* * *
* *
* * *
* *
|
Lynching of Lint Shaw in
Royston, Georgia, 1936
Lynching William Brown in Douglas County, Nebraska, 1919 |
Other Books on Lynching & Violence in
America
The Chronological
History of the Negro in America (1969) /
Strain of
Violence: Historical Studies of American Violence and Vigilantism (1975)
But There Was no Peace: The
Role of Violence in the Politics of Reconstruction
(1984) /
Lynch Law
( 1905) /
An American Dilemma
(1944)
The Crucible of Race:
Black-White Relations in the American South Since Emancipation
(1984) /
Encyclopedia of Southern Culture.
(1989)
Rope and Faggot
( 1929) /
The Tragedy of
Lynching (1933) /
Race Riot in East St,
Louis (1964) /
Urban Racial Violence
(1976)
/
Report of the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders
(1968) /
Violence
in America (1969)
*
* * * *
Dear Mr. Lewis,
I'm writing for a friend who is currently in possession of a very old
postcard picturing 3 very well dressed black men who, unfortunately, have been
hung. Doing research on Ida B. Well-Barnett I've found a story on three such men
in Memphis on the date March 9, 1892. Handwritten in ink on the card is a date
that seems to be 9/9/1892 but because of the age of the card the first 9 is a
little intelligible. Is it possible that this incident could have been made a
post card? I've never encountered anything quite like this before.
Frank (4 May 2007)
*
* * * *
Lynchings in America...a bit of history that sheds light
on the presence and future
 |
When I was a boy growing up in
New Orleans, Louisiana, the word lynching was hardly ever mentioned.
My parents only said these "mean" acts happened in the country
(rural areas) with white men in white gowns (the
KKK). In
all my schooling, through high school and on to college, lynching
was never part of a lecture or connected with American history. I
knew of the word, lynching, but never, never the scope of this
violent, hateful act.
On Thursday, January 13, 2000,
an article entitled, "An Ugly Legacy Lives on, Its Glare Unsoftened
by Age," by Robert Smith was published in the New York Times. This
excellent article revealed a world not known by many Americans
living today and especially by me. Without my explaining here, it
should be read by all persons, especially as it pertains to race and
hate. Without understanding this past evil history, we cannot
understand why hate is on the rise today in this year of 2000. |
After reading the New York Times article, I
wanted to know more about lynching and what could possibly be presented on this
squeamish subject. It turned out that an exhibit of rare collected photo
postcards were on display featuring lynchings as they took place in America from
1883-1960. I saw this exhibit. It was on view at the Roth Horowitz Gallery in
New York City until February 12, 2000. This small gallery took in only about
fifteen people at a time, and the line was long. Watching the viewers as they
exited revealed what was inside: people with tears, some with anguish, some
looked surprised with the horror they had seen.
This New York exhibition presented the
collected photocards of Mr. James Allen, a white Atlanta resident who, for
fifteen years, sought out these images of racial horror and self-righteous
vigilante acts as rare finds. Since most of these photocards were kept as
"keepsakes" by some families, Mr. Allen had to solicit ads for purchase. He paid
from fifteen dollars to as much as thirty thousand dollars for individual cards.
The sixty photo postcards and other material were temporarily housed in the
library at Emory University to allow scholars to have access to it, but are now
being held by their owner at
www.withoutsanctuary.org
/ Melvin
Sylvester, Feb. 2000
* * * *
*
"Cloaking an Apology for Lawlessness"
Ida B. Wells, Frances Willard and the
Lynching Controversy, 1890-1894
Author: Amy Hackett
Advisor: Jean Humez
Abstract:
Between 1890 and 1894, as calls to protect the honor
of white womanhood abounded in an American society ripe with conflict over race,
gender and morality, there erupted a controversy over lynching between social
reformer Frances Willard, the president of the Woman's Christian Temperance
Union, and anti-lynching activist Ida B. Wells. Ida B. Wells vehemently
protested lynching, arguing that the justification for lynching predicated on
the black rape of white women was a myth created by white men as an excuse to
lynch black men in attempts to regain political and economic power in the
post-Civil War era.
