#lynching

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permguerrero:maghrabiyya:raw-r-evolution:chocolatefitspo:ayeeeeeeeeeeebohp:Take 5 minutes

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maghrabiyya:

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Take 5 minutes out of your morning/night to educate yourself on this young man LL. The brother was LYNCHED. “Crackertown”, North Carolina. Been gone since the morning of Aug. 29th. Day of his first football game of his senior year. All that hard work in the summer for nothin’. #JusticeForLennonLacy

This needs more light..

racism needs to hurry up and DIE

http://globalgrind.com/2014/10/14/lennon-lacys-death-hanging-killed-about-list

So he was found hanging, the morning of his first big game that he had been preparing for all year, wearing somebody else’s shoes, with his brand new shoes missing. he had a white girlfriend, openly racist neighbours, confederate flags everywhere, marks on his face indicating he was in a fight just minutes before..

This was not a suicide, no way in hell. This was a modern day lynching.

I hope they get answers soon. Poor boy.

This is a fucking shame.


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amospoe:“Lynching is color line murder.” – Ida B. Wells

amospoe:

“Lynching is color line murder.” – Ida B. Wells


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New Post has been published on Black ThenThe Stories of 5 Black Women Lynched in AmericaJennie Steer

New Post has been published on Black Then

The Stories of 5 Black Women Lynched in America

Jennie Steers: On July 26, 1903 in Shreveport, Louisiana Jennie Steers was charged with giving a poisoned glass of lemonade to a 16 year old white teenager, Elizabeth Dolan. Before she was killed, a mob took her to a tree, placed a rope around her neck and demanded a confession. Steers refused to confess and was hanged. […]

http://bit.ly/2s2pvWR
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The lynching of Laura Nelson, who was hanged together with her son in Okemah, Oklahoma on 25th May 1

The lynching of Laura Nelson, who was hanged together with her son in Okemah, Oklahoma on 25th May 1911….


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The lynching of 14 year old LW Nelson, who was hanged together with his mother in Okemah, Oklahoma o

The lynching of 14 year old LW Nelson, who was hanged together with his mother in Okemah, Oklahoma on 25th May 1911….


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Instead of lynching us in the public square the police just shoot us down in the streets. #black #bl

Instead of lynching us in the public square the police just shoot us down in the streets. #black #blackmen #blacklove #blackwomen #blackpeople #blacklivesmatter #ProBlack #policebrutality #wakeup #war #willielynch #whitesupremacy #willielynchsyndrome #conscious #lynching #lynch #ebony #racism #racist #revolution #modernday


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#ISA is still a far greater threat to world peace and human well-being – and responsible for far more death and destruction in recent years, let alone decades – than #ISIS.

(ISA = Imperialist State of America, aka U.S.A.)

Often times when I drive through a canopy of trees I am reminded of the not so distant past and the

Often times when I drive through a canopy of trees I am reminded of the not so distant past and the grim nature of the American Public as they crow with adoration after stringing up yet another negro. It’s like a tradition and once they are done and everyone is good and satisfied with the conditions under which a “lesser” being died, they all stop, and smile, and pose for the camera like a holiday photo. 

Just cover it up, put a white sheet over it, pretend like it never happened, and change the name of the same game.


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DECEMBER 30 - IDA B. WELLSThe oldest of eight children, Ida B. Wells was born in Holly Springs, Miss

DECEMBER 30 - IDA B. WELLS

The oldest of eight children, Ida B. Wells was born in Holly Springs, Mississippi. Her parents, who were very active in the Republican Party during Reconstruction, died in a yellow fever epidemic in the late 1870s. Wells attended Rust College and then became a teacher in Memphis, Tennessee.

Shortly after she arrived, Wells was involved in an altercation with a white conductor while riding the railroad. She had purchased a first-class ticket, and was seated in the ladies car when the conductor ordered her to sit in the Jim Crow (i.e. black) section, which did not offer first-class accommodations. She refused and when the conductor tried to remove her, she “fastened her teeth on the back of his hand.” Wells was ejected from the train, and she sued. She won her case in a lower court, but the decision was reversed in an appeals court.

