Posted: January 15th, 2024
The Negro Holocaust: Lynching and Race Riots in the United
Yale-New Haven Teachers Institute.yale.edu/ynhti/">Home.0/msohtmlclip1/01/clip_image001.jpg" alt="Description: http://www.yale.edu/ynhti/pix/bluegrad.jpg">.0/msohtmlclip1/01/clip_image002.jpg" alt="Description: http://www.yale.edu/ynhti/pix/greengrad.jpg">The
Negro Holocaust: Lynching and Race Riots in the United States,1880-1950
by
Robert A. GibsonContents of Curriculum Unit 79.02.04:.yale.edu/ynhti/curriculum/units/1979/2/79.02.04.x.html#a">Narrative
.yale.edu/ynhti/curriculum/units/1979/2/79.02.04.x.html#b">Lynching
.yale.edu/ynhti/curriculum/units/1979/2/79.02.04.x.html#c">Race
Riots
.yale.edu/ynhti/curriculum/units/1979/2/79.02.04.x.html#d">Black
Response
.yale.edu/ynhti/curriculum/units/1979/2/79.02.04.x.html#e">Notes
.yale.edu/ynhti/curriculum/units/1979/2/79.02.04.x.html#f">Utilization
of the Unit
.yale.edu/ynhti/curriculum/units/1979/2/79.02.04.x.html#g">Sequence
of Lessons
.yale.edu/ynhti/curriculum/units/1979/2/79.02.04.x.html#h">Sample
Lessons
.yale.edu/ynhti/curriculum/units/1979/2/79.02.04.x.html#i">Selected
Bibliography
.yale.edu/ynhti/curriculum/units/1979/2/79.02.04.x.html#j">Books
Recommended for Students.yale.edu/ynhti/curriculum/guides/1979/2/79.02.04.x.html">To
Guide EntryThe United States has a brutal history of domestic
violence. It is an ugly episode in our national history that has long been
neglected. Of the several varieties of American violence, one type stands out
as one of the most inhuman chapters in the history of the world�the
violence committed against Negro citizens in America by white people. This unit
of post Reconstruction Afro-American history will examine anti-Black violence
from the 1880s to the 1950s. The phenomenon of lynching and the major race
riots of this period, called the American Dark Ages by historian Rayford W.
Logan, will be covered.
Immediately following the end of
Reconstruction, the Federal Government of the United States restored white
supremacist control to the South and adopted a �laissez-faire�
policy in regard to the Negro. The Negro was betrayed by his country. This
policy resulted in Negro disfranchisement, social, educational and employment
discrimination, and peonage. Deprived of their civil and human rights, Blacks
were reduced to a status of quasislavery or �second-class�
citizenship. A tense atmosphere of racial hatred, ignorance and fear bred
lawless mass violence, murder and lynching.
This unit is divided into three sections: 1)
lynchings, 2) the most significant race riots between 1898 and 1943 and 3) the
Black response to these acts of violence.
.yale.edu/ynhti/curriculum/units/1979/2/79.02.04.x.html#top">.0/msohtmlclip1/01/clip_image003.gif" alt="Description: to top">LYNCHING
In the last decades of the
nineteenth century, the lynching of Black people in the Southern and border
states became an institutionalized method used by whites to terrorize Blacks
and maintain white supremacy. In the South, during the period 1880 to 1940,
there was deep-seated and all-pervading hatred and fear of the Negro which led
white mobs to turn to �lynch law�
as a means of social control. Lynchings�open public murders of
individuals suspected of crime conceived and carried out more or less
spontaneously by a mob�seem to have been an American
invention. In Lynch-Law, the first scholarly investigation of lynching,
written in 1905, author James E. Cutler stated that �lynching
is a criminal practice which is peculiar to the United States.�1
Most of the lynchings were by hanging or
shooting, or both. However, many were of a more hideous nature�burning
at the stake, maiming, dismemberment, castration, and other brutal methods of
physical torture. Lynching therefore was a cruel combination of racism and
sadism, which was utilized primarily to sustain the caste system in the South.
