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Northern Draft Riots During the Civil War
“Don’t Unchain the Tiger,” an 1863 broadside from a German-language newspaper after the riots, urging readers not to resort to violence.

“Don’t Unchain the Tiger,” an 1863 broadside from a German-language newspaper after the riots, urging readers not to resort to violence.

Translation:

When the traitors of South Carolina met in convention in Charleston and passed their ordinance to abolish the American Union, and to crush out the democratic principles of free government in America, and when they afterwards fired upon Fort Sumter, and I knew that secession meant a terrible war, I said to myself and to them— Don't unchain the Tiger!

But they did it— and for two years we have seen and suffered the con- sequences, written in tears, and blood, and ruin, in our once happy land ; and now, when the rebellion is being nearly crushed, and Jeff. Davis is finding his plans defeated, and Southern traitors in the loyal States are trying to help him by making civil war at home, I say to myself— Don’t unchain the Tiger!

When I hear Working-Men talk about resisting the law, burning houses, killing public officers, and bursting the doors wide open for every kind of crime and disorder, it seems to me they do not think of all the cost and of all the horrors, or of widows and orphans, and their scalding tears, and I say to them, " Brothers ! in the name of God— Don't unchain the Tiger!"

When I see well-dressed demagogues filling the ears of the people with lies, just as the traitors of the South have done, only to get the Working- Men aroused to deeds of crime and violence, while they themselves take good care to keep out of the way, I wish I had the voice of a thunderer, that I might say to them—Don’t unchain the Tiger!

Working-Men ! When any man asks you to break the law, and tries to etir up your passions, while he skulks out of sight, you may set him down as your worst enemy. Spurn him as you would a viper. The patriotic Working-Men of the North cannot afford to spend time in killing each other. Be wise, and above all things,

DON'T UNCHAIN THE TIGER!

A Democratic Workingman.

New York, July 24, 1863.

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Citation Information
“Entfesselt den Tiger nicht!,” Digital Public Library of America, https://dp.la/item/2f154e227771fdcdff3a72d59fa02a5b.
Note: These citations are programmatically generated and may be incomplete.
Courtesy of University of South Carolina, South Caroliniana Library via South Carolina Digital Library.

Tips for Students

For this source, consider:

  • the author's point of view
  • the author's purpose
  • historical context
  • audience

Item 8 of 12 in the Primary Source Set Northern Draft Riots During the Civil War

Previous ItemNext Item
An illustration of the riot on Lexington Avenue in New York.
An illustration of the riot on Second Avenue in New York.
An illustration of the rioters attacking the New York Tribune building.
An illustration of the burning of the Colored Orphan Asylum, which housed 233 children.
An 1863 illustration of a conflict between the rioters and the military.
An 1887 illustration, “Battle of the Barricades.”
An 1887 illustration, “The Mob’s Destructive Work,” with brief text describing damages to some buildings.
“Don’t Unchain the Tiger,” an 1863 broadside from a German-language newspaper after the riots, urging readers not to resort to violence.
An 1863 letter from William Lloyd Garrison worrying that New York riots would prompt similar responses in the "volcanic" North.
An excerpt from The Volcano Under the City (1886), an account of the draft riot of 1863.
An excerpt from “Report of the Committee of Merchants for the Relief of Colored People, Suffering from the Late Riots in the City of New York,” 1863.
An excerpt from The Battle of New York; A Story for all Young People.

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