PREFACE
The
greater part of what is contained in these pages was published in the New York
Age June 25, 1892, in explanation of the editorial which the Memphis whites
considered sufficiently infamous to justify the destruction of my paper, The Free
Speech.
Since
the appearance of that statement, requests have come from all parts of the
country that "Exiled," (the name under which it then appeared) be
issued in pamphlet form. Some donations were made, but not enough for that
purpose. The noble effort of the ladies of New York and Brooklyn Oct 5 have
enabled me to comply with this request and give the world a true, unvarnished
account of the causes of lynch law in the South.
This
statement is not a shield for the despoiler of virtue, nor altogether a defense
for the poor blind Afro-American Sampsons who suffer themselves to be betrayed
by white Delilahs. It is a contribution to truth, an array of facts, the
perusal of which it is hoped will stimulate this great American Republic to
demand that justice be done though the heavens fall.
It is
with no pleasure I have dipped my hands in the corruption here exposed.
Somebody must show that the Afro-American race is more sinned against than
sinning, and it seems to have fallen upon me to do so. The awful death-roll
that Judge Lynch is calling every week is appalling, not only because of the
lives it takes, the rank cruelty and outrage to the victims, but because of the
prejudice it fosters and the stain it places against the good name of a weak
race.
The
Afro-American is not a bestial race. If this work can contribute in any way
toward proving this, and at the same time arouse the conscience of the American
people to a demand for justice to every citizen, and punishment by law for the
lawless, I shall feel I have done my race a service. Other considerations are
of minor importance. New York City, Oct. 26, 1892. IDA B. WELLS.
To the Afro-American women of New York and
Brooklyn. whose race love, earnest zeal and unselfish effort at Lyric Hall, in
the City of New York, on the night of October 5th, 1892,Ämade possible its publication,
this pamphlet is gratefully dedicated by the author. HON. FRED. DOUGlASS'S
LETTER
Dear Miss
Wells:
Let me give you thanks for your faithful
paper on the lynch abomination now generally practiced against colored people
in the South. There has been no word equal to it in convincing power. I have
spoken, but my word is feeble in comparison. You give us what you know and testify
from actual knowledge. You have dealt with the facts with cool, painstaking fidelity
and left those naked and uncontradicted facts to speak for themselves.
Brave
woman! you have done your people and mine a service which can neither be
weighed nor measured. If American conscience were only half alive, if the
American church and clergy were only half christianized, if American moral
sensibility were not hardened by persistent infliction of outrage and crime
against colored people, a scream of horror, shame and indignation would rise to
Heaven wherever your pamphlet shall be read.
But
alas! even crime has power to reproduce itself and create conditions favorable
to its own existence. It sometimes seems we are deserted by earth and
HeavenÄyet we must still think, speak and work, and trust in the power of a
merciful God for final deliverance.
Very
truly and gratefully yours, Cedar Hill, Anacostia, D.C., Oct. 25, 1892. FREDERICK
DOUGLASS.
CHAPTER
I. THE OFFENSE
Wednesday
evening May 24th, 1892, the city of Memphis was filled with excitement.
Editorials in the daily papers of that date caused a meeting to be held in the
Cotton Exchange Building; a committee was sent for the editors of the
"Free Speech" an Afro-American journal published in that city, and
the only reason the open threats of lynching that were made were not carried
out was because they could not be found. The cause of all this commotion was
the following editorial published in the "Free Speech" May 21st,
1892, the Saturday previous.
"Eight
negroes lynched since last issue of the "Free Speech" one at Little
Rock, Ark., last Saturday morning where the citizens broke (?) into the
penitentiary and got their man; three near Anniston, Ala., one near New
Orleans; and three at Clarksville, Ga., the last three for killing a white man,
and five on the same old racketÄthe new alarm about raping white women. The
same programme of hanging, then shooting bullets into the lifeless bodies was
carried out to the letter.
Nobody
in this section of the country believes the old thread bare lie that Negro men
rape white women. If Southern white men are not careful, they will over-reach
themselves and public sentiment will have a reaction; a conclusion will then be
reached which will be very damaging to the moral reputation of their
women."
`The
Daily Commercial" of Wednesday following, May 25th, contained the
following leader:
`Those
negroes who are attempting to make the lynching of individuals of their race a
means for arousing the worst passions of their kind are playing with a
dangerous sentiment. The negroes may as well understand that there is no mercy
for the negro rapist and little patience with his defenders. A negro organ
printed in this city, in a recent issue publishes the following atrocious
paragraph: `Nobody in this section of the country believes the old thread-bare
lie that negro men rape white women. If Southern white men are not careful they
will over-reach themselves, and public sentiment will have a reaction; and a
conclusion will be reached which will be very damaging to the moral reputation
of their women.
The
fact that a black scoundrel is allowed to live and utter such loathsome and
repulsive calumnies is a volume of evidence as to the wonderful patience of
Southern whites. But we have had enough of it.
There
are some things that the Southern white man will not tolerate, and the obscene
intimations of the foregoing have brought the writer to the very outermost
limit of public patience. We hope we have said enough."
The
"Evening Scimitar" of same date, copied the "Commercial's" editorial
with these words of comment: "Patience under such circumstances is not a
virtue. If the negroes themselves do not apply the remedy without delay it will
be the duty of those whom he has attacked to tie the wretch who utters these
calumnies to a stake at the intersection of Main and Madison Sts., brand him in
the forehead with a hot iron and perform upon him a surgical operation with a
pair of tailor's shears."