Many white people believed that Negroes could only be controlled by fear. To
them, lynching was seen as the most effective means of control.
There are three major sources of lynching
statistics. None cover the complete history of lynching in America. Prior to
1882, no reliable statistics of lynchings were recorded. In that year, the Chicago
Tribune first began to take systematic account of lynchings. Shortly
thereafter, in 1892, Tuskegee Institute began to make a systematic collection
and tabulation of lynching statistics. Beginning in 1912, the National
Association for the Advancement of Colored People kept an independent record of
lynchings.
These statistics were based primarily on
newspaper reports. Because the South is so large and the rural districts had
not always been in close contact with the city newspapers, it is certain that
many lynchings escaped publicity in the press. Undoubtedly, therefore, there
are errors and inaccuracies in the available lynching statistics.
The numbers of lynchings listed in each source
varies slightly. The NAACP lynching statistics tend to be slightly higher than
the Tuskegee Institute figures, which some historians consider �conservative.�
For example, in 1914, Tuskegee Institute reported fifty-two lynchings for the
year, the �Chicago
Tribune�
reported fifty-four, and The Crisis, the official organ of the
NAACP,gave the number as seventy-four.2 The reason for the
discrepancies in these figures is due in part to different conceptions of what
actually constituted a lynching, and errors in the figures. According to the
Tuskegee Institute figures, between the years 1882 and 1951, 4,730 people were
lynched in the United States: 3,437 Negro and 1,293 white.3 The
largest number of lynchings occurred in 1892. Of the 230 persons lynched that
year, 161 were Negroes and sixty-nine whites.
Contrary to present-day popular conception, lynching
was not a crime committed exclusively against Black people. During the
nineteenth century a significant minority of the lynching victims were white.
Between the 1830s and the 1850s the majority of those lynched in the United
States were whites. Although a substantial number of white people were victims
of this crime, the vast majority of those lynched, by the 1890s and after the
turn of the century, were Black people. Actually, the pattern of almost
exclusive lynching of Negroes was set during the Reconstruction period.
According to the Tuskegee Institute statistics for the period covered in this
study, the total number of Black lynching victims was more than two and
one-half times as many as the number of whites put to death by lynching.
Lynchings occurred throughout the United
States; it was not a sectional crime. However, the great majority of lynchings
in the United States took place in the Southern and border states. According to
social economist Gunnar Myrdal: �The Southern states account
for nine-tenths of the lynchings. More than two-thirds of the remaining
one-tenth occurred in the six states which immediately border the South:
Maryland, West Virginia, Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, and Kansas.�4
Mississippi, Georgia, Texas, Louisiana, and Alabama were the leading lynching
states. These five states furnished nearly half the total victims. Mississippi
had the highest incidence of lynchings in the South as well as the highest for
the nation, with Georgia and Texas taking second and third places, respectively.
However, there were lynchings in the North and West. In fact, every state in
the continental United States with the exception of Massachusetts, Rhode
Island, New Hampshire and Vermont has had lynching casualties.
The causes assigned by whites in justification
or explanation of lynching Black people include everything from major crimes to
minor offenses. In many cases, Blacks were lynched for no reason at all other
than race prejudice. Southern folk tradition has held that Negroes were lynched
only for the crimes of raping white women��the nameless crime��and
murder. However, the statistics do not sustain this impression.
