURE?
The
Battle of Athens, Tennessee
As
Recently As 1946, American Citizens Were Forced To Take Up Arms As A
Last Resort Against Corrupt Government Officials.
Jews For The Preservation of
Firearms Ownership
On
August 1-2, 1946, some Americans, brutalized by their county
government, used armed force as a last resort to overturn it. These
Americans wanted honest open elections. For years they had asked for
state or federal election monitors to prevent vote fraud (forged
ballots, secret ballot counts and intimidation by armed sheriff's
deputies) by the local political boss. They got no help.
These
Americans' absolute refusal to knuckle under had been hardened by
service in World War II. Having fought to free other countries from
murderous regimes, they rejected vicious abuse by their county
government.
These
Americans had a choice. Their state's Constitution -- Article 1,
Section 26 – recorded their right to keep and bear arms for the
common defense. Few "gun control" laws had been enacted.
These
Americans were residents of McMinn County, which is located between
Chattanooga and Knoxville in Eastern Tennessee. The two main towns
were Athens and Etowah. McMinn County residents had long been
independent political thinkers. For a long time they also had:
accepted bribe-taking by politicians and/or the sheriff to overlook
illicit whiskey-making and ; financed the sheriff's department from
fines-usually for speeding or public drunkenness which promoted
false arrests; and put up with voting fraud by both Democrats and
Republicans.
The
wealthy Cantrell family, of Etowah, backed Franklin Delano Roosevelt
in the 1932 election, hoping New Deal programs would revive the
local economy and help Democrats to replace Republicans in the
county government. So it proved.
Paul
Cantrell was elected sheriff in the 1936,1938 and 1940 elections,
but by slim margins. The sheriff was the key county official.
Cantrell was elected to the state senate in 1942 and 1944; his chief
deputy, Pat Mansfield, was elected sheriff. In 1946 Paul Cantrell
again sought the sheriff's office.
At
the end of 1945, some 3,000 battle-hardened veterans returned to
McMinn County; the GIs held Cantrell politically responsible for
Mansfield's doings. Early in 1946, some newly returned ex-GIs
decided to challenge Cantrell politically by offering an all-ex-GI,
non-partisan ticket. They promised a fraud-free election, stating in
ads and speeches that there would be an honest ballot count and
reform of county government.
At
a rally, a GI speaker said, "The principles that we fought for
in this past war do not exist in McMinn County. We fought for
democracy because we believe in democracy but not the form we live
under in this county" (Daily Post-Athenian, 17 June 1946, p.1
). At the end of July 1946, 159 McMinn County GIs petitioned the FBI
to send election monitors. There was no response. The Department of
Justice had not responded to McMinn County residents' complaints of
election fraud in 1940, 1942 and 1944.
FROM
BALLOTS TO BULLETS
The
primary election was held on August 1. To intimidate voters,
Mansfield brought in some 200 armed "deputies." GI
poll-watchers were beaten almost at once. At about 3 p.m., Tom
Gillespie, an African-American voter was told by a sheriff's deputy
that he could not vote. Despite being beaten, Gillespie persisted.
The enraged deputy shot him. The gunshot drew a crowd. Rumors spread
that Gillespie had been shot in the back; he later recovered (C.
Stephen Byrum, The Battle of Athens, Paidia Productions,
Chattanooga,
TN, 1987; pp. 155-57).
Other
deputies detained ex-GI poll-watchers in a polling place, as that
made the ballot counting
"Public"
A crowd gathered. Sheriff Mansfield told his deputies to disperse
the crowd. When the two ex-GIs smashed a big window and escaped, the
crowd surge forward. The deputies, with guns drawn, formed a tight
half-circle around the front of the polling place. One deputy,
"his gun raised high...shouted: 'If you sons of bitches cross
this street I'll kill you!'" (Byrum, p.165).
Mansfield
took the ballot boxes to the jail for counting. The deputies seemed
to fear immediate attack by the "people who had just liberated
Europe and the South Pacific from two of the most powerful war
machines in human history" (Byrum, pp. 168-69).
Short
of firearms and ammunition, the GIs scoured the county to find them.