Acting
upon this advice, the leading citizens met in the Cotton Exchange Building the
same evening, and threats of lynching were freely indulged, not by the lawless
element upon which the deviltry of the South is usually saddledÄbut by the
leading business men, in their leading business centre. Mr. Fleming, the
business manager and owning a half interest the Free Speech, had to leave town
to escape the mob, and was afterwards ordered not to return; letters and telegrams
sent me in New York where I was spending my vacation advised me that bodily
harm awaited my return. Creditors took possession of the office and sold the
outfit, and the "Free Speech" was as if it had never been.
The
editorial in question was prompted by the many inhuman and fiendish lynchings
of Afro-Americans which have recently taken place and was meant as a warning.
Eight lynched in one week and five of them charged with rape! The thinking
public will not easily believe freedom and education more brutalizing than
slavery, and the world knows that the crime of rape was unknown during four
years of civil war, when the white women of the South were at the mercy of the race
which is all at once charged with being a bestial one.
Since
my business has been destroyed and I am an exile from home because of that
editorial, the issue has been forced, and as the writer of it I feel that the
race and the public generally should have a statement of the facts as they
exist. They will serve at the same time as a defense for the Afro-Americans
Sampsons who suffer themselves to be betrayed by white Delilahs.
The
whites of Montgomery, Ala., knew J. C. Duke sounded the keynote of the
situationÄwhich they would gladly hide from the world, when he said in his
paper, `The Herald," five years ago: "Why is it that white women
attract negro men now more than in former days? There was a time when such a
thing was unheard of. There is a secret to this thing, and we greatly suspect
it is the growing appreciation of white Juliets for colored Romeos." Mr.
Duke, like the "Free Speech" proprietors, was forced to leave the
city for reflecting on the "honah" of white women and his paper
suppressed; but the truth remains that Afro-American men do not always rape (?)
white women without their consent.
Mr.
Duke, before leaving Montgomery, signed a card disclaiming any intention of
slandering Southern white women. The editor of the "Free Speech" has
no disclaimer to enter, but asserts instead that there are many white women in
the South who would marry colored men if such an act would not place them at
once beyond the pale of society and within the clutches of the law. The
miscegnation laws of the South only operate against the legitimate union of the
races; they leave the white man free to seduce all the colored girls he can, but
it is death to the colored man who yields to the force and advances of a similar
attraction in white women. White men lynch the offending Afro-American, not
because he is a despoiler of virtue, but because he succumbs to the smiles of
white women.
CHAPTER
II. THE BlACK AND WHITE OF IT
The
"Cleveland Gazette" of January 16, 1892, publishes a case in point. Mrs.
J. S. Underwood, the wife of a minister of Elyria, Ohio, accused an
Afro-American of rape. She told her husband that during his absence in 1888,
stumping the State for the Prohibition Party, the man came to the kitchen door,
forced his way in the house and insulted her. She tried to drive him out with a
heavy poker, but he overpowered and chloroformed her, and when she revived her
clothing was torn and she was in a horrible condition. She did not know the man
but could identify him. She pointed out William Offett, a married man who was
arrested and, being in Ohio, was granted a trial.
The
prisoner vehemently denied the charge of rape, but confessed he went to Mrs.
Underwood's residence at her invitation and was criminally intimate with her at
her request. This availed him nothing against the sworn testimony of a
minister's wife, a lady of the highest respectability. He was found guilty, and
entered the penitentiary, December 14, 1888, for fifteen years. Some time
afterwards the woman's remorse led her to confess to her husband that the man
was innocent.
These
are her words: "I met Offett at the Post Office. It was raining. He was
polite to me, and as I had several bundles in my arms he offered to carry them
home for me, which he did. He had a strange fascination for me, and I invited
him to call on me. He called, bringing chestnuts and candy for the children. By
this means we got them to leave us alone in the room. Then I sat on his lap. He
made a proposal to me and I readily consented. Why I did so, I do not know, but
that I did is true. He visited me several times after that and each time I was indiscreet.
I did not care after the first time. In fact I could not have resisted, and had
no desire to resist."
When
asked by her husband why she told him she had been outraged, she said: "I
had several reasons for telling you. One was the neighbors saw the fellows
here, another was, I was afraid I had contracted a loathsome disease, and still
another was that I feared I might give birth to a Negro baby. I hoped to save
my reputation by telling you a deliberate lie." Her husband horrified by
the confession had Offett, who had already served four years, released and
secured a divorce.
There
are thousands of such cases throughout the South, with the difference that the
Southern white men in insatiate fury wreak their vengeance without intervention
of law upon the Afro-Americans who consort with their women. A few instances to
substantiate the assertion that some white women love the company of the
Afro-American will not be out of place. Most of these cases were reported by the
daily papers of the South.
In the
winter of 1885Ä6 the wife of a practicing physician in Memphis, in good social
standing whose name has escaped me, left home, husband and children, and ran
away with her black coachman. She was with him a month before her husband found
and brought her home. The coachman could not be found. The doctor moved his family
away from Memphis, and is living in another city under an assumed name.
In the
same city last year a white girl in the dusk of evening screamed at the
approach of some parties that a Negro had assaulted her on the street. He was
captured, tried by a white judge and jury, that acquitted him of the charge. It
is needless to add if there had been a scrap of evidence on which to convict
him of so grave a charge he would have been convicted.
Sarah
Clark of Memphis loved a black man and lived openly with him. When she was
indicted last spring for miscegenation, she swore in court that she was not a
white woman. This she did to escape the the penitentiary and continued her
illicit relation undisturbed. That she is of the lower class of whites, does
not disturb the fact that she is a white woman. `The leading citizens" of
Memphis are defending the "honor" of all white women, demi-monde
included.
