About the Author:
Born in Ft. Worth and raised in Aledo, E. R. Bills has a degree in journalism from Texas State University. He lives with his family in north Texas and does freelance historical, editorial and travel writing for publications around his home state. He is also the author of Texas Obscurities: Stories of the Peculiar, Exceptional and Nefarious (History Press, 2013).
Review:
"Bills is a bold writer. . . He does not mince words. He has not only retold the story as a 'massacre,' and not a riot, but he has characterized the killings as 'an act of genocide.' Bills' description is precisely accurate of what happened in Slocum on July 29, 1910. . . Bills has retold a story that should be a "must read" for anyone willing to see the truth about genocide in America.
from a review entitled "The 1910 Slocum Massacre: An Act of Genocide in East Texas" (by L. Cravin) in North Amarillo Now (May 18, 2014).
"Bills' writing style is straightforward and engaging. He's obviously done his homework, and the book includes endnotes and sources. . . It's a good read, an astonishing record of man's inhumanity to man."
from a review entitled "Days of Shame" (by Margaret Allyson) in Fort Worth Weekly C05/28/14)
"As the United States and its people make some effort to come to terms with their racist past, they stand to benefit from those whose diligent research has homed in on incidents of racially motivated violence that have marred the republic's history. In the last two decades alone, professional historians, journalists, and other researchers have published dozens of titles treating lynching and race riots, and there seems to be no sign that the possibilities for investigation have been exhausted.
Freelance journalist E. R. Bills contributes to this literature on racial violence with the study of the 1910 murders of an unknown and unknowable number of African Americans that began near the East Texas town of Slocum in southeastern Anderson County on the evening of July 29 and spilled over into Houston County to the south, where additional black residents (again the number of casualties is uncertain) were shot indiscriminately by white mobs. The author makes excellent use of contemporary local and state newspapers to piece together details of this massacre and to place the events in their appropriate historical context.
Bills follows the lead of a number of students of racial violence who have sought to restore historical memory to communities where incidents of racial violence are seldom spoken about. His evidence leads him to challenge the official body count of seven or eight African American victims and to claim that perhaps hundreds were buried in unmarked mass graves, 'probably establishing the Slocum Massacre as the single, largest pogrom of blacks in modern American history,' exceeding the casualty rate of the more well-known Tulsa, Oklahoma riots of 1921 and the Rosewood, Florida, massacre of 1923. Following a wide-ranging, sometimes speculative analysis of the precipitating events leading up to the massacre, Bills concludes, 'Regardless of the impetus, what followed was an act of genocide that went unprosecuted, unpunished and unresolved and remains so to this day.'
In the final analysis, however, Bills is less concerned with historical memory than he is with historical amnesia. His frustration leaps from the pages of this brief and occasionally repetitive volume as he describes a deceitful official of the Houston County Historical Commission who ignored requests to erect a permanent marker in memory of the incident; indifferent Texas politicians who 'acknowledged' the episode in 2011 with the passage of House Resolution 865 but who, according to the author, should have instead appointed an investigating committee to research the event thoroughly; and the officials of the Museum of East Texas Culture who have provided space for African American exhibits absent any mention of the Slocum Massacre and who appear, according to Bills, much more interested in the 2013 opening of the Confederate Veterans' Memorial Park in downtown Palestine, Texas. For Bills, substantive efforts toward racial reconciliation in post-James Byrd Texas, similar to the proactive steps taken in the past decade in Rosewood and Tulsa, mark the only hope for Texans, southerners and all Americans to remedy the ongoing racial tensions that confront the United States. This volume, accessible to both scholarly and general audiences interested in the history of racial violence, African American history, and Texas history, seeks to assist in that ambitions goal."
James M. SoRelle, Baylor University
JOURNAL OF SOUTHERN HISTORY, August 2015, Vol. LXXXI, No. 3, p. 756-757.
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.