By borrowing keys to the National Guard and State Guard armories,
they got three M-1 rifles, five .45 semi-automatic pistols and 24
British Enfield rifles. The armories were nearly empty after the
war's end. By 8 p.m. a group of GIs and "local boys"
headed for the jail but left the back doorunguarded to give the
jail's defenders an easy way out.
Three
GIs alerting passersby to danger were fired on from the jail. Two
GIs were wounded. Other GIs returned fire.
Firing
subsided after 30 minutes; ammunition ran low and night had fallen.
Thick brick walls shielded those inside the jail. Absent radios, the
GIs' rifle fire was uncoordinated. "From the hillside fire rose
and fell in disorganized cascades. More than anything else, people
were simply shooting at the jail" (Byrum, p.189).
Several
who ventured into the street in front of the jail were wounded. One
man inside the jail was badly hurt; he recovered. Most sheriff's
deputies wanted to hunker down and await rescue. Governor McCord
mobilized the State Guard, perhaps to scare the GIs into
withdrawing. The State Guard never went to Athens. McCord may have
feared that Guard units filled with ex-GIs might not fire on other
ex-GIs.
At
about 2 a.m. on August 2, the GIs forced the issue. Men from Meigs
County threw dynamite sticks and damaged the jail's porch. The
panicked deputies surrendered. GIs quickly secured the building.
Paul Cantrell faded into the night, having almost been shot by a GI
who knew him, but whose .45 pistol had jammed. Mansfield's deputies
were kept overnight in jail for their own safety. Calm soon
returned. The GIs posted guards. The rifles borrowed from the armory
were cleaned and returned before sunup.
THE
AFTERMATH: RESTORING DEMOCRACY
In
five precincts free of vote fraud, the GI candidate for sheriff,
Knox Henry, won 1,168 votes to Cantrell's 789. Other GI candidates
won by similar margins.
The
GI's did not hate Cantrell. They only wanted honest government. On
August 2, a town meeting set up a three-man governing committee. The
regular police having fled, six men were chosen to police Etowah. In
addition, "Individual citizens were called upon to form patrols
or guard groups, often led by a GI... To their credit, however,
there is not a single mention of an abuse of power on their
behalf" (Byrum, p. 220).
Once
the GI candidates' victory had been certified, they cleaned up
county government, the jail was fixed, newly elected officials
accepted a $5,000 pay limit and Mansfield supporters who resigned
were replaced.
The
general election on November 5 passed quietly. McMinn County
residents, having restored the rule of law, returned to their daily
lives. Pat Mansfield moved back to Georgia. Paul Cantrell set up an
auto dealership in Etowah. "Almost everyone who knew Cantrell
in the years after the Battle' agree that he was not bitter about
what had happened" (Byrum pp. 232-33; see also New York Times,
9 August 1946, p. 8).
The
79th Congress adjourned on August 2, 1946, when the Battle of Athens
ended. However, Representative John Jennings Jr. from Tennessee
decried McMinn County's sorry situation under Cantrell and Mansfield
and the Justice Department's repeated failures to help the McMinn
County residents. Jennings was delighted that "...at long last,
decency and honesty, liberty and law have returned to the fine
county of McMinn.. " (Congressional Record, House; U.S.
Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C., 1946; Appendix, Volume
92, Part
13, p. A4870).
THE LESSONS OF ATHENS
Those
who took up arms in Athens, Tennessee, wanted honest elections, a
cornerstone of our constitutional order. They had repeatedly tried
to get federal or state election monitors and had used armed force
so as to minimize harm to the law-breakers, showing little malice to
the defeated law-breakers. They restored lawful government.
The
Battle of Athens clearly shows how Americans can and should lawfully
use armed force and also shows why the rule of law requires
unrestricted access to firearms and how civilians with military-type
firearms can beat the forces of government gone bad.
Dictators
believe that public order is more important than the rule of law.
However, Americans reject this idea. Brutal political repression is
lethal to many. An individual criminal can harm a handful of people.
Governments alone can brutalize thousands, or millions.
Law-abiding
McMinn County residents won the Battle of Athens because they were
not hamstrung by "gun control " They showed us when
citizens can and should use armed force to support the rule of law.
Jews
For The Preservation of Firearms Ownership, Inc.
P.O. Box 270143
Hartford, WI 53027
Phone (262) 673-9745
Fax (262) 673-9746
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