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The Uncommon Case of Daniel Brown

How a White Police Officer Was Convicted of Killing a Black Citizen, Baltimore, 1875

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

An extraordinary look at race and policing in late nineteenth-century Baltimore

In 1875 an Irish-born Baltimore policeman, Patrick McDonald, entered the home of Daniel Brown, an African American laborer, and clubbed and shot Brown, who died within an hour of the attack. In similar cases at the time, authorities routinely exonerated Maryland law enforcement officers who killed African Americans, usually without serious inquiries into the underlying facts. But in this case, Baltimore's white community chose a different path. A coroner's jury declined to attribute the killing to accident or self-defense; the state's attorney indicted McDonald and brought him to trial; and a criminal court jury convicted McDonald of manslaughter.

What makes this work so powerful is that many of the issues that the antipolice brutality movement faces today were the very issues faced by black people in nineteenth-century Baltimore.

Both Brown and McDonald represented factions in conflict during a period of social upheaval, and both men left home to escape dire conditions. Yet trouble followed both to Baltimore. While the conviction of McDonald was unique, it was not a racially enlightened moment in policing. The killing of Brown was viewed not as racial injustice, but police violence spreading to their neighborhood. White elites saw the police as an uncontrolled force threatening their well-being. The clubbing and shooting of an unarmed black man only a block away from the wealthy residences of Park Avenue represented a breakdown in the social order—but Jim Crow in Baltimore was not in danger.

Prior to 1867 a Maryland statute barred African Americans from testifying against whites in proceedings before police magistrates or in any of the state's courts. During the trial of McDonald, the press described the Baltimore police as "blue coated ruffians," and there was a general distrust of the police force by both blacks and whites. Brown's wife, Keziah, gave damning testimony of Officer McDonald's actions. The jury could not agree on verdicts of first- or second-degree murder, and after an attempt to reach a compromise verdict of second-degree murder failed, the majority acquiesced to the manslaughter verdict.

The Uncommon Case of Daniel Brown adds to the historiography of policing and criminal justice by demonstrating the pivotal role of the coroner's inquest in such cases and by illustrating the importance of social ties and political divisions when a community addresses an episode of police violence.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      December 21, 2020
      Shufelt debuts with a close and engrossing look at an obscure 19th-century homicide through a granular and judicious review of archival records. One summer night in 1875, white policeman Patrick McDonald confronted African American Daniel Brown in Brown’s Baltimore home after receiving a noise complaint. The encounter ended with McDonald fatally shooting Brown. Surprisingly, given the city’s endemic racism at the time, an all-white jury convicted McDonald of manslaughter after hearing testimony that Brown had done nothing violent to provoke the shooting. Shufelt puts that outcome in context, which included distrust of the police force following misconduct during elections that year, and the status of the Black witnesses to the killing; their employment as servants in affluent white homes made them viewed as trustworthy, which Shufelt considers “the persistence of some elements of a slavery-era culture.” The verdict was not a breakthrough, however, or evidence that white Baltimoreans “objected to the oppression of African Americans.” Though this study is of limited utility in understanding current police shootings of Black men despite the author’s suggestions to the contrary, Shufelt does a good job illuminating race relations and the criminal justice system in post–Civil War Baltimore.

    • Library Journal

      February 1, 2021

      In his first book, former attorney and judge Shufelt examines an all-too-common crime--a white police officer killing an unarmed Black man--with an unusual aftermath: the murder conviction of the police officer. In the summer of 1875, Patrick McDonald, an Irish immigrant and Baltimore police officer with a long history of violence, responded to a noise complaint at the home of Daniel Brown, a Black laborer; McDonald then fatally shot Brown. In the weeks following, Baltimore's white establishment decided that McDonald should be prosecuted but denied the role race played in the incident--an astounding response given that the department was run by former slaveholders and Confederates and there were firsthand accounts of McDonald's use of racial epithets. Writing with empathy for Brown, Shufelt presents a full picture of the man's life and offers rich context about his deadly encounter with McDonald. The author explains how a seemingly enlightened outcome resulted from Baltimore's race and class structure. White distrust of the police stemmed from the department's disruption of elections, and Brown's murder contributed to the argument for reform, Shufelt explains. VERDICT An accessible account that will make a worthy addition to collections on racial justice and police brutality.--Bart Everts, Rutgers Univ.-Camden Lib., NJ

      Copyright 2021 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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