Two thousand people, mostly black, jammed into the Shiloh Baptist Church
in Birmingham, Alabama, on September 19, 1902, to hear an address by
Booker T. Washington. The brick church was new. A steep flight of
stairs, enclosed in brick, led from the entrance doors to the church
proper. After Washington’s speech, there was an altercation over an
unoccupied seat, and the word ‘fight’ was misunderstood as ‘fire’. The
congregation rose as if on cue and stampeded for the stairs. Those who
reached them first were pushed from behind and fell. Others fell on top
of them until the entrance was completely blocked by a pile of screaming
humanity 10 ft high. Efforts by Washington and the churchmen down in
the front to induce calm were fruitless, and they stood by helplessly
while their brothers and sisters, mostly the latter, were trampled or
suffocated to death. There was neither fire – nor even a real fight –
but 115 people died.
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