History of Lynchings in Indiana Data Indicates That There Have Been 21 Reported Lynchings in Indiana’S History and One Survivor of an Attempted Lynching

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

History of Lynchings in Indiana Data Indicates That There Have Been 21 Reported Lynchings in Indiana’S History and One Survivor of an Attempted Lynching History of lynchings in Indiana Data indicates that there have been 21 reported lynchings in Indiana’s history and one survivor of an attempted lynching. Pulaski County Kosciusko County 1 reported lynching 1 reported lynching Saved from lynching Carroll County Grant County 1 reported lynching Hancock County 2 reported lynchings; 1 saved ■ Amer Green, Oct. 1887, 1 reported lynching On Aug. 7, 1930, accused of abduction ■ (—) Keemer, June 1875, James Cameron and murder accused of rape Jr., Thomas Vigo County Grant County Shipp and Abram Henry County Smith were 1 reported lynching See box at right 1 reported lynching lynched in ■ George Ward, 1901, ■ Eli Ladd, Feb. 1890, Marion, initially accused of murder alleged confrontation charged with Sullivan County with whites robbery, murder 1 reported lynching and rape. Shipp ■ James Dillard, Nov. Johnson County and Smith died, 1902, accused of rape 1 reported lynching but, miraculously, Knox County with the rope already around his neck, 1 reported lynching Clark County Cameron was saved. He was tried and convicted as an accessory to murder and ■ Holly Epps, Jan. 1886, 3 reported lynchings spent five years in prison. accused of murder ■ George Johnson, Squire Posey County Taylor and Charles Davis, In the 1940s, Cameron founded three 5 reported lynchings Nov. 1871, accused of murder chapters of the NAACP and later served as Indiana’s State Director of the Office ■ William Chambers, Jim Good, of Civil Liberties. In 1988, he founded Jeff Hopkins and Ed Warren, Spencer County America’s Black Holocaust Museum in Oct. 1878, accused of ravishing Warrick County 2 reported lynchings Milwaukee. Cameron is thought to be white women 1 reported lynching ■ Jim Henderson and Bud the only known survivor of a lynching ■ Dan Harris Sr., Oct. 1878, ■ John Rolla, Dec. 1900, Rowland, Dec. 1900, accused attempt in the United States. allegedly killed deputy sheriff alleged complicity in murder of murder Sources: Information compiled from www.monroeworktoday.org, lynchinginamerica.eji.org and the Library of Congress Kevin Burkett | (Logansport) Pharos-Tribune.
Recommended publications
  • Commencement
    WAKE FOREST UNIVERSITY Commencement THE GRADUATION EXERCISES MONDAY, MAY THE TWENTY-FIRST TwO THOUSAND AND TWELVE T HE GRADU A T ION EXE R C ISE S MONDAY, MAY THE TWEN T YFIRST TWO THO U SAND AND TWEL VE N INE O’C LOCK IN THE M ORNING T H O M AS K. HE ARN, JR. PLAZA THE CARILLON: “Preludium VII” ....................................................... Matthias Van den Gheyn Lauren Bradley Mellick (’05), University Carillonneur THE PROCESSIONAL ....................................................................e Brass Ensemble THE WELCOME ........................................................................... Nathan O. Hatch President GREETINGS FROM THE CLASS OF 2012 ..................................................Nilam A. Patel (’12) Student Body President THE PRAYER OF INVOCATION ..............................................e Reverend Timothy L. Auman University Chaplain THE ADDRESS: “A Little Fatherly Advice” .....................................................Charles W. Ergen Chairman, DISH Network and EchoStar Communications THE CONFERRING OF HONORARY DEGREES ..................................................Mark E. Welker Interim Provost Charles W. Ergen, Doctor of Laws Sponsor: Bernard Beatty, Associate Professor of Management, Schools of Business Elizabeth B. Lacy, Doctor of Laws Sponsor: Blake Morant, Dean, School of Law Willie E. May, Doctor of Science Sponsor: Lorna Moore, Dean, Graduate School of Arts and Sciences Jonathan T.M. Reckford, Doctor of Humane Letters Sponsor: Julie Wayne, Associate Professor, Schools of Business Eric C. Wiseman, Doctor of Laws Sponsor: Steve Reinemund, Dean, Schools of Business REMARKS TO THE GRADUATES ............................................................President Hatch THE HONORING OF RETIRING FACULTY FROM THE BOWMAN GRAY CAMPUS Patricia L. Adams, M.D., Professor Emerita of Internal Medicine - Nephrology Vardaman M. Buckalew, Jr., M.D., Professor Emeritus of Internal Medicine - Nephrology John R. Crouse III, M.D., Professor Emeritus of Internal Medicine - Endocrinology and Metabolism Robert G.