The accusations against persons lynched,
according to the Tuskegee Institute records for the years 1882 to 1951, were:
in 41 per cent for felonious assault, 19.2 per cent for rape, 6.1 per cent for
attempted rape, 4.9 per cent for robbery and theft, 1.8 per cent for insult to
white persons, and 22.7 per cent for miscellaneous offenses or no offense at a
11.5 In the last category are all sorts of trivial �offenses�
such as �disputing
with a white man,� attempting to register to vote, �unpopularity�,
self-defense, testifying against a white man, �asking a white woman
in marriage�,
and �peeping
in a window.�
Being charged with a crime did not necessarily
mean that the person charged was guilty of the crime. Mob victims ware often
known to have been innocent of misdeeds. A special study by Arthur Raper of
nearly one hundred lynchings convinced him that approximately one-third of the
victims were falsely accused.6 Occasionally mobs were mistaken in
the identity of their victims.
The racist myth of Negroes�
uncontrollable desire to rape white women acquired a strategic position in the
defense of the lynching practice. However, homicides and felonious assault, not
rape, were most frequently cited in explanation of mob action. Next in
importance, from the viewpoint of number of cases, is rape and attempted rape�25.3
per cent of the victims. Concerning this figure, Myrdal states: �There
is much reason to believe that this figure has been inflated by the fact that a
mob which makes the accusation of rape is secure from any further
investigation; by the broad Southern definition of rape to include all sexual
relations between Negro men and white women; and by the psychopathic fears of
white women in their contacts with Negro men.�7 Another
fact which refutes the fallacy of rape as being the primary cause of Negro
lynchings is that between 1882 and 1927, 92 women were victims of lynch mobs:
76 Negro and 16 white.8 Certainly they could not have been rapists.
The lynching of Negroes, Cutler states, �can
only be justified on no other ground than that the law as formulated and
administered has proved inadequate to deal with the situation�that
there has been governmental inefficiency...�9
Lynchings occurred most commonly in the smaller
towns and isolated rural communities of the South where people were poor,
mostly illiterate, and where there was a noticeable lack of wholesome community
recreation. The people who composed mobs in such neighborhoods were usually
small land holders, tenant farmers and common laborers, whose economic status
was very similar to that of the Negro. They frequently found Black men economic
competitors and bitterly resented any Negro progress. Their starved emotions
made the raising of a mob a quick and simple process, and racial antagonism
made the killing of Negroes a type of local amusement which broke the monotony
of rural life. Although most participants in the lynching mobs were from the
lower strata of Southern white society, occasionally middle and upper class
whites took part, and generally condoned the illegal activity. Many Southern
politicians and officials supported �lynch-law�,
and came to power on a platform of race prejudice.
Lynching was a local community affair. When the
sentiment of a community favored lynching the laws were difficult or impossible
to enforce. State authorities often attempted to prevent lynchings, but seldom
punished the mob participants. Because of the tight hold on the courts by local
public opinion, lynchers were rarely ever indicted by a grand jury or
sentenced. The judge, prosecutor, jurors and witnesses�all
white�were
usually in sympathy with the lynchers. If sentenced, the participants in the
lynch mobs were usually pardoned. Local police and sheriffs rarely did anything
to defend Negro citizens and often supported lynchings. Arthur Raper estimated,
from his study of one hundred lynchings, that �at least one-half of
the lynchings are carried out with police officers participating, and that in
nine-tenths of the others the officers either condone or wink at the mob
action.�10
Myrdal suggests several background factors and
underlying causes for the prevalence of lynching in rural areas by lower class
whites: poverty, economic and social fear of the Negro, low level of education,
and the �isolation,
the dullness of every day life and the general boredom of rural and small town
life.�11
However, the fundamental cause of lynching was fear of the Negro�the
basis of racism and discrimination. Many whites, after Reconstruction and
during the first four decades of the twentieth century, feared that the Negro
was �getting
out of his place� and that the white man�s
social status was threatened and was in need of protection. Lynching was seen
as the method to defend white domination and keep the Negroes from becoming �uppity�.
