
New Orleans remembers mass lynching of Italians 134 years later
On March 14, 1891, 11 Italian-American immigrants were killed in New Orleans. It remains one of the country's largest single lynchings.
Some of the victims were acquitted the day before in the murder of the city's police chief.
Zoom out: Italy cut off diplomatic relations with the U.S in the aftermath and there was talk of war, according to the Washington Post.
Read the Italian consul's statement at the time.
The next year, President Benjamin Harrison, hoping to repair things, created Columbus Day to honor the Italian-born explorer.
The U.S. also paid Italy about $760,000 in today's currency to make amends, the paper wrote.
The bottom line: New Orleans officials formally apologized in 2019 for the lynchings.
No one was charged in the deaths. No one was convicted in the police chief's death either.
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