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Lynchings in Elmore County, Alabama

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Map with a county highlighted
Map of Alabama with Elmore County in red

Elmore County is a county located in the east-central portion of the U.S. state of Alabama. Throughout its history, there have been many lynchings in the county including on July 2, 1901, when a local mob lynched Robert (or perhaps Robin) White. In a strange turn of events, a local farmer, George White confessed in court to the killing and named five other local men as killers. Three men were convicted in the killing and sentenced to ten years in prison. On 9 June 1902, they were pardoned by Governor Jelks.[1]

Lynching is an extrajudicial killing by a group. In the Jim Crow American South, it was also used as an extreme form of informal group social control, and it is often conducted with the display of a public spectacle (often in the form of hanging) for maximum intimidation. Victims often professed their innocence right up to the public deaths in front of crowds that sometimes numbered in the thousands. Lynching victims are never given their time in court to prove their innonence.

Lynching in Elmore County, Alabama

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Name Age Ethnicity City County or Parish State Year Alleged Accusation Comment
Lewis Hendricks African-American Elmore County Alabama February 20, 1894 Murdering a white woman, Mrs. Jesse Rucker After being accused Hendricks tried to escape but was shot twice and badly wounded. Dogs were sent to track down Hendricks and he was caught and surrounded by armed citizens. Hendricks was shot three times and managed to jump into Callaway Creek in an attempt to escape but he died of his injuries. He was the third man to be accused of the crime. Sources give the location of the lynching as the swamps 10 miles (16 km) from Jemison/Jamison in Chilton County, Alabama [2]
Rufus Swindle 21 African-American 12 miles (19 km) from Wetumpka Elmore County Alabama March 30, 1895 Swindle was a witness of an illegal moonshine operation of Josephus Jowers Rufus Swindle was taken from his house in the middle of the night in 1895 by Josephus Jowers, Will Jowers, Alonzo Edwards, John Edwards, Luther Ingram and possibly others. This group of men took Swindle to the woods where they whipped, shot and killed him. [3]
Solomon Jackson, Camp Reese, Louis Spier and Jesse Thompson African-American Wetumpka Elmore County Alabama Broken out of jail on June 17, 1898 Arrested as potential witnesses in the robbery and arson of a William Carden and his wife's home in which $1200 ($44,000 in 2024) was stolen. In 1898 a mob of 500 stormed the county jail where Solomon Jackson, Camp Reese, Louis Spier and Jesse Thompson were being held. A few prominent citizens and a Methodist minister tried talking the mob away from violence but they were unsuccessful. The sheriff had hidden the jail keys so that the mob couldn't get into the cells but they took a crowbar and took the cell doors off of their hinges and kidnapped the four men. The mob took the four men and had planned to burn them alive but they thought that troops would intervene before long so instead the men were hanged. [4] [5][6][7]
Wallace Townsend 16 African-American Eclectic Elmore County Alabama October 2, 1900 Attempted assault of white woman, Mrs. G. S. Harrinton a cousin of Ms. Kate Pierson Three other black boys were arrested with Townsend, Frank and Jake Floyd and Virgil Miller. Wallace Townsend was taken by the mob to the local graveyard and tied to a stake. Wood was piled around him and Mr G. S. Harrinton lit the pyre, burning him alive. [8]
Zeb Floyd Including Floyd there were nine arrested in the attack, all under 21-years-old. African-American Eclectic Elmore County Alabama September 10, 1900 Assault of Ms. Kate Pierson, a cousin of Mrs. G. S. Harrinton Including Floyd there were nine arrested in the attack. Some of the nine are Zeb, Jake and Frank Floyd [8]
Robert (or Robin) White 27 African-American Tallassee Elmore County Alabama 1901 Attempted murder Robert (or Robin) White was lynched by a white mob in 1901. White tried to fight back against the mob but he was overpowered, dragged into a swamp, and then murdered. Almost everything that is known of Robert White's case comes from the testimony of one of the white men in the mob.[1] A man named George Howard confessed to the lynching of White. Howard told what happened, the attempts at keeping the rest of the mob quiet, and names of other men in the mob. This testimony led to an all white jury convicting four white men of lynching a black man. This was unheard of at the time and a sentence like this wasn't passed again in an Alabama court until 1981.[1]
Berney African-American Elmore County Alabama 1912 Buggy accident In 1912 Berney and another black man were accused of carelessly driving a buggy and causing two white farmer's daughter's horse to run away. A mob of white citizens chased the two men into the woods where they were cornered and the mob and two men began shooting at each other. Two people in the mob were killed and the two black men managed to escape to a cabin. When the mob reached the cabin one man was able to escape but Berney was shot and burned.[9]
Ed and William Smith African-American Wetumpka Elmore County Alabama January 4, 1915 Murder of R.A. Stillwell Stillwell was shot while guarding his barns, bloodhounds from the murder scene led to the cabin where the Smiths were staying. [10]

National memorial

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Memorial Corridor, National Memorial for Peace and Justice

The National Memorial for Peace and Justice opened in Montgomery, Alabama, on April 26, 2018. Featured among other things is the Memorial Corridor which displays 805 hanging steel rectangles, each representing the counties in the United States where a documented lynching took place and, for each county, the names of those lynched.[11] The memorial hopes that communities, like Elmore County where these people were lynched, will take these slabs and install them in their own communities.

See also

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Bibliography

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Notes

  1. ^ a b c Lyman 2019.
  2. ^ The Indianapolis Journal, February 21, 1894, p. 1.
  3. ^ University of Alabama 2022.
  4. ^ Brown 2022.
  5. ^ The Topeka State Journal, June 17, 1898, p. 3.
  6. ^ "LYNCHING IN ALABAMA: Five Negroes Who Murdered Mr. and Mrs. Carden and Carlee Hanged by a Mob," The New York Times, June 18, 1898, Page 10.
  7. ^ The New Crisis, NAACP, The Crisis Publishing Company, January/February 2022, page 42.
  8. ^ a b The Age-Herald, October 3, 1900, p. 1.
  9. ^ "Lynching in America: A Community Remembrance Project" (PDF). EJI.org. Retrieved April 22, 2021.
  10. ^ New Britain Herald, January 4, 1915, p. 1.
  11. ^ Robertson 2018.

References