Since
the manager of the "Free Speech" has been run away from Memphis by
the guardians of the honor of Southern white women, a young girl living on
Poplar St., who was discovered in intimate relations with a handsome mulatto
young colored man, Will Morgan by name, stole her father's money to send the
young fellow away from that father's wrath. She has since joined him in
Chicago.
The
Memphis "Ledger" for June 8th has the following; "If Lillie Bailey,
a rather pretty white girl seventeen years of age, who is now at the City
Hospital, would be somewhat less reserved about her disgrace there would be
some very nauseating details in the story of her life. She is the mother of a
little coon. The truth might reveal fearful depravity or it might reveal the
evidence of a rank outrage. She will not divulge the name of the man who has
left such black evidence of her disgrace. and, in fact, says it is a matter in
which there can be no interest to the outside world. She came to Memphis nearly
three months ago and was taken in at the Woman's Refuge in the southern part of
the city. She remained there until a few weeks ago, when the child was born.
The ladies in charge of the Refuge were horified. The girl was at once sent to
the City Hospital, where she has been since May 30th. She is a country girl.
She came to Memphis from her father's farm, a short distance from Hemando,
Miss. Just when she left there she would not say. In fact she says she came to
Memphis from Arkansas, and says her home is in that State. She is rather good
looking, has blue eyes, a low forehead and dark red hair. The ladies at the
Woman's Refuge do not know anything about the girl further than what they learned
when she was an inmate of the institution; and she would not tell much. When
the child was born an attempt was made to get the girl to reveal the name of
the Negro who had disgraced her, she obstinately refused and it was impossible
to elicit any information from her on the subject."
Note
the wording. `The truth might reveal fearful depravity or rank outrage."
If it had been a white child or Lillie Bailey had told a pitiful story of Negro
outrage, it would have been a case of woman's weakness or assault and she could
have remained at the Woman's Refuge. But a Negro child and to withhold its
father's name and thus prevent the killing of another Negro "rapist."
A case of "fearful depravity."
The
very week the "leading citizens" of Memphis were making a spectacle
of themselves in defense of all white women of every kind, an Afro-American,
Mr. Stricklin, was found in a white woman's room in that city. Although she
made no outcry of rape, he was jailed and would have been lynched, but the
woman stated she bought curtains of him (he was a furniture dealer) and his
business in her room that night was to put them up. A white woman's word was
taken as absolutely in this case as when the cry of rape is made, and he was
freed.
What is
true of Memphis is true of the entire South. The daily papers last year
reported a farmer's wife in Alabama had given birth to a Negro child. When the
Negro farm hand who was plowing in the field heard it he took the mule from the
plow and fled. The dispatches also told of a woman in South Carolina who gave
birth to a Negro child and charged three men with being its father, every one
of whom has since disappeared. In Tuscumbia, Ala., the colored boy who was lynched
there last year for assaulting a white girl told her before his accusers that
he had met her there in the woods often before.
Frank
Weems of Chattanooga who was not lynched in May only because the prominent
citizens became his body guard until the doors of the penitentiary closed on
him, had letters in his pocket from the white woman in the case, making the
appointment with him. Edward Coy who was burned alive in Texarkana, January 1,
1892, died protesting his innocence. Investigation since as given by the
Bystander in the Chicago Inter-Ocean, October 1, proves:
1. The woman who was paraded as a victim of
violence was of bad character; her husband was a drunkard and a gambler.
2. She
was publicly reported and generally known to have been criminally intimate with
Coy for more than a year previous.
3. She
was compelled by threats, if not by violence, to make the charge against the
victim[.]
4. When
she came to apply the match Coy asked her if she would burn him after they had
`been sweethearting' so long.
5. A
large majority of the `superior' white men prominent in the affair are the
reputed fathers of mulatto children.
These are not pleasant facts, but they are
illustrative of the vital phase of the so-called `race question,' which should
properly be designated an earnest inquiry as to the best methods by which
religion, science, law and political power may be employed to excuse injustice,
barbarity and crime done to a people because of race and color. There can be no
possible belief that these people were inspired by any consuming zeal to vindicate
God's law against miscegnationists of the most practical sort. The woman was a
willing partner in the victim's guilt, and being of the `superior' race must naturally
have been more guilty."
In
Natchez, Miss., Mrs. Marshall, one of the creme de la creme of the city,
created a tremendous sensation several years ago. She has a black coachman who
was married, and had been in her employ several years. During this time she
gave birth to a child whose color was remarked, but traced to some brunette
ancestor, and one of the fashionable dames of the city was its godmother. Mrs.
Marshall's social position was unquestioned, and wealth showered every dainty
on this child which was idolized with its brothers and sisters by its white
papa. In course of time another child appeared on the scene, but it was
unmistakably dark. All were alarmed, and "rush of blood,
strangulation" were the conjectures, but the doctor, when asked the cause,
grimly told them it was a Negro child. There was a family conclave, the
coachman heard of it and leaving his own family went West, and has never
returned. As soon as Mrs. Marshall was able to travel she was sent away in deep
disgrace. Her husband died within the year of a broken heart.
Ebenzer
Fowler, the wealthiest colored man in Issaquena County, Miss., was shot down on
the street in Mayersville, January 30, 1885, just before dark by an armed body
of white men who filled his body with bullets. They charged him with writing a
note to a white woman of the place, which they intercepted and which proved
there was an intimacy existing between them.
Hundreds
of such cases might be cited, but enough have been given to prove the assertion
that there are white women in the South who love the Afro-American's company
even as there are white men notorious for their preference for Afro-American
women.
There
is hardly a town in the South which has not an instance of the kind which is
well-known, and hence the assertion is reiterated that "nobody in the
South believes the old thread bare lie that negro men rape white women."
