Mamie Kirkland, Witness to an Era of Racial Terror, Dies at 111 - the New York Times

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Mamie Kirkland, Witness to an Era of Racial Terror, Dies at 111 - the New York Times 1/11/2020 Mamie Kirkland, Witness to an Era of Racial Terror, Dies at 111 - The New York Times https://nyti.ms/36Gpj14 Mamie Kirkland, Witness to an Era of Racial Terror, Dies at 111 She endured the horrors of the African-American experience — lynchings, riots, the Ku Klux Klan — and worked to ensure that they never slipped from collective memory. By Dan Barry Published Jan. 9, 2020 Updated Jan. 10, 2020 Mamie Lang Kirkland died last month at her home in upstate New York. She was the mother of nine, the matriarch of another 158, a longtime saleswoman for Avon Products, and, at the time of her death, at 111, the oldest resident of Buffalo. That only begins to describe Ms. Kirkland. She was also the embodiment of the African-American experience of the 20th century, her life’s long journey altered repeatedly by the racial violence and bigotry coursing through the United States. Lynchings, riots, the Ku Klux Klan — she survived it all, and spent her centenarian years working to ensure that these realities never slipped from collective memory. Her life helped inspire the creation, in 2018, of the Legacy Museum and the National Memorial for Peace and Justice, in Montgomery, Ala. Both document the country’s history of racial terrorism and encourage social justice. Ms. Kirkland figures in two of the exhibits, said Sia Sanneh, a senior attorney with the Equal Justice Initiative, the nonprofit that started the memorials. “Her life was such an inspiration to us,” Ms. Sanneh said. “It embodied all those things.” Mamie Lang was born on Sept. 3, 1908, in the rural Mississippi town of Ellisville, the daughter of Edward Lang, a laborer and fledgling minister, and Rochelle (Moore) Lang, who minded the family’s rented home. Ms. Kirkland would remember the large peach tree in the yard, and the strange brew concocted by her grandmother that saved her from a typhomalarial fever when she was near death at age 5. When she was about 7, her father awakened the family to announce that it was time to leave — some local white men were preparing to lynch him and his friend, John Hartfield. The two men slipped out of town that night; Rochelle and the five Lang children, including a nursing baby, escaped by train in the morning. https://www.nytimes.com/2020/01/09/us/mamie-kirkland-dead.html 1/3 1/11/2020 Mamie Kirkland, Witness to an Era of Racial Terror, Dies at 111 - The New York Times Ms. Kirkland, with family members and her supporters from the Equal Justice Initiative, prayed at the approximate spot where John Hartfield, her father’s friend, was lynched in 1919. Andrea Morales for The New York Times The family friend, Mr. Hartfield, eventually returned to Ellisville, and in the summer of 1919 he was accused of raping a white woman. Some townspeople set a date for his lynching, a public event that the governor of Mississippi claimed he was powerless to prevent. At an appointed time announced in The Jackson Daily News, crowds gathered near a large gum tree beside the train tracks. There Mr. Hartfield was strung up and hanged, after which his body was riddled with bullets and burned. Body parts became souvenirs. “Could have been my father,” Ms. Kirkland said in an interview with The New York Times in 2015. Though the Lang family had fled to East St. Louis, Ill., they still could not outrun the racist violence. In 1917, white men responded to the pressures of changing demographics and job competition by rioting in black neighborhoods, burning down homes and shooting residents. Dozens died, thousands were left homeless, and 9-year-old Mamie was seared by the memory of seeing a deaf man shot dead because he could not hear an order to halt. The family moved again, this time to Alliance, Ohio, reflecting another aspect of the black experience: the Great Migration of the last century, when six million African-Americans left the rural South for the urban Northeast and Midwest — some seeking economic opportunity, others hoping to escape racial terrorism. Sometimes it followed them north. In Alliance, in the 1920s, members of the Ku Klux Klan — whose rallies were casually announced in the local press — came to the family’s home, hoods donned and torches afire, to burn a cross on their lawn. The Langs always wondered what would have happened if armed white neighbors hadn’t arrived to chase away the aggressors. At 15, Mamie married an itinerant railroad worker named Albert Kirkland, and the couple moved to Buffalo. He found work as a grinder at the Pratt & Letchworth plant; she gave birth to nine children, six of whom reached adulthood, and immersed herself in the First Shiloh Baptist Church, of which she was a foundational member. https://www.nytimes.com/2020/01/09/us/mamie-kirkland-dead.html 2/3 1/11/2020 