Wells also radically contended that white women were
engaging in these types of relationships, even seducing black men, deceiving
white society by denying that relationships could be consensual, and then
standing by while African American men were lynched for rape. Her suggestion
that white women might voluntarily engage in sexual relationships with black
men, provocatively challenged the concepts of the purity, chastity and morality
of white womanhood central to the conceptual framework of the W.C.T.U.
As the president of one of America's foremost social
reform organizations, Frances Willard called for the protection of the purity of
white womanhood from threats to morality and safety. In her attempts to bring
Southern women into the W.C.T.U., Frances Willard accepted the rape myth and
publicly condoned lynching and the color line in the South. Wells argued that as
a Christian reformer, Willard should be speaking out against lynching, but
instead seemed to support the position of Southerners.
While Willard strongly refuted Wells' claims and made
statements denouncing lynching, she continued to accept the rape myth, denying
that white women could possibly take part in sexual relationships with black
men. For Willard, accepting Wells' position on voluntary interracial sex would
have meant admitting that true white women were not pure, chaste and moral,
undercutting the basic conceptual underpinnings of her organization.
This paper examines the lynching controversy between
Frances Willard and Ida B. Wells as a lens through which to view the broader
subject of race relations in white-founded social reform movements, especially
the issues of white womanhood, African American manhood, and sexuality in the
late nineteenth century America.
First, this paper explains Frances Willard's personal
and professional background, as well as the early history of the Woman's
Christian Temperance Union. I focus on how Willard's childhood experiences
shaped her understanding of the "woman question" and her interest in education
and social reform. I also explore how Willard's political strategy as the
president of the W.C.T.U., specifically in recruiting Southern white women and
African American women to membership, had consequences for her position in the
lynching controversy.
Second, this paper focuses on Wells' persona and
professional background and how she came to commit her energies to a campaign
against lynching. In this section, I focus on Wells' personal experience as a
single African American woman in the South, and how she turned to protest of
racial discrimination as a central focus of her professional career.
In both of the first two sections, I argue that the
early experiences of both women shaped their approaches to activism and the
values they espoused in their advocacy.
Third, this paper details the lynching controversy
itself, providing an analysis of the debate through examining the speeches and
publications of Wells and Willard on the lynching between 1890 and 1894. Lastly,
this paper attempts to explain why Wells and Willard were unable to come to any
agreement on the lynching controversy. Central to this discussion is
understanding how Wells and Willard envision protection for women. Willard's and
Wells' concepts of protection for women included an implicit stance on white and
black sexuality, as well as white womanhood and black manhood, particularly in
the context of the debate. Ultimately, Wells and Willard spoke at cross purposes
and were unable to see each other's positions.
In this paper, I utilize the speeches and publications
of Wells and Willard between 1890 and 1894, which convey their positions on race
relations, concepts of womanhood, lynching and rape, to produce a complex
picture of the lynching controversy. In order to develop an understanding of
Wells' personal history and position on the controversy, I extensively rely upon
Wells' autobiography, Crusade for Justice, and Patricia Schechter's recent
biography of Wells, Ida B. Wells-Barnett and American Reform, 1880-1930, as well
as other biographical works on Wells.
Similarly, I make extensive use of Willard's published
journal and Ruth Bordin's biography on Willard, Frances Willard: A Biography,
and her book on the Woman's Christian Temperance Union, Woman and Temperance, in
addition to other biographies written on Willard (although these biographies are
quite dated) to explain Willard's background and the history of the W.C.T.U. I
also utilize scholarship on Southern sexual politics, lynching and concepts of
white womanhood, including works by Paula Baker, Robyn Wiegman, Gail Bederman,
Glenda Gilmore and Hazel Carby.
This paper may be of interest to students and scholars
of history and American Studies who are examining race relations in
white-founded social reform movements in America in the late nineteenth century.
This paper is specifically relevant of those examining issues of white
womanhood, African American manhood and sexuality during this time.
Lastly, this paper may be of particular interest to
those focused on examining the link between power and sexuality in the political
and social climate of Reconstruction, and the consequences for the African
American community.
Roundtable UMB
* * * *
*
* * *
* *
Bill Moyers
Interviews Douglass A. Blackmon
http://www.pbs.org/moyers/journal/06202008/watch2.html
Douglas A. Blackmon,
Slavery by Another Name: The Re-Enslavement of Black Americans from the Civil
War to World War II (2008)
* * * * *
update 2 July 2008