Hence there is a growing demand among Afro-Americans that the guilt or innocence
of parties accused of rape be fully established. They know the men of the
section of the country who refuse this are not so desirous of punishing rapists
as they pretend. The utterances of the leading white men show that with them it
is not the crime but the class. Bishop Fitzgerald has become apologist for
lynchers of the rapists of white women only. Governor Tillman, of South
Carolina, in the month of June, standing under the tree in Barnwell, S.C., on
which eight Afro-Americans were hung last year, declared that he would lead a
mob to lynch a negro who raped a white woman [.1" So say the pulpits,
officials and newspapers of the South. But when the victim is a colored woman
it is different.
Last
winter in Baltimore, Md., three white ruffians assaulted a Miss Camphor, a
young Afro-American girl, while out walking with a young man of her own race.
They held her escort and outraged the girl. It was a deed dastardly enough to
arouse Southern blood, which gives its horror of rape as excuse for
lawlessness, but she was an AfroAmerican. The case went to the courts, an
Afro-American lawyer defended the men and they were acquitted.
In
Nashville, Tenn., there is a white man, Pat Hanifan, who outraged a little
Afro-American girl, and, from the physical injuries received, she has been
ruined for life. He was jailed for six months, discharged, and is now a
detective in that city. In the same city, last May, a white man outraged an
Afro-American girl in a drug store. He was arrested, and released on bail at
the trial. It was rumored that five hundred AfroAmericans had organized to
lynch him. Two hundred and fifty white citizens armed themselves with
Winchesters and guarded him. A cannon was placed in front of his home, and the
Buchanan Rifles (State Militia) ordered to the scene for his protection. The Afro-American
mob did not materialize. Only two weeks before Eph. Grizzard, who had only been
charged with rape upon a white woman, had been taken from the jail, with
Governor Buchanan and the police and militia standing by, dragged through the
streets in broad daylight, knives plunged into him at every step, and with
every fiendish cruelty a frenzied mob could devise, he was at last swnng out on
the bridge with hands cut to pieces as he tried to climb up the stanchions. A
naked, bloody example of the blood-thirstiness of the nineteenth century
civilization of the Athens of the South! No cannon or military was called out
in his defense. He dared to visit a white woman.
At the
very moment these civilized whites were announcing their determination "to
protect their wives and daughters," by murdering Grizzard, a white man was
in the same jail for raping eight-year-old Maggie Reese, an Afro-American girl.
He was not harmed. The "honor" of grown women who were glad enough to
be suppported by the Grizzard boys and Ed Coy, as long as the liasion was not known,
needed protection; they were white. The outrage upon helpless childhood needed
no avenging in this case; she was black.
A white
man in Guthrie, Oklahoma Territory, two months ago inflicted such injuries upon
another Afro-American child that she died. He was not punished, but an attempt
was made in the same town in the month of June to lynch an Afro-American who
visited a white woman.
In
Memphis, Tenn., in the month of June, Ellerton L. Dorr, who is the husband of
Russell Hancock's widow, was arrested for attempted rape on Mattie Cole, a
neighbor's cook; he was only prevented from accomplishing his purpose, by the
appearance of Mattie's employer. Dorr's friends say he was drunk and not
responsible for his actions. The grand jury refused to indict him and he was
discharged.
CHAPTER
III. THE NEW CRY
The
appeal of Southern whites to Northern sympathy and sanction, the adroit,
insiduous plea made by Bishop Fitzgerald for suspension of judgment because
those "who condemn lynching express no sympathy for the white woman in the
case," falls to the ground in the light of the foregoing.
From
this exposition of the race issue in lynch law, the whole matter is explained
by the well-known opposition growing out of slavery to the progress of the
race. This is crystalized in the oft-repeated slogan: `This is a white man's
country and the white man must rule." The South resented giving the
Afro-American his freedom, the ballot box and the Civil Rights Law. The raids
of the Ku-Klux and White Liners2 to subvert reconstruction government, the
Hamburg and Ellerton, S.C., the Copiah County Miss., and the Lafayette Parish,
La., massacres3 were excused as the natural resentment of intelligence against government
by ignorance.
Honest
white men practically conceded the necessity of intelligence murdering
ignorance to correct the mistake of the general government, and the race was
left to the tender mercies of the solid South. Thoughtful Afro-Americans with
the strong arm of the government withdrawn and with the hope to stop such
wholesale massacres urged the race to sacrifice its political rights for sake
of peace. They honestly believed the race should fit itself for government, and
when that should be done, the objection to race participation in politics would
be removed.
But the
sacrifice did not remove the trouble, nor move the South to justice. One by one
the Southern States have legally (?) disfranchised the Afro-American, and since
the repeal of the Civil Rights Bill nearly every Southern State has passed
separate car laws with a penalty against their infringement. The race
regardless of advancement is penned into filthy, stifling partitions cut off
from smoking cars. All this while, although the political cause has been
removed, the butcheries of black men at Barnwell, S.C., Carrolton, Miss.,
Waycross, Ga., and Memphis, Tenn., have gone on; also the flaying alive of a
man in Kentucky, the burning of one in Arkansas, the hanging of a fifteen year old
girl in Louisiana, a woman in Jackson, Tenn., and one in Hollendale, Miss.,
until the dark and bloody record of the South shows 728 Afro-Americans lynched
during the past 8 years. Not 50 of these were for political causes; the rest
were for all manner of accusations from that of rape of white women, to the
case of the boy Will Lewis who was hanged at Tullahoma, Tenn., last year for
being drunk and "sassy" to white folks.
These
statistics compiled by the Chicago `Tribune" were given the first of this
year (1892). Since then, not less than one hundred and fifty have been known to
have met violent death at the hands of cruel bloodthirsty mobs during the past
nine months.