Therefore, lynching was more the expression of white American fear of Black
social and economic advancement than of Negro crime. W. E. B. DuBois was
correct when he stated: �...the white South feared
more than Negro dishonesty, ignorance and incompetency, Negro honesty,
knowledge, and efficiency.�12
After 1892, lynchings declined quite steadily
until about 1905, when there were sixty-two. No material change occurred for
nearly twenty years. There was an annual average of sixty-two lynchings for the
years 1910 to 1919. However, beginning in 1923 lynchings began to grow markedly
fewer, and in the late 1930s and 1940s trailed off and became rarer. During
these two decades, the annual rate of lynchings dropped to about ten and three
respectively. Although the actual number of lynchings declined after 1892, the
percentage of Black victims increased.
This decline has never been fully explained.
There has been much speculation about this matter, but several logical reasons
have been considered responsible for this steady decline in lynchings. Some
have suggested the growing distaste of Southern elites for anti-Negro violence,
particularly Southern women and businessmen. Others mention the increasing
urbanization of the South during the 1930s and 1940s. Moreover, statewide
police systems were developed which were willing to oppose local mobs, and the
National Guard was increasingly called to stop lynchings. Also, Southern
newspapers began frequently to denounce lynchings.
The work of the National Association for the
Advancement of Colored People was tremendously effective in awakening the
nation to the urgency of stopping lynching. The NAACP, an interracial civil
rights protest organization founded in 1909, made thorough investigations of
lynchings and other crimes committed against Negroes, and informed the public
concerning them. In 1919 the NAACP published Thirty Years of Lynching in the
United States, 1889-1918,which was a revelation of the causes of lynching
and the circumstances under which the crimes occurred. Beginning in 1921, the
NAACP sponsored antilynching legislation such as the Dyer Anti-Lynching Bill
and numerous other proposals to make lynching a federal crime.
The sharp decline in lynchings since 1922
undoubtedly had something to do with the fact that early in that year the Dyer
Anti-Lynching Bill was passed in the House of Representatives. The Dyer
Anti-Lynching Bill provided fines and imprisonment for persons convicted of
lynching in federal courts, and fines and penalties against states, counties,
and towns which failed to use reasonable efforts to protect citizens from mob
violence. It was killed in the Senate by the filibuster of the Southern
senators who claimed that anti-lynching legislation would be unconstitutional
and an infringement upon states� rights. However, the long
discussion of the Dyer Anti-Lynching Bill was of great importance to the
decline.
Southern white organizations also began to
condemn lynchings during the two decades before World War II. Among them were
the Commission for Interracial Cooperation, which did research and issued
publications which provided additional facts on lynchings, and the Association
of Southern Women for the Prevention of Lynching, which was founded in Atlanta
in 1930. Various other women�s organizations in the South
were also active in the struggle against lynching.
.yale.edu/ynhti/curriculum/units/1979/2/79.02.04.x.html#top">.0/msohtmlclip1/01/clip_image003.gif" alt="Description: to top">RACE RIOTS
In the decade immediately
preceding World War I, a pattern of racial violence began to emerge in which
white mob assaults were directed against entire Black communities. These race
riots were the product of white society�s desire to maintain its
superiority over Blacks, vent its frustrations in times of distress, and attack
those least able to defend themselves. In these race riots, white mobs invaded
Black neighborhoods, beat and killed large numbers of Blacks and destroyed
Black property. In most instances, Blacks fought back and there were many
casualties on both sides, though most of the dead were Black.
Gunnar Myrdal opposed the use of the term �riots�
to describe these interracial conflicts. He preferred to call this phenomena �a
terrorization or massacre, and (considered) it a magnified, or mass, lynching.�13
Race riots occurred in both the North and South, but were more characteristic
of the North. They were primarily urban phenomena, while lynching was primarily
a rural phenomenon.
Although lynchings were decreasing slightly by
the turn of the century, race riots were perceptibly on the increase.
Large-scale interracial violence became almost epidemic, as increasing numbers
of Blacks migrated to Northern cities. The greatest number of race riots
occurred during and just after World War I. During this period the North was
concerned with the tremendous migration of Blacks from the South, and the
displacement of some whites by Blacks in jobs and residences, which escalated
social tensions between the races. The South was concerned about the possible
demands of returning Negro soldiers, who were unwilling to slip quietly back
into second class citizenship.
