The rescheduled September 4, 1949, concert, where Robeson did sing, was also marred by violence despite the presence of a police helicopter overhead and at least one sniper's nest. The concert was located on the grounds of the old Hollow Brook Golf Course in
Cortlandt Manor, near the site of the original concert. 20,000 people showed up. Security was organized by the Communist Party and Communist-dominated
labor unions. The men were directed by the Communist Party and some unions to form a line around the outer edge of the concert area and were sitting with Robeson on the stage. They were there to fight any protestors who objected to Robeson's presence. The singers and musicians performed without incident, but groups of protesters surged into the crowd
Setlist • Sylvia Kahn: "
The Star-Spangled Banner" • Piano performances by
Leonid Hambro and
Ray Lev including works by Chopin and Bach,
Prokofiev • Singing by soprano
Hope Foye •
Pete Seeger: "
T For Texas", "
If I Had a Hammer", •
Paul Robeson: "
Go Down Moses", the English ballad "No John No", and "Farewell, My Son, I'm Dying" (,
Proshchay, moy syn, umirayu...), the final aria from
Boris Godunov and
Negro spirituals ending with "
Ol' Man River"
Aftermath The aftermath of the concert, however, was far from peaceful. After some violence to south-going buses near the intersection of Locust Avenue and Hillside Avenue, concertgoers were diverted to head northward to Oregon Corners and forced to run a gauntlet miles long of veterans and their families, who threw rocks through windshields of the cars and buses. Much of the violence was also caused by anti-Communist members of local
Veterans of Foreign Wars and
American Legion chapters. Standing off the angry mob of rioters chanting "go on back to Russia, you niggers" and "white niggers", some of the concertgoers and
union members, along with writer
Howard Fast and others assembled a non-violent line of resistance, locked arms, and sang the song "We Shall Not Be Moved." Some people were reportedly dragged from their vehicles and beaten. Over 140 people were injured and numerous vehicles were severely damaged as police stood by. One car carried
Woody Guthrie,
Lee Hays,
Pete Seeger, Seeger's wife
Toshi, and his infant children. Guthrie pinned a shirt to the inside of the window to stop it shattering. "Wouldn't you know it, Woody pinned up a red shirt," Hays was to remember. Seeger used some of the thrown rocks to build the chimney of his cabin in the
Town of Fishkill, New York, to stand as a reminder of the incident.
Eugene Bullard, the first black combat pilot and decorated World War I veteran, was knocked to the ground and beaten by the mob, which included white members of state and local law enforcement. The beating was captured on film and can be seen in the 1970s documentary
The Tallest Tree in Our Forest and the
Oscar-winning,
Sidney Poitier-narrated documentary
Paul Robeson: Tribute to an Artist. Despite recorded evidence of the beating, no one was prosecuted for the assault. Graphic photos of Eugene Bullard being beaten by two policemen, a state trooper and concert-goer, were published in
The Whole World in His Hands: A Pictorial Biography of Paul Robeson, by
Susan Robeson.
Protests afterwards Following the riots, more than 300 people went to Albany, New York to express their indignation to Governor
Thomas Dewey, who refused to meet with them, blaming communists for provoking the violence. Still, Dewey called on the Westchester County District Attorney to impanel a Grand Jury investigation into both riots. Twenty-seven plaintiffs filed a civil suit against Westchester County and two veterans' groups. The charges were dismissed three years later.
Reactions in the U.S. House of Representatives in 1938 Following the Peekskill riots, Democratic House Representative
John E. Rankin of Mississippi condemned Robeson on the house floor. When New York Congressman
Jacob Javits, a liberal Republican, spoke to the
United States House of Representatives, deploring the Peekskill riots as a violation of constitutional guarantees of freedom of speech and free assembly, Rankin replied angrily: "It was not surprising to hear the gentlemen from New York defend the Communist enclave." Rankin said that he wanted it known that the American people are not in sympathy "with that
Nigger Communist and that bunch of Reds who went up there." Speaker Rayburn then defended Rankin, ruling that "the gentlemen from Mississippi is not subject to a point of order...referred to the Negro race and they should not be afraid of that designation." Then Democratic Representative
E. Eugene Cox of Georgia denounced Robeson on the House floor as a "Communist agent provocateur."
Aftermath Within a few days, hundreds of editorials and letters appeared in newspapers across the nation and abroad by prominent individuals, organizations, trade unions, churches and others. They condemned the attacks and the failure of Governor Dewey and the State Police to protect the lives and property of citizens as well as called for a full investigation of the violence and prosecution of the perpetrators. Despite condemnation from progressives and civil rights activists, the mainstream press and local officials overwhelmingly blamed Robeson and his fans for "provoking" the violence. Following the Peekskill riots, other cities became fearful of similar incidents, and over 80 scheduled concert dates of Robeson's were canceled. On September 12, 1949, in response to Robeson's controversial status in the press and leftist affiliations, the
National Maritime Union convention considered a motion that Robeson's name be removed from the union's honorary membership list. The motion was withdrawn for lack of support among members. Later that month, the All-China Art and Literature Workers' Association and All-China Association of Musicians of Liberated China protested the Peekskill attack on Robeson. On October 2, 1949, Robeson spoke at a luncheon for the National Labor Conference for Peace held at the Ashland Auditorium in Chicago, referred the riots in his remarks. ==Legacy and reconciliation ceremonies==