Mamie Kirkland, Witness to an Era of Racial Terror, Dies at 111 - The New York Times After her husband died in 1959, Ms. Kirkland worked as a domestic helper and babysitter before becoming a door-to-door saleswoman for Avon. She never learned to drive, and often attributed her longevity to her faith and those many years walking the Buffalo streets selling beauty products. She was still taking orders until a few weeks before her death on Dec. 28, according to her son Tarabu Betserai Kirkland. Mr. Kirkland, her youngest child at 70, said that his mother’s experience with Avon helped her to shed her shyness and embrace her ability to connect with people. Over time, he said, she became a kind of door-to-door life coach. “Folks didn’t want her to leave the house,” Mr. Kirkland said in a phone interview this week. “She would help them figure out ways to manage.” But there was one place that Ms. Kirkland refused to visit: the state of her birth, where the terror of racism had scarred her childhood. She often said that she didn’t even want to see Mississippi on a map. Her son had been nudging her to tell her life’s powerful story, and in 2015 he showed her a report by the Equal Justice Initiative called “Lynching in America: Confronting the Legacy of Racial Terror.” It included an image of an old newspaper’s headline: “John Hartfield Will Be Lynched By Ellisville Mob at 5 O’Clock This Afternoon.” “We had never seen anything documented about John Hartfield,” Mr. Kirkland said. “For a long time we didn’t know if it was fact or fiction. But then she pointed to my laptop and said, ʻThat’s him.’ And chills went up my back.” A few months later, Ms. Kirkland returned to Ellisville with her son, who has been working on a documentary film about his mother’s journey. It was an emotional visit to a place that seemed to have erased the Hartfield lynching from memory. Ms. Kirkland took time to pray at the approximate spot where a mob had killed her father’s friend. “She always maintained this level of grace and forgiveness,” Mr. Kirkland said. “I’m not sure I could do that.” In addition to her son, Ms. Kirkland’s survivors include her daughters Juanita Hunter, Beatrice Kirkland, Margaret Kirkland and Jeanette Clinton. In 2016, the Equal Justice Initiative honored Ms. Kirkland at a fund-raising gala in Manhattan. She and her son worked for weeks on her short speech, in which she planned to tell the young people in the audience that stories like hers needed to be told again and again; that stories like hers were just as important now as they were a century ago; that she should know, because she had been there. Her speech reflected a resilient optimism; a determination to triumph over tribulation. “I left Mississippi a scared little girl of 7 years old,” Ms. Kirkland said at the event. “Now I’m 107 — and I’m not frightened anymore.” Organizers fretted about how their guest would ascend to the stage, and they offered her a wheelchair. She declined, saying that she intended to walk on her own. And she did. https://www.nytimes.com/2020/01/09/us/mamie-kirkland-dead.html 3/3.
Recommended publications
  • The Evolution of Racism Through the Lens of Lynching Rhetoric and Memory
    THE EVOLUTION OF RACISM THROUGH THE LENS OF LYNCHING RHETORIC AND MEMORY by TAMMY BLUE ANDREW BAER, COMMITTEE CHAIR HARRIET AMOS DOSS PAMELA STERNE KING A THESIS Submitted to the graduate faculty of The University of Alabama at Birmingham, in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Masters of History BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA 2020 ProQuest Number:27833348 All rights reserved INFORMATION TO ALL USERS The quality of this reproduction is dependent on the quality of the copy submitted. In the unlikely event that the author did not send a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. Also, if material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. ProQuest 27833348 Published by ProQuest LLC (2020). Copyright of the Dissertation is held by the Author. All Rights Reserved. This work is protected against unauthorized copying under Title 17, United States Code Microform Edition © ProQuest LLC. ProQuest LLC 789 East Eisenhower Parkway P.O. Box 1346 Ann Arbor, MI 48106 - 1346 THE EVOLUTION OF RACISM THROUGH THE LENS OF LYNCHING RHETORIC AND MEMORY TAMMY BLUE HISTORY ABSTRACT The Evolution of Racism Through the Lens of Lynching Rhetoric and Memory, examines the use of ‘lynching’ in its definition, legislation and politics. Rhetoric has the power to influence and persuade, therefore when public figures manipulate lynching rhetoric, the meaning of lynching becomes distorted. In part, this thesis explores the difficulty of defining lynching. Among others, key players in this process included Walter White of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), Monroe Work of the Tuskegee Institute, and Jessie Daniel Ames of the Association of Southern Women for the Prevention of Lynching (ASWPL).