The summer of 1919, called �The
Red Summer�
by James Weldon Johnson, ushered in the greatest period of interracial violence
the nation had ever witnessed. During that summer there were twenty-six race
riots in such cities as Chicago, Illinois; Washington, D.C.; Elaine, Arkansas;
Charleston, South Carolina; Knoxville and Nashville, Tennessee; Longview,
Texas; and Omaha, Nebraska. More than one hundred Blacks were killed in these
riots, and thousands were wounded and left homeless.
The seven most serious race riots were those
which occurred in Wilmington, N. C. (1898), Atlanta, Ga. (1906), Springfield,
Ill. (1908), East St. Louis) Ill. (1917), Chicago, Ill. (1919), Tulsa, Okla.
(1921) and Detroit, Mich. (1943). What follows is a brief summary of the facts
concerning each riot.
Just before the turn of the century, in
November 1898, Wilmington, North Carolina exploded in the first major race riot
since Reconstruction. The Wilmington riot followed an impassioned election
campaign in which intimidation and fraud brought in a white supremacist
government. Plans were drawn up before the election to coerce the Black voters
and workers, and to expel the editor of the Black newspaper. Two days after the
election, as whites began to execute their plan, the riot flamed. About thirty
Blacks were killed in the massacre and many left the city. The white mob
suffered no casualties.
One of the South�s most sensational
riots occurred in Atlanta, Georgia in September 1906. For months the city had
been lashed into a fury of race hatred by a movement to disfranchise Blacks.
The Atlanta press had begun to treat Black crime, especially assault and rape,
in an inflammatory fashion. Twelve rapes of white women were reported in one
week, giving the impression that there was an epidemic of Black rape. This
touched off a riot. White mobs, meeting ineffective resistance by city police,
murdered Blacks, destroyed and looted their homes and businesses. Blacks
attempted to resist, but were outnumbered. Some Blacks were arrested for arming
themselves in self-defense. When the four days of rioting ended, ten Blacks and
two whites were dead, hundreds were injured, and over a thousand fled the city.
In Springfield, Illinois, during August 1908, a
three-day riot took place, initiated by a white woman,s claim of violation by a
Negro. Inflamed by newspapers� sensationalism, crowds of
whites gathered around the jail demanding that the Negro, who had been arrested
and imprisoned, be lynched. When the sheriff transferred the accused and
another Negro to a jail in a nearby town, white mobs headed for the Negro
section and attacked homes and businesses. Two Blacks were lynched, others were
dragged from their houses and streetcars and beaten. By the time the National
Guardsmen reached the scene, six persons were dead�four
whites and two Negroes. This riot, in the home town of Abraham Lincoln, shocked
white liberals, who met the following year in New York City, with several
prominent Blacks, to form the NAACP �to promote equality of rights
and eradicate caste or race prejudice...�
The East St. Louis, Illinois riot in 1917 was
touched off by the fear of white working men that Negro advances in economic,
political and social status were threatening their own status. When the labor
force of an aluminum plant went on strike in April, the company hired Negro
workers. Although the strike was crushed by a combination of militia,
injunctions, and both Black and white strike breakers, the union blamed its
defeat on the Blacks. A union meeting in May demanded that �East
St. Louis must remain a white man�s town.�
A riot followed, sparked by a white man, during which mobs demolished buildings
and Blacks were attacked and beaten. Policemen did little more than take the
injured to hospitals and disarm Negroes. Harassments and beatings continued
through June.