To
palliate this record (which grows worse as the Afro-American becomes intelligent)
and excuse some of the most heinous crimes that ever stained the history of a
country, the South is shielding itself behind the plausible screen of defending
the honor of its women. This, too, in the face of the fact that only one-third
of the 728 victims to mobs have been charged with rape, to say nothing of those
of that onethird who were innocent of the charge. A white correspondent of the Baltimore
Sun declares that the Afro-American who was lynched in Chestertown, Md., in May
for assault on a white girl was innocent; that the deed was done by a white man
who had since disappeared. The girl herself maintained that her assailant was a
white man. When that poor Afro-American was murdered, the whites excused their refusal
of a trial on the ground that they wished to spare the white girl the
mortification of having to testify in court.
This
cry has had its effect. It has closed the heart, stifled the conscience, warped
the judgment and hushed the voice of press and pulpit on the subject of lynch
law throughout this "land of liberty." Men who stand high in the
esteem of the public for christian character, for moral and physical courage,
for devotion to the principles of equal and exact justice to all, and for great
sagacity, stand as cowards who fear to open their mouths before this great
outrage. They do not see that by their tacit encouragement, their silent
acquiescence, the black shadow of lawlessness in the form of lynch law is
spreading its wings over the whole country.
Men
who, like Governor Tillman, start the ball of lynch law rolling for a certain
crime, are powerless to stop it when drunken or criminal white toughs feel like
hanging an Afro-American on any pretext.
Even to
the better class of Afro-Americans the crime of rape is so revolting they have
too often taken the white man's word and given lynch law neither the
investigation nor condemnation it deserved.
They
forget that a concession of the right to lynch a man for a certain crime, not
only concedes the right to lynch any person for any crime, but (so frequently
is the cry of rape now raised) it is in a fair way to stamp us a race of
rapists and desperadoes. They have gone on hoping and believing that general education
and financial strength would solve the difficulty, and are devoting their
energies to the accumulation of both.
The mob
spirit has grown with the increasing intelligence of the Afro-American. It has
left the out-of-the-way places where ignorance prevails, has thrown off the
mask and with this new cry stalks in broad daylight in large cities, the
centres of civilization, and is encouraged by the "leading citizens"
and the press.
CHAPTER
IV. THE MALICIOUS AND UNTRUTHFUL WHITE PRESS The "Daily Commercial"
and "Evening Scimitar" of Memphis, Tenn., are owned by leading
business men of that city, and yet, in spite of the fact that there had been no
white woman in Memphis outraged by an Afro-American, and that Memphis possessed
a thrifty law-abiding, property owning class of Afro-Americans the
"Commercial" of May 17th, under the head of "More Rapes, More
Lynchings" gave utterance to the following:
["IThe
lynching of three Negro scoundrels reported in our dispatches from Anniston,
Ala., for a brutal outrage committed upon a white woman will be a text for much
comment on "Southern barbarism" by Northern newspapers; but we fancy
it will hardly prove effective for campaign purposes among intelligent people.
The frequency of these lynchings calls attention to the frequency of the crimes
which causes lynching. The "Southern barbarism" which deserves the
serious attention of all people North and South, is the barbarism which preys
upon weak and defenseless women. Nothing but the most prompt, speedy and
extreme punishment can hold in check the horrible and beastial propensities of
the Negro race. There is a strange similarity about a number of cases of this
character which have lately occurred.
In each
case the crime was deliberately planned and perpetrated by several Negroes.
They watched for an opportunity when the women were left without a protector.
It was not a sudden yielding to a fit of passion, but the consummation of a
devilish purpose which has been seeking and waiting for the opportunity. This
feature of the crime not only makes it the most fiendishly brutal, but it adds
to the terror of the situation in the thinly settled country communities. No
man can leave his family at night without the dread that some roving Negro ruffian
is watching and waiting for this opportunity. The swift punishment which
invariably follows these horrible crimes doubtless acts as a deterring effect
upon the Negroes in that immediate neighborhood for a short time. But the
lesson is not widely learned nor long remembered. Then such crimes, equally
atrocious, have happened in quick succession, one in Tennessee, one in
Arkansas, and one in Alabama. The facts of the crime appear to appeal more to
the Negro's lustful imagination than the facts of the punishment do to his
fears. He sets aside all fear of death in any form when opportunity is found
for the gratification of his bestial desires.
There
is small reason to hope for any change for the better. The commission of this
crime grows more frequent every year. The generation of Negroes which have
grown up since the war have lost in large measure the traditional and wholesome
awe of the white race which kept the Negroes in subjection, even when their
masters were in the army, and their families left unprotected except by the
slaves themselves. There is no longer a restraint upon the brute passion of the
Negro.
What is
to be done? The crime of rape is always horrible, but the Southern man there is
nothing which so fills the soul with horror, loathing and fury as the outraging
of a white woman by a Negro. It is the race question in the ugliest, vilest,
most dangerous aspect. The Negro as a political factor can be controlled. But
neither laws nor lynchings can subdue his lusts. Sooner or later it will force
a crisis. We do not know in what form it will come."
In its
issue of June 4th, the Memphis "Evening Scimitar" gives the following
excuse for lynch law:
"Aside
from the violation of white women by Negroes, which is the outcropping of a
bestial perversion of instinct, the chief cause of trouble between the races in
the South is the Negro's lack of manners. In the the state of slavery he
learned politeness from association with white people, who took pains to teach
him. Since the emancipation came and the tie of mutual interest and regard
between master and servant was broken, the Negro has drifted away into a state
which is neither freedom nor bondage. Lacking the proper inspiration of the one
and the restraining force of the other he has taken up the idea that boorish
insolence is independence, and the exercise of a decent degree of breeding
toward white people is identical with servile submission. In consequence of the
prevalence of this notion there are many Negroes who use every opportunity to make
themselves offensive, particularly when they think it can be done with
impunity.