    [Show full text]
  • Web Du Bois E a Revista the Crisis, 1910-1920
    UNIVERSIDADE DE SÃO PAULO FACULDADE DE FILOSOFIA, LETRAS E CIÊNCIAS HUMANAS DEPARTAMENTO DE HISTÓRIA PROGRAMA DE PÓS-GRADUAÇÃO EM HISTÓRIA SOCIAL CARLOS ALEXANDRE DA SILVA NASCIMENTO REPRESENTANDO O “NOVO” NEGRO NORTE-AMERICANO: W. E. B. DU BOIS E A REVISTA THE CRISIS, 1910-1920 São Paulo 2015 CARLOS ALEXANDRE DA SILVA NASCIMENTO REPRESENTANDO O “NOVO” NEGRO NORTE-AMERICANO: W. E. B. DU BOIS E A REVISTA THE CRISIS, 1910-1920 Dissertação apresentada à Faculdade de Filosofia, Letras e Ciências Humanas da Universidade de São Paulo para a obtenção do título de Mestre em História. Orientador: Prof. Dr. Robert Sean Purdy São Paulo 2015 Autorizo a reprodução e divulgação total ou parcial deste trabalho, por qualquer meio convencional ou eletrônico, para fins de estudo e pesquisa, desde que citada a fonte. Catalogação na Publicação Serviço de Biblioteca e Documentação Faculdade de Filosofia, Letras e Ciências Humanas da Universidade de São Paulo Nascimento, Carlos Alexandre da Silva Nascimento N244r Representando o "novo" negro norte-americano: W. E. B. Du Bois e a revista The Crisis, 1910-1920 / Carlos Alexandre da Silva Nascimento Nascimento ; orientador Robert Sean Purdy Purdy. - São Paulo, 2015. 233 f. Dissertação (Mestrado)- Faculdade de Filosofia, Letras e Ciências Humanas da Universidade de São Paulo. Departamento de História. Área de concentração: História Social. 1. História dos Estados Unidos . 2. Direitos Civis. 3. Afro-americano. 4. Representação. 5. W. E. B. Du Bois. I. Purdy, Robert Sean Purdy, orient. II. Título. NASCIMENTO, Carlos Alexandre da Silva. Representando o “novo” negro norte-americano Dissertação apresentada à Faculdade de Filosofia, Letras e Ciências Humanas da Universidade de São Paulo para a obtenção do título de Mestre em História.
    [Show full text]
  • UC Riverside Electronic Theses and Dissertations
    UC Riverside UC Riverside Electronic Theses and Dissertations Title The Race of Machines: A Prehistory of the Posthuman Permalink https://escholarship.org/uc/item/90d94068 Author Evans, Taylor Scott Publication Date 2018 License https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/ 4.0 Peer reviewed|Thesis/dissertation eScholarship.org Powered by the California Digital Library University of California UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA RIVERSIDE The Race of Machines: A Prehistory of the Posthuman A Dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in English by Taylor Scott Evans December 2018 Dissertation Committee: Dr. Sherryl Vint, Chairperson Dr. Mark Minch-de Leon Mr. John Jennings, MFA Copyright by Taylor Scott Evans 2018 The Dissertation of Taylor Scott Evans is approved: ____________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________ Committee Chairperson University of California, Riverside Acknowledgments Whenever I was struck with a particularly bad case of “You Should Be Writing,” I would imagine the acknowledgements section as a kind of sweet reward, a place where I can finally thank all the people who made every part of this project possible. Then I tried to write it. Turns out this isn’t a reward so much as my own personal Good Place torture, full of desire to acknowledge and yet bereft of the words to do justice to the task. Pride of place must go to Sherryl Vint, the committee member who lived, as it were. She has stuck through this project from the very beginning as other members came and went, providing invaluable feedback, advice, and provocation in ways it is impossible to cite or fully understand.