On July 1, some whites in a Ford drove through
the main Negro district, shooting into homes. Blacks armed themselves. When a
police car, also a Ford, drove down the street to investigate, the Blacks fired
on it, killing two policemen. The next day, as reports of the shooting spread,
a new riot began. Streetcars were stopped, Blacks were pulled off, stoned,
clubbed, kicked and shot. Other rioters set fire to Black homes. By midnight
the Black section was in flames and Blacks were fleeing the city. The official
casualty figures were nine whites and thirty-nine Blacks, hundreds wounded, but
the NAACP investigators estimated that between one hundred to two hundred
Blacks were killed.14 Over three hundred buildings were destroyed.
The worst of the post-War race riots took place
in Chicago, Illinois. It began late in July 1919 when a young Black �encroached�
upon a swimming area that the whites had marked off for themselves, and was
stoned until he drowned. By the time the riot ended, thirteen days later,
thousands of both races had been involved in a series of frays, fifteen whites
and twenty-three Negroes were killed, and 178 whites and 342 Blacks were
injured. More than one thousand families, mostly Blacks, were left homeless due
to the burnings and general destruction of property.
The Tulsa, Oklahoma riot took place from May 31
to June 1, 1921. A white girl charged a Black youth with attempted rape in an
elevator in a public building. The youth was arrested and imprisoned. Armed
Blacks came to the jail to protect the accused youth, who, it was rumored,
would be lynched. Altercations between whites and Blacks at the jail led to a �race
war�.
A mob, numbering more than ten thousand attacked the Black district. �Machine-guns
were brought into.use; eight aeroplanes were employed to spy on the movements
of the Negroes and according to some were used in bombing the colored section.�15
Four companies of the National Guard were called out, but by the time order was
restored, fifty whites and between 150 and 200 Blacks were killed. Many homes
were looted and $1,500,000 worth of property was destroyed by fire.
The riot in Detroit, Michigan in 1943 flared
from the increased racial friction over the sharp rise in the Negro population,
which led to competition with whites on the job and housing markets. On June
20, rioting broke out on Belle Isle, a recreational area used by both races but
predominately by Negroes. Fist fights escalated into a major conflict. The
first wave of looting and bloodshed began in the Black ghetto �Paradise
Valley�
and later spread to other sections of the city. White mobs attacked Blacks in
the downtown area, and traveled into Black neighborhoods by car, where they
were met by sniping. By the time federal troops arrived to halt the riot, 25
Blacks and nine whites were killed and property damaged exceeded $2 million.16
Race riots were caused by a great number of
social, political and economic factors. Joseph Boskin, author of Urban
Racial Violence observed that there were certain general patterns in the
major twentieth century race riots:17
1. In each of the race riots,
with few exceptions, it was white people that sparked the incident by attacking
Black people.
2. In the majority of the
riots, some extraordinary social condition prevailed at the time of the riot:
prewar social changes, wartime mobility, post-war adjustment, or economic
depression.
3. The majority of the riots
occurred during the hot summer months.
4. Rumor played an extremely
important role in causing many riots. Rumors of some criminal activity by
Blacks against whites perpetuated the actions of white mobs.
5. The police force, more than
any other institution, was invariably involved as a precipitating cause or
perpetuating factor in the riots. In almost every one of the riots, the police
sided with the attackers, either by actually participating in, or by failing to
quell the attack.
6. In almost every instance,
the fighting occurred within the Black community.
.yale.edu/ynhti/curriculum/units/1979/2/79.02.04.x.html#top">.0/msohtmlclip1/01/clip_image003.gif" alt="Description: to top">BLACK RESPONSE
The Black American community
responded to white mob violence in several ways. Black people resisted this
oppression. This resistance was expressed in three ways: retaliatory violence,
Northward migration, and organized non-violent protest.
There are records of numerous instances of
individual and collective acts of Black retaliatory violence. Although
retaliatory violence seemed unreasonable, and often led to more lynching and
violence, Blacks frequently armed themselves and fought back in self-defense.