We have
had too many instances right here in Memphis to doubt this, and our experience
is not exceptional. The white people won't stand this sort of thing, and
whether they be insulted as individuals are as a race, the response will be
prompt and effectual. The bloody riot of 1866, in which so many Negroes
perished, was brought on principally by the outrageous conduct of the blacks
toward the whites on the streets. It is also a remarkable and discouraging fact
that the majority of such scoundrels are Negroes who have received educational advantages
at the hands of the white taxpayers. They have got just enough of learning to
make them realize how hopelessly their race is behind the other in everything
that makes a great people, and they attempt to "get even" by insolence,
which is ever the resentment of inferiors. There are well-bred Negroes among
us, and it is truly unfortunate that they should have to pay, even in part, the
penalty of the offenses committed by the baser sort, but this is the way of the
world. The innocent must suffer for the guilty. If the Negroes as a people
possessed a hundredth part of the self-respect which is evidenced by the courteous
bearing of some that the "Scimitar" could name, the friction between the
races would be reduced to a minimum. It will not do to beg the question by
pleading that many white men are also stirring up strife. The Caucasian
blackguard simply obeys the promptings of a depraved disposition, and he is
seldom deliberately rough or offensive toward strangers or unprotected women.
The
Negro tough, on the contrary, is given to just that kind of offending, and he
almost invariably singles out white people as his victims."
On
March 9th, 1892, there were lynched in this same city three of the best
specimens of young since-the-war Afro-American manhood. They were peaceful,
law-abiding citizens and energetic business men.
They
believed the problem was to be solved by eschewing politics and putting money
in the purse. They owned a flourishing grocery business in a thickly populated
suburb of Memphis, and a white man named Barrett had one on the opposite
corner. After a personal difficulty which Barrett sought by going into the
"People's Grocery" drawing a pistol and was thrashed by Calvin
McDowell, he (Barrett) threatened to "clean them out." These men were
a mile beyond the city limits and police protection; hearing that Barrett's
crowd was coming to attack them Saturday night, they mustered forces and
prepared to defend themselves against the attack.
When
Barrett came he led a posse of officers, twelve in number, who afterward
claimed to be hunting a man for whom they had a warrant. That twelve men in
citizen's clothes should think it necessary to go in the night to hunt one man
who had never before been arrested, or made any record as a criminal has never
been explained. When they entered the back door the young men thought the
threatened attack was on, and fired into them. Three of the officers were wounded,
and when the defending party found it was officers of the law upon whom they
had fired, they ceased and got away.
Thirty-one
men were arrested and thrown in jail as "conspirators," although they
all declared more than once they did not know they were firing on officers.
Excitement was at fever heat until the morning papers, two days after,
announced that the wounded deputy sheriffs were out of danger. This hindered
rather than helped the plans of the whites. There was no law on the statute
books which would execute an Afro-American for wounding a white man, but the
"unwritten law" did. Three of these men, the president, the manager
and clerk of the groceryÄ"the leaders of the conspiracy"Äwere
secretly taken from jail and lynched in a shockingly brutal manner. `The
Negroes are getting too independent," they say, "we must teach them a
lesson."
What
lesson? The lesson of subordination. "Kill the leaders and it will cow the
Negro who dares to shoot a white man, even in selfdefense."
Although
the race was wild over the outrage, the mockery of law and justice which
disarmed men and locked them up in jails where they could be easily and safely
reached by the mob Äthe AfroAmerican ministers, newspapers and leaders counselled
obedience to the law which did not protect them.
Their
counsel was heeded and not a hand was uplifted to resent the outrage; following
the advice of the "Free Speech," people left the city in great
numbers.
The
dailies and associated press reports heralded these men to the country as
"toughs," and "Negro desperadoes who kept a low dive." This
same press service printed that the Negro who was lynched at Indianola, Miss.,
in May, had outraged the sheriff's eightyear-old daughter[.] The girl was more
than eighteen years old, and was found by her father in this man's room, who
was a servant on the place.
Not
content with misrepresenting the race, the mob-spirit was not to be satisfied
until the paper which was doing all it could to counteract this impression was
silenced. The colored people were resenting their bad treatment in a way to
make itself felt, yet gave the mob no excuse for further murder, until the
appearance of the editorial which is construed as a reflection on the
"honor" of the Southern white women. It is not half so libelous as
that of the "Commercial" which appeared four days before, and which
has been given in these pages. They would have lynched the manager of the
"Free Speech" for exercising the right of free speech if they had
found him as quickly as they would have hung a rapist, and glad of the excuse
to do so. The owners were ordered not to return, `The Free Speech" was
suspended with as little compunction as the business of the "People's
Grocery" broken up and the proprietors murdered.
CHAPTER
V. THE SOUTH'S POSITION
Henry
W. Grady in his well-remembered speeches in New England and New York pictured
the Afro-American as incapable of selfgovernment. Through him and other leading
men the cry of the South to the country has been "Hands off Leave us to
solve our problem." To the Afro-American the South says, "the white
man must and will rule." There is little difference between the
Ante-bellum South and the New South.
Her
white citizens are wedded to any method however revolting, any measure however
extreme, for the subjugation of the young manhood of the race. They have
cheated him out of his ballot, deprived him of civil rights or redress therefor
in the civil courts, robbed him of the fruits of his labor, and are still
murdering, burning and lynching him.