    [Show full text]
  • Judge Lynch S Cause Cel Bre Fr Ank — Or ( B ) the Mob Was Or Der Ly New Leans Mafia
    JUDGELYNCH HIS FIRS T HU N D RED Y EARS BY FRANK SHAY NEWY ORK WASHBU RN IN C. IVES , By th e Same Auth or IRON MEN AN D WOODEN SHIPS MY PIOUS FRIENDS AN D DRUNKEN COMPANIONS ’ HERE S AUDACITY# INCREDIB LE PI#ARRO PIRATE WENCH etc . etc. , JUDGELYNCH HIS FIRS T HU N D RED Y EARS BY FRAN K SHAY N EWY ORK WASHBU RN IN C. IVES , CO IG H 1 8 B Y K H PYR T, 93 , FRAN S AY All rights r eserved P R I N T E D I N T H E U N I T E D S T A T E S O F A M E R I C A - B Y T H E VA I L B A L L O U P RE S S , I N C . , B I N G H A MT O N , N . Y . Carrter m Preface “ TO HELL WITH THE LAW Chapter One THERE WAS A JUDGE NAMED LYNCH Chapter Two THE EARLY LIFE AN D TIMES OF JUDG E LYNCH Chapter Three ’ JUDG E LYNCH S CODE Chapter Four ’ JU DG E LY NCH S JURORS Chapter Five THE JURISDICTION OF JUDG E LYN CH Chapter Six ’ SOME OF JUDG E LYNCH S CASES ’ ’ e — Leo (A) Judge Lynch s Cause Cel bre Fr ank — Or ( B ) The Mob Was Or der ly New leans Mafia w . ( C ) The Bur ning of Henry Lo ry CO N TE N T S (D) The Law Never Had a Chance Claude Neal ( E ) Th e Five Thousandth— Raymond G unn ( F ) Twice Lynche d in Texas— Ge or ge Hughes (G) Thr ee Governors Go Into Action 1 9 3 3 Who D efie d (H) Those the Bo sses ( 1 ) I 9 3 7 Chapter Seven THE REVERSALS OF JUDG E LYNCH L nch -Executions in U ni d S s 1 882— 1 y the te tate , 93 7 Bibliography P r efa ce TO HELL WITH THE LAW LYN CHING has many legal definitions : It means one thing in Kentucky and North Carolina and another in Virginia or Minnesota .
    [Show full text]
  • Race and Justice in Mississippi's Central Piney Woods, 1940-2010
    The University of Southern Mississippi The Aquila Digital Community Dissertations Spring 5-2011 Race and Justice in Mississippi's Central Piney Woods, 1940-2010 Patricia Michelle Buzard-Boyett University of Southern Mississippi Follow this and additional works at: https://aquila.usm.edu/dissertations Part of the Cultural History Commons, Political History Commons, Social History Commons, and the United States History Commons Recommended Citation Buzard-Boyett, Patricia Michelle, "Race and Justice in Mississippi's Central Piney Woods, 1940-2010" (2011). Dissertations. 740. https://aquila.usm.edu/dissertations/740 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by The Aquila Digital Community. It has been accepted for inclusion in Dissertations by an authorized administrator of The Aquila Digital Community. For more information, please contact [email protected]. The University of Southern Mississippi RACE AND JUSTICE IN MISSISSIPPI’S CENTRAL PINEY WOODS, 1940-2010 by Patricia Michelle Buzard-Boyett A Dissertation Submitted to the Graduate School of The University of Southern Mississippi in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy Approved: Dr. William K. Scarborough Director Dr. Bradley G. Bond Dr. Curtis Austin Dr. Andrew Wiest Dr. Louis Kyriakoudes Dr. Susan A. Siltanen Dean of the Graduate School May 2011 The University of Southern Mississippi RACE AND JUSTICE IN MISSISSIPPI’S CENTRAL PINEY WOODS, 1940-2010 by Patricia Michelle Buzard-Boyett Abstract of a Dissertation Submitted to the Graduate School of The University of Southern Mississippi in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy May 2011 ABSTRACT RACE AND JUSTICE IN MISSISSIPPI’S CENTRAL PINEY WOODS, 1940-2010 by Patricia Michelle Buzard-Boyett May 2011 “Race and Justice in Mississippi’s Central Piney Woods, 1940-2010,” examines the black freedom struggle in Jones and Forrest counties.
