Ossian Sweet (died 1960) was an African American doctor notable for his self-defense of his newly-purcashed home against a white mob attempting to force him out in Detroit in 1925.
Sweet was born in Florida. He earned his undergraduate degree from Wilberforce University and studied medicine at Howard University. He practiced in Detroit, then studied further in Vienna and Paris. He returned to Detroit in 1924 and started to work at Detroit's first black hospital, Dunbar. Having saved enough money, he moved his family in 1925 from the lower east side ghetto to 2905 Garland Road, in an all-white neighborhood at Garland and Charlevoix.
In the following days, Sweet's house was repeatedly surrounded by white mobs, encouraged by the "Waterworks Improvement Association," which gathered outside Sweet's home to force him to move from the neighborhood. At around 10 p.m. on Thursday, September 9 1925, Leon Breiner, one member of the mob of at least 1,000, was shot dead, and another was injured. The shots were fired from within Sweet's house.
All eleven occupants of the house (Sweet, his wife Gladys, two brothers and a number of friends who were helping Sweet to defend his home) were arrested and tried for murder by a jury presided over by young judge Frank Murphy. With assistance from the NAACP, the defense (headed by Clarence Darrow, assisted by Arthur Garfield Hays and Walter M. Nelson) successfully construed the fear that had assailed Sweet and his friends, and also asked whether the jury of 12 whites would be able to give a Negro a fair trial. The first jury was unable to form a verdict after 46 hours of deliberations.
The defense then elected to hold eleven separate trials. Henry Sweet, Ossian's younger brother who had admitted to actually firing the gun, was tried first and defended again by Darrow with Detroit lawyer Thomas Chawke replacing Hays. He was acquitted after a deliberation of less than four hours. The prosecution then dropped the charges against the remaining ten defendants.
Sweet's later life was troubled. His daughter Iva died at the age of 2 in 1926, and his wife died soon after, both from tuberculosis. Breiner's widow sued for $150,000, but the case was dismissed. Sweet ran for office four times, but lost each time. He remarried twice, but both marriages ended in divorce. He committed suicide in 1960.
A Saga of Race, Civil Rights, and Murder in the Jazz Age, by Kevin Boyle, chronicles Sweet's life and trial, and was awarded the 2004 National Book Award for Non-Fiction.
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Ossian Sweet".
Home Page • arts • business • computers • games • health • hospitals • home • kids & teens • news • physicians • recreation• reference • regional • science • shopping • society • sports • world