The
result is a growing disregard of human life. Lynch law has spread its insiduous
influence till men in New York State, Pennsylvania and on the free Western
plains feel they can take the law in their own hands with impunity, especially
where an Afro-American is concerned. The South is brutalized to a degree not
realized by its own inhabitants, and the very foundation of government, law and
order, are imperilled.
Public
sentiment has had a slight "reaction" though not sufficient to stop
the crusade of lawlessness and lynching. The spirit of christianity of the
great M. E. Church was aroused to the frequent and revolting crimes against a
weak people, enough to pass strong condemnatory resolutions at its General
Conference in Omaha last May. The spirit of justice of the grand old party
asserted itself sufficiently to secure a denunciation of the wrongs, and a feeble
declaration of the belief in human rights in the Republican platform at
Minneapolis, June 7th. Some of the great dailies and weeklies have swung into
line declaring that lynch law must go. The President of the United States6 issued
a proclamation that it be not tolerated in the territories over which he has
jurisdiction. Governor Northern and Chief Justice Bleckley of Georgia have
proclaimed against it. The citizens of Chattanooga, Tenn., have set a worthy
example in that they not only condemn lynch law, but her public men demanded a
trial for Weems, the accused rapist, and guarded him while the trial was in
progress. The trial only lasted ten minutes, and Weems chose to plead guilty
and accept twenty-one years sentence, than invite the certain death which awaited
him outside that cordon of police if he had told the truth and shown the
letters he had from the white woman in the case.
Col. A.
S. Colyar, of Nashville, Tenn., is so overcome with the horrible state of affairs
that he addressed the following earnest letter to the Nashville
"American." "Nothing since I have been a reading man has so
impressed me with the decay of manhood among the people of Tennssee as the
dastardly submission to the mob reign. We have reached the unprecedented low
level; the awful criminal depravity of substituting the mob for the court and
jury, of giving up the jail keys to the mob whenever they are demanded. We do
it in the largest cities and in the country towns; we do it in midday; we do it
after full, not to say formal, notice, and so thoroughly and generally is it acquiesced
in that the murderers have discarded the formula of masks. They go into the
town where everybody knows them, sometimes under the gaze of the governor, in
the presence of the courts, in the presence of the sheriff and his deputies, in
the presence of the entire police force, take out the prisoner, take his life,
often with fiendish glee, and often with acts of cruelty and barbarism which
impress the reader with a degeneracy rapidly approaching savage life. That the
State is disgraced but faintly expresses the humiliation which has settled upon
the once proud people of Tennessee. The State, in its majesty, through its organized
life, for which the people pay liberally, makes but one record, but one note,
and that a criminal falsehood, `was hung by persons to the jury unknown.' The
murder at Shelbyville is only a verification of what every intelligent man knew
would come, because with a mob a rumor is as good as a proof."
These
efforts brought forth apologies and a short halt, but the lynching mania was
raged again through the past three months with unabated fury.
The
strong arm of the law must be brought to bear upon lynchers in severe
punishment, but this cannot and will not be done unless a healthy public
sentiment demands and sustains such action.
The men
and women in the South who disapprove of lynching and remain silent on the
perpetration of such outrages, are particeps criminis, accomplices, accessories
before and after the fact, equally guilty with the actual law-breakers who
would not persist if they did not know that neither the law nor militia would
be employed against them.
CHAPTER
VI. SELF HELP In the creation of this healthier public sentiment, the Afro-American
can do for himself what no one else can do for him, The world looks on with
wonder that we have conceded so much and remain lawabiding under such great outrage
and provocation.
To
Northern capital and Afro-American labor the South owes its rehabilitation. If
labor is withdrawn capital will not remain. The AfroAmerican is thus the
backbone of the South. A thorough knowledge and judicious exercise of this
power in lynching localities could many times effect a bloodless revolution.
The white man's dollar is his god, and to stop this will be to stop outrages in
many localities.
The
Afro Americans of Memphis denounced the lynching of three of their best
citizens, and urged and waited for the authorities to act in the matter and
bring the lynchers to justice. No attempt was made to do so, and the black men
left the city by thousands, bringing about great stagnation in every branch of
business. Those who remained so injured the business of the street car company
by staying off the cars, that the superintendent, manager and treasurer called
personally on the editor of the "Free Speech," asked them to urge our
people to give them their patronage again. Other business men became alarmed
over the situation and the "Free Speech" was run away that the
colored people might be more easily controlled. A meeting of white citizens in June,
three months after the lynching, passed resolutions for the first time,
condemning it. But they did not punish the lynchers. Every one of them was
known by name, because they had been selected to do the dirty work, by some of
the very citizens who passed these resolutions. Memphis is fast losing her
black population, who proclaim as they go that there is no protection for the
life and property of any AfroAmerican citizen in Memphis who is not a slave.
The
Afro-American citizens of Kentucky, whose intellectual and financial improvement
has been phenomenal, have never had a separate car law until now. Delegations
and petitions poured into the Legislature against it, yet the bill passed and
the Jim Crow Car of Kentucky is a legalized institution. Will the great mass of
Negroes continue to patronize the railroad? A special from Covington, Ky., says:
Covington,
June 13th. ÄThe railroads of the State are beginning to feel very markedly, the
effects of the separate coach bill recently passed by the Legislature. No class
of people in the State have so many and so largely attended excursions as the
blacks. All these have been abandoned, and regular travel is reduced to a
minimum. A competent authority says the loss to the various roads will reach $1,000,000
this year.
