Lest We Forget Who They Are…

HOW MANY PEOPLE WERE LYNCHED

From 1882 to 1968, 4,743 lynch­ings occurred in the U.S., accord­ing to records main­tained by NAACP. Other accounts, includ­ing the Equal Justice Initiative’s exten­sive report on lynch­ing, count slight­ly dif­fer­ent num­bers, but it’s impos­si­ble to know for cer­tain how many lynch­ings occurred because there was no for­mal track­ing. Many his­to­ri­ans believe the true num­ber is underreported.

The high­est num­ber of lynch­ings dur­ing that time peri­od occurred in Mississippi, with 581 record­ed. Georgia was sec­ond with 531, and Texas was third with 493. Lynchings did not occur in every state. There are no record­ed lynch­ings in Arizona, Idaho, Maine, Nevada, South Dakota, Vermont, and Wisconsin.

Black peo­ple were the pri­ma­ry vic­tims of lynch­ing: 3,446, or about 72 per­cent of the peo­ple lynched, were Black. But they weren’t the only vic­tims of lynch­ing. Some white peo­ple were lynched for help­ing Black peo­ple or for being anti-lynch­ing. Immigrants from Mexico, China, Australia, and oth­er coun­tries were also lynched.

ALLEGATIONS BEHIND LYNCHINGS

White mobs often used dubi­ous crim­i­nal accu­sa­tions to jus­ti­fy lynch­ings. A com­mon claim used to lynch Black men was per­ceived sex­u­al trans­gres­sions against white women. Charges of rape were rou­tine­ly fab­ri­cat­ed. These alle­ga­tions were used to enforce seg­re­ga­tion and advance stereo­types of Black men as vio­lent, hyper­sex­u­al aggressors.

Hundreds of Black peo­ple were lynched based on accu­sa­tions of oth­er crimes, includ­ing mur­der, arson, rob­bery, and vagrancy.

Many vic­tims of lynch­ings were mur­dered with­out being accused of any crime. They were killed for vio­lat­ing social cus­toms or racial expec­ta­tions, such as speak­ing to white peo­ple with less respect than what white peo­ple believed they were owed.

HOW NAACP FOUGHT LYNCHING

As Black Americans fled the South to escape the ter­ror of lynch­ings, a his­toric event known as the Great Migration, peo­ple began to oppose lynch­ings in a num­ber of ways. They con­duct­ed grass­roots activism, such as boy­cotting white busi­ness­es. Anti-lynch­ing cru­saders like Ida B. Wells com­posed news­pa­per columns to crit­i­cize the atroc­i­ties of lynching.

And sev­er­al impor­tant civ­il rights orga­ni­za­tions — includ­ing NAACP — emerged dur­ing this time to com­bat racial violence. 

NAACP led a coura­geous bat­tle against lynch­ing. In the July 1916 issue of The Crisis, edi­tor W.E.B. Du Bois pub­lished a pho­to essay called “The Waco Horror” that fea­tured bru­tal images of the lynch­ing of Jesse Washington.

Washington was a 17-year-old Black teen lynched in Waco, Texas, by a white mob that accused him of killing Lucy Fryer, a white woman. Du Bois was able to turn post­cards of Washington’s mur­der against their cre­ators to ener­gize the anti-lynch­ing move­ment. The Crisis’s cir­cu­la­tion grew by 50,000 over the next two years, and we raised $20,000 toward an anti-lynch­ing cam­paign.In 1919, NAACP pub­lished Thirty Years of Lynching in the United States, 1889 – 1919, to pro­mote aware­ness of the scope of lynch­ing. The data in this study offer the grue­some facts by num­ber, year, state, col­or, sex, and alleged offense. 

Among the cam­paign’s oth­er efforts, from 1920 to 1938, we flew a flag from our nation­al head­quar­ters in New York that bore the words “A man was lynched yes­ter­day.” The cam­paign turned the tide of pub­lic opin­ion and even per­suad­ed some south­ern news­pa­pers to oppose lynch­ing because it was dam­ag­ing the South’s eco­nom­ic prospects.NAACP Office Harlem

We also fought hard for anti-lynch­ing leg­is­la­tion. In 1918, Congressman Leonidas Dyer of Missouri first intro­duced his Anti-Lynching Bill — known as the Dyer Bill — into Congress. NAACP sup­port­ed pas­sage of the bill from 1919 onward, though it was defeat­ed by a Senate fil­i­buster. NAACP con­tin­ued to push for fed­er­al anti-lynch­ing leg­is­la­tion into the 1930s.

National lynch­ing rates declined in the 1930s, a trend that NAACP Executive Secretary Walter White attrib­uted to anti-lynch­ing activism, shifts in pub­lic opin­ion, and the Great Migration. The first full year with­out a record­ed lynch­ing occurred in 1952.

THE LYNCHING OF EMMET TILL

The tide may have turned against lynch­ing, but white suprema­cy and vio­lence con­tin­ued to ter­ror­ize Black com­mu­ni­ties. In 1955, 14-year-old Emmett Till was bru­tal­ly mur­dered for alleged­ly flirt­ing with a white woman. Till’s mur­der and sub­se­quent injus­tice deeply affect­ed the Black com­mu­ni­ty and gal­va­nized a young gen­er­a­tion of Black peo­ple to join the Civil Rights Movement.