    [Show full text]
  • Justice John Paul Stevens and Babe Ruth 4/20/1920 – 7/16/2019
    Need Referrals? Call Rosie at LRIS today! at (805) 650-7599 SEPTEMBER – TWO THOUSAND NINETEEN JUSTICE JOHN PAUL STEVENS AND BABE RUTH 4/20/1920 – 7/16/2019 by William Grewe Page 8 DOUGLAS K. GOLDWATER PRESIDENT'S MESSAGE 3 LINDSAY F. NIELSON THINKING THINGS OVER - GREAT TRIAL MOMENTS 7 WENDY C. LASCHER DO BILLABLE HOURS HURT? 9 DAVID L. SHAIN NATIONAL MEMORIAL FOR PEACE AND JUSTICE OPENS IN ALABAMA 12 HAVE YOU HEARD? 15 PANDA KROLL HONORING THE ORIGIN 16 PANDA KROLL WELCOME INN 17 SHOULD NONLAWYERS BE ABLE TO PROVIDE LEGAL SERVICES? 18 CLASSIFIEDS 18 ARTICLES CAN BE VIEWED ONLINE AT WWW.VCBA.ORG CREATIVE DISPUTE RESOLUTION CONTINUING THE EXPANSION AND TRADITION OF EXCELLENCE IN MEDIATION AND ARBITRATION ESTABLISHED IN 1986 BY PAUL D. FRITZ ESQ. (1941-2011) MEDIATION OF ALL CIVIL DISPUTES • Business Litigation • Construction Defects • Serious Personal Injury • Partnership Dissolution • Insurance Claims • Wrongful Death • Probate • Professional & Medical Malpractice • Trade Secret Disputes • Employment - Wrongful Termination • Real Estate JOINING FORCES Hon. David W. Long David M. Karen, Esq. • Ventura County Superior Court, Retired • 35 Year Trial Attorney • Appointed Judge of the Ventura County • Member, American Board of Trial Municipal Court Advocates (ABOTA) • Appointed and served for two years as • The Straus Institute for Dispute Resolution Ventura County Superior/Municipal Pepperdine School of Law (2004) Commissioner • Los Angeles Superior Court-ADR • Chair of the VCBA-ADR Section HIGHLY SKILLED AND EFFECTIVE MEDIATORS WE GET IT DONE cdrmediation.com (805) 498-9494 3155 Old Conejo Road, Thousand Oaks, CA LATERALS AND AFFILIATIONS WELCOMED! OFFICES AVAILABLE! LITIGATION AND TRIAL REFERRALS WELCOMED! DK LAW GROUP DAVID M.
    [Show full text]
  • Documenting Racism
    Documenting Racism 99780826405555_Pre_Final_txt_print.indd780826405555_Pre_Final_txt_print.indd i 11/3/2012/3/2012 44:48:17:48:17 PPMM 99780826405555_Pre_Final_txt_print.indd780826405555_Pre_Final_txt_print.indd iiii 11/3/2012/3/2012 44:48:17:48:17 PPMM Documenting Racism African Americans in US Department of Agriculture Documentaries, 1921–42 J. Emmett Winn 99780826405555_Pre_Final_txt_print.indd780826405555_Pre_Final_txt_print.indd iiiiii 11/3/2012/3/2012 44:48:17:48:17 PPMM Continuum International Publishing Group 80 Maiden Lane, New York NY 10038 The Tower Building, 11 York Road, London SE1 7NX www.continuumbooks.com © J. Emmett Winn, 2012 All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the written permission of the publishers. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Winn, J. Emmett (John Emmett), 1959- Documenting racism : African Americans in US Department of Agriculture documentaries, 1921–42 / by J. Emmett Winn. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN-13: 978-0-8264-0555-5 (hardcover : alk. paper) ISBN-10: 0-8264-0555-X (hardcover : alk. paper) 1. African Americans in motion pictures. 2. Racism in motion pictures. 3. Stereotypes (Social psychology) in motion pictures. 4. United States. Dept. of Agriculture. Motion Picture Service. 5. Documentary fi lms--United States--History--20th century. I. Title. PN1995.9.N4W56 2011 791.43’652996073--dc23
    [Show full text]
  • Lesson Plans
