Sacramento and Front Streets
Financial District
The San Francisco Committee of Vigilance was a popular ad hoc organization formed in 1851 and revived in 1856 in response to rampant crime and corruption in the municipal government of San Francisco. It was one of the most successful organizations in the vigilante tradition of the American Old West.
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May 14, 1856: The nation was gearing up for the Civil War, and San Francisco was divided between the secessionist and unionist factions. James King of William, editor of the Daily Evening Bulletin and a Union loyalist, wrote an editorial condemning James Casey, rival editor of the Weekly Sunday Times, a pro-South stalwart. King of William made a point of saying unflattering things about Casey–not a terribly difficult task, as Casey was a notorious hothead who had served eighteen months in Sing Sing. The same day the editorial was published, Casey approached King of William at the corner of Montgomery and Commercial Streets, whipped a concealed pistol from beneath his cloak, pressed it against his rival’s chest, and squeezed the trigger.
The city fell into a frenzy. Tens of thousands of hard-drinking San Franciscans poured into the streets, frothing at the mouth and howling for lynch law. The cavalry charged through the streets, but was unable to scatter the swelling mob. Mayor Van Ness stood in front of the jail and spoke in favor of the rule of law, but was met by a torrent of verbal abuse and rotten vegetables. The mob threw its weight behind the Vigilance Committee, an extralegal paramilitary force that had been dispensing vigilante justice since 1851. In the next two days, 2,600 men joined the Vigilantes and were quickly organized into companies of 100 and armed with knives, pistols, shotguns, and cannons. On Sunday the 18th, as King of William lay dying, the Vigilante mob surrounded the jail and pointed a cannon at its door. Sheriff David Scannell and his outgunned deputies quickly handed over Casey. James King of William died on Tuesday. On Thursday, May 22, just as tolling bells signaled that funeral services for King of William had ended, the Vigilance Committee hanged James Casey at their homemade “Fort Gunnybags”.
Historical note: Despite the two Vigilance Committees’ fearsome reputation, they only hanged eight men during their five years of existence. When the Vigilance Committee arrested a man, they would put on what now appears to have been a reasonably fair trial before meting out punishment. (Some of their detainees were acquitted or released for lack of evidence.)
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Fort Gunnybags was the sandbagged warehouse converted in 1856 to the use of the San Francisco Vigilantes as its armory and drill hall, “Fort Vigilance” also served as the group’s headquarters. The site of the pseudo fort in San Francisco is on Sacramento Street, bounded by Front, Davis and California Streets.
Photo courtesy of the San Francisco Public Library
Photo courtesy of ExecutedToday.com
What a fascinating story — I’d like to know how a mob of hard drinking guys could be organized into companies and dispense vigilante justice.
What a story!
I HAVE A BRASS BELT BUCKLE FROM 1856 CAN U TELL ME WHAT ITS VALUE WOULD BE TODAY
I have the carved wooden mold that was used to create the Fort Gunnybags plaque. It’s a beautiful piece. Looking for serious collectors of SF history