NAACP declared Till’s mur­der a lynch­ing. Southeast Regional Director Ruby Hurley, Mississippi Field Secretary Medgar Evers, and Amzie Moore, pres­i­dent of the Bolivar County branch in Mississippi, ini­ti­at­ed the homi­cide inves­ti­ga­tion and secured wit­ness­es. An all-white jury acquit­ted the two men accused, who lat­er bragged about their crimes in a mag­a­zine article.

Mamie Elizabeth Till-Mobley, Emmet Till’s moth­er, decid­ed to hold an open-cas­ket funer­al to put her son’s bru­tal­ized body on dis­play for the world to see. Jet Magazine pub­lished pho­tos of his body in the cas­ket, along with the head­line “Negro Boy Was Killed for ‘Wolf Whistle,’ ” caus­ing nation­al out­rage among Black and white Americans alike, help­ing to cat­alyze the Civil Rights Movement.

MODERN-DAY LYNCHINGS
Emmett Till

You might think of lynch­ings as a dis­grace­ful and bar­bar­ic prac­tice from the past, but they con­tin­ue to this day. In 1998, James Byrd was chained to a car by three white suprema­cists and dragged to his death in the streets of Jasper, Texas. In 2020, Ahmaud Arbery was fatal­ly shot while jog­ging near Brunswick, Georgia. The three white men charged with killing Arbery claimed he was tres­pass­ing.The video­taped death of George Floyd was a mod­ern-day lynch­ing. Floyd was killed in broad day­light by police offi­cer Derek Chauvin, who held Floyd down with a knee on his neck for more than nine minutes.

Lynchings like these should not be part of American soci­ety today just as they should not have been 100 years ago. NAACP will con­tin­ue to fight back against white suprema­cy and vio­lence, and demand that peo­ple respon­si­ble, includ­ing law enforce­ment offi­cers, be held accountable.

President Johnson

What we wit­nessed with George Floyd was that same pub­lic spec­ta­cle: some­one in broad day­light with onlook­ers around, being killed at the hands of a law enforce­ment offi­cer who has just com­plete dis­re­gard for human life and felt he was above the law. - Derrick Johnson, NAACP President and CEO.

WALTER WHITE, INVESTIGATOR

In 1918, Walter White, NAACP Assistant Secretary, ini­tial­ly joined NAACP as an inves­ti­ga­tor. His fair skin and straight hair made him effec­tive in con­duct­ing inves­ti­ga­tions of lynch­ings and race riots in the South. He could “pass” and talk to whites but iden­ti­fied as Black. Through 1927, White would inves­ti­gate 41 lynchings.

WALTER WHITE LYNCHING INVESTIGATIONS FEATURED IN THE CRISIS:

The Lynching of Mary Turner, May 19, 1918 – Georgia

The lynch­ing of Mary Turner in Brooks-Lowndes County, Georgia, was one of the lynch­ing inves­ti­ga­tions by Walter White on behalf of NAACP. Abusive plan­ta­tion own­er, Hampton Smith, was shot and killed. A week-long man­hunt result­ed in the killing of Mary Turner’s hus­band, Hayes Turner. Mary denied that her hus­band had been involved in Smith’s killing, pub­licly opposed her hus­band’s mur­der, and threat­ened to have mem­bers of the mob arrested.

On May 19, 1918, a mob of sev­er­al hun­dred brought her to Folsom Bridge, tied Mary’s ankles, hung her upside down from a tree, doused her in gaso­line and motor oil and set her on fire. She was still alive when a mem­ber of the mob split her abdomen open with a knife. Her unborn child fell to the ground, was stomped and crushed. Mary’s body was rid­dled with hun­dreds of bullets.

The September 1918 issue of The Crisis car­ried an account of the lynching.

The Lynching of Jesse McIlherron, February 1918 – Tennessee 

The lynch­ing of Jesse McIlherron was anoth­er Walter White inves­ti­ga­tion for NAACP. Jesse was a Black man who resent­ed the slights and insults of white men. He stayed armed and the sher­iff feared him. On February 8, 1918, he got into a quar­rel with three young white men who insult­ed him. Threats were made and McIlherron shot and killed two of the men.

McIlherron fled to the home of a Black cler­gy­man who aid­ed him to escape and was lat­er shot and killed by a mob. McIlherron was cap­tured and lynched. McIlherron was chained to a hick­o­ry tree, a fire was built, and the tor­ture began. Bars of iron were heat­ed and the mob amused itself by putting them close to McIlherron, at first with­out touch­ing him. He grasped at a bar and as it was jerked from his grasp, the inside of his hand came with it. Then, the real tor­tur­ing began, last­ing twen­ty minutes.

During that time, while his flesh was slow­ly roast­ing, Jesse nev­er lost nerve. He cursed those who tor­tured him and almost to the last breath, derid­ed the attempts of the mob to break his spirit.

An account of the lynch­ing of Jesse was car­ried in the May 1918 issue of The Crisis.

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