    CONTENTS ____ INTRODUCTION ● Teaching the Legacy of Lynching in the United States ● About the Lesson Plans UNIT 1 : LYNCHING AND RACIAL TERROR ● Lesson 1.1 : History and Engaging the Past ​ ● Lesson 1.2 : Slavery and Inventing the Myth of Racial Difference ​ ● Lesson 1.3 : Reconstruction and Enforcing White Supremacy ​ ● Lesson 1.4 : Racial Terrorism and the Ideology of White Supremacy ​ ● Lesson 1.5 : Documenting Racial Terror Lynchings ​ ● Lesson 1.6 : Lynching and the Presumption of Innocence ​ ● Lesson 1.7 : Racial Terror Institutionalized ​ ● Lesson 1.8 : Racial Terror and the Great Migration ​ ● Lesson 1.9 : Black Veterans and the Ideology of White Supremacy ​ UNIT 2 : THE LEGACY OF LYNCHING ● Lesson 2.1 : The End of Lynching and the Beginning of Mass Incarceration and Capital ​ ​ Punishment ● Lesson 2.2 : The Endurance of White Supremacy ​ ​ ● Lesson 2.3 : Memorials and Monuments ​ ● Lesson 2.4 : Truth and Reconciliation ​ ● Concluding Activity Ideas 1 INTRODUCTION ___ TEACHING THE LEGACY OF LYNCHING IN THE UNITED STATES The history of lynching in the United States remains with us all, even as it goes largely unspoken and unacknowledged. The history of lynching in America is undeniably brutal and disturbing; yet avoiding this brutality disallows meaningful understanding of U.S. history. The ongoing challenge for teachers will be finding a balance between engaging and confronting the reality in its difficulty, while also supporting the emotional experience of students. Constructive approaches to this challenge will be largely dependent on the students and the context in which teachers are working. Teaching the ​ Taboo: Courage and Imagination in the Classroom (2011), by Bill and Rick Ayers, takes up the ​ concerns that many teachers might have about teaching difficult topics in the classroom.
    [Show full text]
  • At Lynching Memorial, Steel Columns Rise and Hang Overhead Like Bodies
    A JOURNALISM DIVERSITY FUND PROJECT At lynching memorial, steel columns rise and hang overhead like bodies PHOTO BY JILL FRIEDMAN FOR COMMUNITY WORD The National Memorial for Peace and Justice sits on a grassy knoll overlooking Montgomery, Ala., — origin of the Confederacy and birthplace of the Civil Rights Movement. The memorial channels the pain, fear and injustice of 4,400 African American men, women and children lynched in 800 counties and 20 states throughout the country including Illinois. Using poetry, historical documentation, design and narratives, a sacred text emerges of human suffering imbued with the power to reconcile our local and national legacy. A Public Eulogy Reconcile history or repeat injustice BY PAM ADAMS BY SHERRY CANNON The new lynching memorial in Montgomery, Ala. is a prayer and a Montgomery is a city of contradictions. It is known as the Cradle of the Confederacy as well as the birthplace challenge. of the Civil Rights Movement that was born from the Montgomery Bus Boycott. The memorial, officially the National Memorial for Peace and Justice, The city has markers throughout the town square that tell its story. There is a sanitized history told by the is the end of a public eulogy, in stone and steel, for the long-buried Alabama Historical Society markers and the real history told by the Equal Justice Initiative. memories of thousands of Black people killed by white mobs during Civil Rights attorney Bryan Stevenson founded the Equal Justice Initiative to confront racial injustice and the decades when racial terror was routine. Rows and rows and rows of hanging coppery-colored steel col- … Real History B4 umns, each engraved with counties, states and the name or names, if known, of Black men, women and children lynched in that county — 805 hanging gravestones memorializing more than 4,000 lynchings documented from 1877 to 1950, almost 60 in Illinois.