    [Show full text]
  • The Devil Is Watching You: Lynching and Southern Memory, 1940–1970
    THE DEVIL IS WATCHING YOU: LYNCHING AND SOUTHERN MEMORY, 1940–1970 A Dissertation Presented to the Faculty of the Graduate School of Cornell University In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy by MARI N. CRABTREE August 2014 ©2014 Mari N. Crabtree ii THE DEVIL IS WATCHING YOU: LYNCHING AND SOUTHERN MEMORY, 1940–1970 Mari N. Crabtree, Ph.D. Cornell University, 2014 This dissertation is a cultural history of lynching in African American and white southern memory. Mob violence had become relatively infrequent by 1940, yet it cast a long shadow over the region in the three decades that followed. By mining cultural sources, from folklore and photographs to my own interviews with the relatives of lynching victims, I uncover the ways in which memories of lynching seeped into contemporary conflicts over race and place during the long Civil Rights Era. The protest and counter-protest movements of the 1950s and 1960s garner most of the attention in discussions of racial violence during this period, but I argue that scholars must also be attentive to the memories of lynching that register on what Ralph Ellison called “the lower frequencies” to fully understand these legacies. For instance, African Americans often shielded their children from the most painful memories of local lynchings but would pass on stories about the vengeful ghosts of lynching victims to express their disgust with these unpunished crimes. By interpreting these memories through the lenses of silence, haunting, violence, and protest, I capture a broad range of legacies, from the subtle to the overt, that illustrate how and why lynching maintained its stranglehold on southern culture.
    [Show full text]
  • Enrolled Joint Resolution
    2017 Senate Joint Resolution 7 ENROLLED JOINT RESOLUTION Relating to: proclaiming February 2017 as Black History Month. Whereas, Americans have recognized black history annually since 1926, first as “Negro History Week” and later as “Black History Month”; and Whereas, we are commemorating the 51st anniversary of the 1964 Civil Rights Act, which drew from many African Americans taking a positive stance on breaking down the barriers to racial equality; and Whereas, African Americans in Wisconsin have made and continue to make outstanding contributions to our communities, and it is important to recognize the work of these leaders to combat negative stereotypes; and Whereas, Ezekiel Gillespie, born in Tennessee as a slave, purchased his freedom to go north; Ezekiel sold groceries and operated a local branch of the Underground Railroad, helping hundreds of African Americans escape slavery; and Whereas, Ezekiel Gillespie tied faith to the African−American community; he helped open Wisconsin’s first black church; and Whereas, Ezekiel Gillespie also led the charge for African−American suffrage when, in 1865, Ezekiel attempted to vote and was denied a ballot, and Ezekiel went on to sue for his right to vote in Gillespie v. Palmer, which led to the Wisconsin Supreme Court enforcing the 1849 referendum in favor of African−American male suffrage; and Whereas, Clayborn Benson, a native of Milwaukee, faced many challenges as an impoverished youth of color; he graduated from the old West Division High School despite being labeled “learning disabled;”
    [Show full text]
  • Kalamazoo College Harry T
    DonorHonor2012-2013 Roll July 1, 2012 - June 30, 2013 Kalamazoo, Michigan Associate Science Director for Research, Marketing Trustees Hans P. Morefield ’92 and Extramural Programs Senior Vice President, Strategic Members of the Board Walter Reed Army Institute of Partnerships Alexandra F. Altman ‘97 Research SCI Solutions Chicago, Illinois Silver Spring, Maryland Katonah, New York Eugene V. N. Bissell ‘76 Donald R. Parfet Gladwyne, Pennsylvania Emeriti Trustees Managing Director John W. Brown H’03 Roger E. Brownell ’68 Apjohn Group, LLC Portage, Michigan President Kalamazoo, Michigan Golf & Electric Carriages, Inc. Rosemary Brown Jody K. Olsen Fort Myers, Florida Portage, Michigan Visiting Professor University of Jevon A. Caldwell-Gross ‘04 Maryland Baltimore Lawrence D. Bryan Pastor Baltimore, Maryland Martinsville, Indiana Hamilton Memorial United Methodist Gail A. Raiman ‘73 Phillip C. Carra ’69 Church Arlington, Virginia Fennville, Michigan Atlantic City, New Jersey Christopher P. Reynolds ‘83 Joyce K. Coleman ’66 Erin M.P. Charnley ‘02 General Counsel and Chief Legal Dallas, Texas Dentist Officer Blue Water Dentistry, PLC James H. C. Duncan, Sr. Toyota Motor Sales, USA Inc. Hudsonville, Michigan Santa Fe, New Mexico Torrance, California James A. Clayton ‘78 Marlene C. Francis ’58 William C. Richardson Senior Managing Director Ann Arbor, Michigan College Professor of Policy General Electric Capital Kalamazoo College Harry T. Garland ’68 Norwalk, Connecticut Kalamazoo, Michigan Los Altos Hills, California Amy S. Courter ’83 James A. Robideau ’76 Alfred J. Gemrich ’60 President General Manager Kalamazoo, Michigan International Air Cadet Tecumseh Packaging Solutions, Inc. Exchange Association Otha Gilyard H’01 Van Wert, Ohio Ottawa, Ontario, Canada Columbus, Ohio Mary Beth Sarhatt Harold J.
    [Show full text]
  • Congressional Record—Senate S6364
    S6364 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD — SENATE June 13, 2005 Mr. FRIST. Mr. President, I ask These three men, driven by their en- can become a better people by cele- unanimous consent to speak as in trepreneurial energy, opened a small brating the glories of our past—but morning business for what time is re- grocery store that catered primarily to also our imperfections. That includes quired. African Americans. They took business continuing to do our utmost to protect The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without away from nearby White business own- voting rights for all Americans. objection, it is so ordered. ers. Driven by hatred and jealousy, by Mr. President, I yield the floor and f rage and prejudice, an angry White suggest the absence of a quorum. mob stormed their store. Acting in The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tem- A FAILING OF THE SENATE self-defense, Wells’ three friends fired pore. The clerk will call the roll. Mr. FRIST. Mr. President, in 45 min- on the rioters. The police arrested the The bill clerk proceeded to call the utes or so, we will be turning to an im- grocers for defending themselves. The roll. portant issue which people have spoken mob kidnapped all three from jail, and Ms. LANDRIEU. Mr. President, I ask to over the course of the day, an issue all three were murdered in the Mem- unanimous consent that the order for we will be spending the evening on. It phis streets. the quorum call be rescinded. is an issue that is one of the worst These brutal murders galvanized The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr.
    [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]
  • Class of 2021
    THE UNIVERSITY of MISSISSIPPI One Hundred Sixty-Eighth COMMENCEMENT Saturday, the First of May 2021 THE UNIVERSITY of MISSISSIPPI TM One Hundred Sixty-Eighth COMMENCEMENT Saturday, the First of May 2021 Office of the Chancellor On behalf of the faculty and staff of the University of Mississippi, we extend a sincere welcome to the students, parents, families and friends gathered to celebrate the university’s 168th Commencement. We are pleased to recognize the spirit of our community and honor the academic accomplishments and dedication of our beloved candidates for graduation of the Class of 2021. Commencement is a time-honored tradition that recognizes the outstanding work and achievements of students and faculty. It is an exciting time for us, and we know this is a special occasion for all of you. Our students are the heart and soul of Ole Miss, and we take pride and inspiration in their accomplishments and growth. Today’s ceremony celebrates years of study, hard work and careful preparation, and we’re grateful that you have come to show your support, love and belief in these graduates. The members of the Class of 2021 accomplished so much during their time as Ole Miss students — they pursued their passions, maximized their potential and pushed their boundaries through outstanding learning opportunities and life-changing experiences. In addition, they endured the disruption caused by the pandemic, which has taught us all important life lessons about resilience and the need to be adaptable. Now, we can’t wait to see how they’ll build and grow personal legacies of achievement, service and leadership.