A call
to a State Conference in Lexington, Ky,, last June had delegates from every
county in the State. Those delegates, the ministers, teachers, heads of secret
and others orders, and the head of every every family should pas the word around
for every member of the race in Kentucky to stay off railroads unless obliged
to ride[.] If they did so, and their advice was followed persistently the
convention would not need to petition the Legislature to repeal the law or
raise money to file a suit. The railroad corporations would be so effected they
would in sell-defense lobby to have the separate car law repealed. On the other
hand, as long as the railroads can get Afro-American excursions they will
always have plenty of money to fight all the suits brought against them. They
will be aided in so doing by the same partisan public sentiment which passed
the law. White men passed the law, and white judges and juries would pass upon
the suits against the law, and render judgment in line with their prejudices
and in deference to the greater financial power.
The
appeal to the white man's pocket has ever been more effectual than all the
appeals ever made to his conscience. Nothing, absolutely nothing, is to be
gained by a further sacrifice of manhood and selfrespect. By the right exercise
of his power as the industrial factor of the South, the Afro-American can
demand and secure his rights, the punishment of lynchers, and a fair trial for
accused rapists.
Of the
many inhuman outrages of this present year, the only case where the proposed
lynching did not occur, was where the men armed themselves in Jacksonville,
Fla., and Paducah, Ky., and prevented it. The only times an Afro-American who
was assaulted got away has been when he had a gun and used it in self-defense.
The
lesson this teaches and which every Afro American should ponder well, is that a
Winchester rifle should have a place of honor in every black home, and it
should be used for that protection which the law refuses to give. When the
white man who is always the aggressor knows he runs as great risk of biting the
dust every time his AfroAmerican victim does, he will have greater respect for Afro-American
life. The more the Afro-American yields and cringes and begs, the more he has
to do so, the more he is insulted, outraged and lynched.
The
assertion has been substantiated throughout these pages that the press contains
unreliable and doctored reports of lynchings, and one of the most necessary
things for the race to do is to get these facts before the public. The people
must know before they can act, and there is no educator to compare with the
press.
The
Afro-American papers are the only ones which will print the truth, and they
lack means to employ agents and detectives to get at the facts. The race must
rally a mighty host to the support of their journals, and thus enable them to
do much in the way of investigation.
A
lynching occurred at Port Jarvis, N.Y., the first week in June. A white and
colored man were implicated in the assault upon a white girl. It was charged
that the white man paid the colored boy to make the assault, which he did on
the public highway in broad day time, and was lynched. This, too was done by
"parties unknown." The white man in the case still lives. He was
imprisoned and promises to fight the case on trial. At the preliminary
examination, it developed that he had been a suitor of the girl's. She had
repulsed and refused him, yet had given him money, and he had sent threatening
letters demanding more.
The day
before this examination she was so wrought up, she left home and wandered miles
away. When found she said she did so because she was afraid of the man's
testimony. Why should she be afraid of the prisoner? Why should she yield to
his demands for money if not to prevent him exposing something he knew? It
seems explainable only on the hypothesis that a liason existed between the colored
boy and the girl, and the white man knew of it. The press is singularly silent.
Has it a motive? We owe it to ourselves to find out.
The
story comes from Larned, Kansas, Oct. 1st, that a young white lady held at bay
until daylight, without alarming any one in the house, "a burly
Negro" who entered her room and bed. The "burly Negro" was
promptly lynched without investigation or examination of inconsistant stories.
A house
was found burned down near Montgomery, Ala., in Monroe County, Oct. 13th, a few
weeks ago; also the burned bodies of the owners and melted piles of gold and
silver.
These
discoveries led to the conclusion that the awful crime was not prompted by
motives of robbery. The suggestion of the whites was that "brutal lust was
the incentive, and as there are nearly 200 Negroes living within a radius of
five miles of the place the conclusion was inevitable that some of them were
the perpetrators."
Upon
this "suggestion" probably made by the real criminal, the mob acted upon
the "conclusion" and arrested ten Afro-Americans, four of whom, they
tell the world, confessed to the deed of murdering Richard L. Johnson and
outraging his daughter, Jeanette. These four men, Berrell Jones, Moses Johnson,
Jim and John Packer, none of them 25 years of age, upon this conclusion, were
taken from jail, hanged, shot, and burned while yet alive the night of Oct.
12th. The same report says Mr. Johnson was on the best of terms with his Negro
tenants.
The
race thus outraged must find out the facts of this awful hurling of men into
eternity on supposition, and give them to the indifferent and apathetic
country. We feel this to be a garbled report, but how can we prove it?
Near
Vicksburg, Miss., a murder was committed by a gang of burglars. Of course it
must have been done by Negroes, and Negroes were arrested for it. It is
believed that 2 men, Smith Tooley and John Adams belonged to a gang controlled
by white men and, fearing exposure, on the night of July 4th, they were hanged
in the Court House yard by those interested in silencing them. Robberies since committed
in the same vicinity have been known to be by white men who had their faces
blackened. We strongly believe in the innocence of these murdered men, but we
have no proof. No other news goes out to the world save that which stamps us as
a race of cut-throats, robbers and lustful wild beasts. So great is Southern
hate and prejudice, they legally (?) hung poor little thirteen year old Mildrey
Brown at Columbia, S.C., Oct. 7th, on the circumstantial evidence that she poisoned
a white infant. If her guilt had been proven unmistakably, had she been white,
Mildrey Brown would never have been hung.
The
country would have been aroused and South Carolina disgraced forever for such a
cnme. The Afro American himself did not know as he should have known as his
journals should be in a position to have him know and act.
Nothing
is more definitely settled than he must act for himself. I have shown how he
may employ the boycott, emigration and the press, and I feel that by a
combination of all these agencies can be effectually stamped out lynch law,
that last relic of barbarism and slavery. `The gods help those who help themselves."