    [Show full text]
  • Want Socialism? Try the U.S
    The New Hampshire Gazette, Friday, June 18, 2021 — Page 1 We Put the Vol. CCLXV, No. 20 The New Hampshire Gazette June 18, 2021 The Nation’s Oldest Newspaper™ • Editor: Steven Fowle • Founded 1756 by Daniel Fowle Free! PO Box 756, Portsmouth, NH 03802 • [email protected] • www.nhgazette.com in Free Press The Fortnightly Rant Keeping Up With the Loonies e do our best to keep up. In it altogether.” theory, that’s most of the job: That sounds bad on the face of it. tryW to keep up, and write about the Why do it? “The agency says shift- stuff that really matters. These days ing from air to surface modes of that boils down to tracking dan- transport would improve net income gerous outbreaks of authoritarian by $175 million a year and avoid lunacy. This can be unnerving—es- dependence on air carriers, which pecially in the context of a former- can sometimes be unpredictable in ly-natural environment whose ex- meeting USPS time frames.” piration date seems to be getting a But, a reasonable person might fortnight closer every dang week. sputter, the Postal Service has no In a perfect world we’d be main- choice but to use planes, if it’s going taining a sophisticated database to meet current service standards of for this purpose. Cross-tabulation three-day delivery to the contiguous analysis would no doubt be useful in 48 states…. sorting out the misleaders from the Yes, that’s true. So, to solve that misled, the grifters from the true be- little problem, “the Postal Service lievers, and the charlatans from the has proposed downgrading service congenitally bewildered.
    [Show full text]
  • We Put the Vol
    The New Hampshire Gazette, Friday, June 19, 2020 — Page 1 We Put the Vol. CCLXIV, No. 20 The New Hampshire Gazette June 19, 2020 The Nation’s Oldest Newspaper™ • Editor: Steven Fowle • Founded 1756 by Daniel Fowle Free! PO Box 756, Portsmouth, NH 03802 • [email protected] • www.nhgazette.com in Free Press The Fortnightly Rant Insurgency Now welve score and four years peat a year to make up for the time ago, smugglers, land grabbers, it took him to recover from an epic farmers,T and shoe makers brought case of gonorrhea. Though he was forth on this continent a new nation, effective early on in his Confeder- conceived in a curiously narrow vi- ate career, he was frequently placed sion of Liberty, and dedicated— under arrest by his superiors. At sev- nominally—to the proposition that eral crucial times, however, he was all men are created equal. unable to perform his duties due to Now we are engaged in a great the lingering effects of his youthful difference of opinion, testing wheth- indiscretion. er that nation can endure much lon- The logistics involved in expung- ger while ten Army posts continue ing Hill’s name alone—post signage, to honor the names of men who stationery, organizational charts, fought against it in a great Civil War. &c., &c.—would be considerable. It would be altogether fitting and But what of, say, Fort Benning? proper for us the living to re-ded- More than twice the size of Fort icate those places. We could give Hill, Benning houses more people them new names, in honor of oth- than Manchester.
    [Show full text]
  • Shattered Humanity: the Brutality of Lynch Mob Formation
    Shattered Humanity: The Brutality of Lynch Mob Formation Krystin Robertson Professor Gritter HIST – J 495 April 19, 2019 Title Slide – Good evening, thank you all for coming. Today, I will be giving a presentation on the subject of lynching in the South between the post-emancipation period (or, after 1865) to the 1930s, or, the Great Depression era in United States history. For this presentation, I will begin by discussing my historiography and methodology, then I will introduce my thesis statement, provide evidence for each of my main points, conclude with a turning point to this era, and then I will note why this subject is important. Historiography • Jim Crow’s Defense: Anti- Negro Thought in America, 1900-1930 (1965) by I. A. Newby • Black Folk Here and There: An Essay in History and Anthropology (1987) by St. Clair Drake • The Condemnation of Blackness: Race, Crime, and the Making of Modern Urban America (2010) by Khalil Gibran Muhammad Historiography Slide – For my historiography, I have included three books that share common themes of anti-Negro thought, the pejorative connotations of being black, or black criminality. It is crucial to understand these themes to make sense of the context of the lynching era and the backdrop of lynching justifications. White perceptions were designed on each of these premises because they all led to the belief that African Americans were inferior. As for issues with this historiography, lynching is not a big subject that is featured often throughout these books. I. A. Newby has a section dedicated to lynching in his index, but Drake and Muhammad do not, although their books mention this subject throughout.
    [Show full text]