    [Show full text]
  • IUPUI Celebration 2020
    IUPUI CELEBRATION 2020 CELEBRATION IUPUI HAIL TO OLD I.U. Come and join in song together, Greetings and congratulations! As a spring 2020 degree candidate at IUPUI, you deserve Shout with might and main; to be recognized for all the work that has brought you to this moment. The celebration Our beloved Alma Mater, website offers numerous activities to help you enjoy this day with family and friends near Sound her praise again. and far. So now’s the time to connect with them online via your favorite phone app or a webcam and then take part in all of these activities that honor you, a member of the Chorus Bicentennial Class: Gloriana, Frangipana, E’er to her be true; WATCH THE HAIL TO OLD I.U. VIDEO, FEATURING MUSICIANS IN THE CLASS OF 2020 She’s the pride of Indiana, FROM ALL CAMPUSES Hail to old I.U.! LISTEN TO CURATED PLAYLISTS THAT CAPTURE THE JOY OF THIS OCCASION —Joe T. Giles, Class of 1894 WATCH VIDEO MESSAGES FROM UNIVERSITY LEADERS DOWNLOAD YOUR PERSONALIZED CAMPUS-BASED IMAGE PURDUE HYMN Close by the Wabash, TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THE GRADUATION PHOTO OP In famed Hoosier land, Stands old Purdue, Many other opportunities are also available on the celebration website, so we hope you’ll Serene and grand. explore them all with the most heartfelt good wishes from IUPUI. Cherished in memory, By all her sons and daughters true, Fair alma mater, All hail Purdue. Chorus Fairest in all the land, Our own Purdue. Fairest in all the land, Our own Purdue.
    [Show full text]
  • Senate Apology
    Senate Apology Last June 13, the United States Senate unanimously passed Senate Resolution 39 (see Resolution text in accompanying box), apologizing for that body’s past failure to enact federal anti-lynching legislation—legislation the House had passed three times (1922, 1937, 1940). Each time the House-passed bill came to the Senate, Southern members used “states’ rights” arguments and the filibuster and other parliamentary maneuvers to prevent a floor vote—which most likely would have approved the bill. Senate Resolution 39 was an extraordinary action, reported widely in the media. The effort was the result of several years of organizing/lobbying by The Committee For A Formal Apology—initiated by publication of Without Sanctuary: Lynching Photography in America, by James Allen (Twin Palms Twelve Trees Press, 2000), the mind-blowing and sickening collection of photos, not only of the victims but of the festive crowds that regularly attended these horrific acts. Eighty of the Senate’s 100 members were original co-endorsers of the resolution, introduced by Mary Landrieu (D- LA) and George Allen (R-VA); the remaining 20 took a lot of heat for their silence, leading 12 of them to add their names. The 8 holdouts, all Republicans, were both Mississippi Senators (Thad Cochran and Trent Lott), both Wyoming Senators (Craig Thomas and Michael Enzi), both New Hampshire Senators (Judd Gregg and John Sununu), Texas’ John Cornyn and Lamar Alexander of Tennessee. Although Senate Majority Leader Bill First joined as a co-endorser, he acted to protect his holdout colleagues by preventing a roll call vote and by scheduling the bill’s hearing on a Monday evening, a time when the Senate chamber is nearly empty.