Several Black leaders advocated self-defense
against mob attack. Through the pages of The Crisis, W. E. B. DuBois
occasionally encouraged Blacks to fight back. �If we are to die,�
he angrily wrote after a Pennsylvania mob lynched a Negro in 1911 �in
God�s
name let us not perish like bales of hay.� Lynching, said DuBois, would
stop in the South �when the cowardly mob is faced with effective
guns in the hands of the people determined to sell their souls dearly,�
(Oct. 1916). A. Phillip Randolph, editor of the militant Socialist monthly, The
Messenger, also advocated physical resistance to white mobs: �The
black man has no rights which will be respected unless the black man enforces
that respect...We are consequently urging Negroes and other oppressed groups
concerned with lynching and mob violence to act upon the recognized and
accepted law of self-defense.�18 The NAACP,
considered moderate by Randolph, also defended the legality of Black
retaliatory self-defense from mob attack.
Poet Claude McKay, in 1921, captured the
sentiment of many militant Negroes in his poem, �If We Must Die�:
�If
we must die/let it not be like hogs: hunted and penned in an accursed spot!/...If
we must die; oh let us nobly die/ dying but fighting back.�19
By the First World War, Blacks were
increasingly armed and prepared to defend themselves from mob violence in many
parts of the country, even in the deep South. In one case, the mayor of
Memphis, Tennessee was advised, �The Negroes would not make
trouble unless they were attacked, but in that event they were prepared to
defend themselves.� Most of the race riots were the result of Negro
retaliation to white acts of persecution and violence. However, in most cases,
because of the overwhelming white numerical superiority, Negro armed resistance
was futile.
Another response of disillusioned Black people
to the southern reign of terror was the �Great Migration�
which began shortly before World War I. In the decade between 1910 and 1920,
more than five hundred thousand Blacks fled from the social and political
oppression of the South to the overcrowded industrial centers of the North. The
number of Blacks in Northern cities increased substantially. Despite southern
efforts to halt the Black exodus, the annual rate of Black northward migration
reached seventy-five thousand by the 1920s.
Organized non-violent protest, educating public
opinion about the barbarity of lynching, and the passage of federal
anti-lynching legislation were seen by many Black leaders to be the most
effective weapons against antiBlack mob violence. The pioneer organizer of the
crusade against lynching was a Black woman named Ida B. Wells-Barnett. Mrs.
Barnett, editor of the Memphis Free Speech, had more to do with
originating and carrying forward the anti-lynching crusade than any other
person. Almost single-handedly, she rallied anti-lynching sentiment in the
United states and England. She served as chairman of the Anti-Lynching Bureau
of the Afro-American Council. Mrs. Wells published several pamphlets exposing
the barbarity of lynching, including A Red Record written in 1894.
The struggle of Black leaders and organizations
to make lynchings a federal crime was long and futile. At the beginning of the
twentieth century, such organizations as the Afro-American Council and the
Niagara Movement, precursors of the NAACP, demanded investigation of lynchings
and legislation to enforce the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments. In 1900,
Negro Congressman George White introduced America�s first
anti-lynching bill, only to see it die in the House Judiciary Committee.
In the first year of its existence, the
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People launched a vigorous campaign
against lynching and all forms of racism and discrimination. By 1918, The
Crisis, the NAACP organ, was alerting one hundred thousand people each
month to the horrors of mob violence and the demands of Black America. The
NAACP�s
Legal Redress Committee attacked segregation and discrimination in the courts.
The NAACP�s
attempts to secure federal anti-lynching legislation, such as the Dyer
Anti-Lynching Bill, were unsuccessful. However, the Association�s
nationwide and interracial fight against lynching eventually helped reduce the
annual number of lynchings in the United States.
.yale.edu/ynhti/curriculum/units/1979/2/79.02.04.x.html#top">.0/msohtmlclip1/01/clip_image003.gif" alt="Description: to top">
Order | Check Discount
Tags: UK - Cheap Essay Writing Service, Essay USA, Custom Dissertation Writing Services for PhD Students, Best Online Essay Writers - Thesis and Dissertation Help