In response, some 50,000 people, particularly impoverished Irish immigrants, rioted, smashing store windows and attacking people, particularly African Americans, on the street. Telegraph offices and wires were attacked to disrupt communication, indicating organized leadership.
The New York police forces proved unable to quell the riots. It was not until Federal troops were called in to fire upon the rioters that order was restored. The exact death toll is unknown, as a result of conflicting contemporary accounts. The Guinness Book of World Records cites it as the bloodiest riot in history, costing approximately 1,200 lives.
The Draft Riots were fictionally portrayed in the John Jakes novel 'On Secret Service' and the Martin Scorcese film 'Gangs of New York', among other works.