    [Show full text]
  • Lynching in America
    Lynching in America LYNCHING IN AMERICA Confronting the Legacy of Racial Terror Third Edition Equal Justice Initiative Equal Justice Initiative 122 Commerce Street Montgomery, Alabama 36104 334.269.1803 www.eji.org © 2017 by Equal Justice Initiative. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, modified, or distributed in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means without express prior written permission of Equal Justice Initiative. Contents Introduction 3 Secession and Emancipation, 1861-1865 6 Presidential Reconstruction 8 Progressive Reconstruction 10 White Backlash: The Ku Klux Klan and the Reign of Terror 12 Wavering Support: Federal Indifference and Legal Opposition 16 Back To Brutality: Restoring Racial Hierarchy Through Terror and Violence 18 After Reconstruction: Unequal, Again 22 Convict Leasing 23 Jim Crow 25 Lynching in America: From “Popular Justice” to Racial Terror 27 Characteristics of the Lynching Era 29 Lynchings Based on Fear of Interracial Sex 30 Lynchings Based on Minor Social Transgressions 31 Lynchings Based on Allegations of Crime 32 Public Spectacle Lynchings 33 Lynchings Targeting the Entire African American Community 38 Lynchings of Black People Resisting Mistreatment, 1915-1940 38 Lynching in the South, 1877-1950 39 Lynching Outside the South, 1877-1950 44 Enabling an Era of Lynching: Retreat, Resistance, and Refuge 48 Turning a Blind Eye to Lynching: Northern and Federal Complicity 48 Opposition To Lynching 51 Confronting Lynching 57 Violent Intimidation and Opposition to Equality 57 Men and boys pose beneath the body of Lige Daniels, a black man, shortly after he was lynched on August 3, 1920, in Center, Texas.
    [Show full text]
  • The Journal Times, Racine, Wis
    Hateful Things: Museum exhibit conveys a powerful message By Lee Roberts (June 29, 2006) MILWAUKEE - The exhibit itself does not take up a lot of space. The message that the one- room show at America's Black Holocaust Museum conveys, however, is a large and very powerful one. Called "Hateful Things," this traveling show from the Jim Crow Museum of Racist Memorabilia in Big Rapids, Mich., gives visitors an idea of the scope of prejudice and discrimination that existed in this country's pre-civil rights era, as well as the remnants that have surfaced since and are still evident today. The 39 items of material culture, which span from the late 19th century to the present, include stereotypical and demeaning images of Africans and their American descendants in the form of advertisements and everyday items including ash trays, kitchen gadgets, toys and games. Millions of anti-black items were produced during the Jim Crow period (mid-1870s to mid- 1960s), according to information from the Museum of Racist Memorabilia, and these items served to justify prejudice and discrimination against African-Americans by integrating racism into daily life. "All racial and ethnic groups have been caricatured but none as often, or in as many ways, as Africans and their American descendants," the exhibit's written materials tell visitors. Those caricatures range from the well-known mammy images such as Aunt Jemima to portrayals of black men as lazy coons or violent brutes, and black women as promiscuous Jezebels and whores - many of which depict blacks as physically grotesque and/or culturally deficient.
    [Show full text]
  • Hoosiers and the American Story Chapter 6
    2033-12 Hoosiers American Story.indd 140 and allAmericans.and Hoosiers enjoyment offered cars gives and asense of freedom the cover sheet The music century. during early the ture twentieth pervadedmobile American cul- auto- how the reflects Tilzer, von composer Albert by Hoosier ten This 1912 song, withmusic writ- 8/29/14 11:00 AM COLLECTIONS OF THE INDIANA HISTORICAL SOCIETY 6 Immigrants, Cars, Cities, and a New Indiana Indiana holds by the pioneering culture . old-fashioned philosophies springing out of the soil and smelling of the pennyrile and the sassafrack [mint and sassafrass]. — Irvin S. Cobb, 1924 In the late nineteenth century Indiana moved Americans had come from England, Scotland, Wales, along with the nation, experiencing increasing immi- and the German principalities. Immigrants from gration, rapid industrial change that came with a new Ireland and the German states started arriving in the invention—the automobile, and big city growth. Indi- early to mid part of the nineteenth century, and a few ana developed a culture of its own. Hoosiers claimed African Americans settled in the state, too, most near to be the most American of Americans, but they also Quaker settlements. developed pride in being different from Texans or New By 1880 Indiana had become different than other Yorkers. They liked the Indiana way of doing things, states in an important way—hoosiers were primarily including being fiercely independent and self-suffi- American-born, white, and Protestant. Other states cient, intensely political and wary of the government, tended to have more immigrants, more ethnic groups, and community-focused. However, economic growth and more people of different religions.
    [Show full text]