While living in Memphis, Wells became a co-owner and editor of a local black newspaper called The Free Speech and Headlight. Writing her editorials under the pseudonym “Iola,” she condemned violence against blacks, disfranchisement, poor schools, and the failure of black people to fight for their rights. She was fired from her teaching job and became a full-time journalist.

In 1892, Tom Moss, a respected black store owner and friend of Barnett, was lynched, along with two of his friends, after defending his store against an attack by whites. Wells, outraged, attacked the evils of lynching in her newspaper; she also encouraged the black residents of Memphis to leave town. When Wells was out of town, her newspaper was destroyed by a mob and she was warned not to return to Memphis because her life was in danger. Wells took her anti-lynching campaign to England and was well received.

Wells wrote many pamphlets exposing white violence and lynching and defending black victims.  In 1895 she married Ferdinand Barnett, a prominent Chicago attorney. The following year she helped organize the National Association of Colored Women. She was opposed to the policy of accommodation advocated by Booker T. Washington and had personal, if not ideological, difficulties with W.E.B. Du Bois.  In 1909, she helped found the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. Wells-Barnett continued her fight for black civil and political rights and an end to lynching until shortly before she died. 


Text from today’s post was originally written by Richard Wormser for the PBS series The Rise and Fall of Jim Crow.


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Lynchings by states and counties in the United States, 1900-1931 : (data from Research Department, T

Lynchings by states and counties in the United States, 1900-1931 : (data from Research Department, Tuskegee Institute) ; cleartype county outline map of the United States.


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“In Colonial Times a hanging was a major social event. People came from miles around with picn

“In Colonial Times a hanging was a major social event. People came from miles around with picnic lunches and wine to watch the guilty be punished. The mood was festive and the hanging was an all day affair.”


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In March of 1892, three Black grocery store owners in Memphis, Tennessee, were murdered by a mob of white men. Lynchings like these were happening all over the American South, often without any subsequent legal investigation or consequences for the murders. But this time, a young journalist and friend of the victims set out to expose the truth about these killings. Her reports would shock the nation and launch her career as an investigative journalist, civic leader, and civil rights advocate. Her name was Ida B. Wells.

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Ida Bell Wells was born into slavery in Holly Springs, Mississippi on July 16, 1862, several months before the Emancipation Proclamation released her and her family. After losing both parents and a brother to yellow fever at the age of 16, she supported her five remaining siblings by working as a schoolteacher in Memphis.

During this time, she began working as a journalist. Writing under the pen name “Iola”, by the early 1890s she gained a reputation as a clear voice against racial injustice and become co-owner and editor of the Memphis Free Speech and Headlight. She had no shortage of material: in the decades following the Civil War, Southern whites attempted to reassert their power by committing crimes against Black people including suppressing their votes, vandalizing their businesses, and even murdering them.

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After the murder of her friends, Wells launched an investigation into lynching. She analyzed specific cases through newspaper reports and police records, and interviewed people who had lost friends and family members to lynch mobs. She risked her life to get this information. As a black person investigating racially motivated murders, she enraged many of the same southern white men involved in lynchings.

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Her bravery paid off. Most whites had claimed and subsequently reported that lynchings were responses to criminal acts by Black people. But that was not usually the case. Through her research, Wells showed that these murders were actually a deliberate, brutal tactic to control or punish black people who competed with whites. Her friends, for example, had been lynched when their grocery store became popular enough to divert business from a white competitor.

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Wells published her findings in 1892. In response, a white mob destroyed her newspaper presses. She was out of town when they struck, but they threatened to kill her if she ever returned to Memphis. So she traveled to New York, where that same year she re-published her research in a pamphlet titled Southern Horrors: Lynch Law in All Its Phases. In 1895, after settling in Chicago, she built on Southern Horrors in a longer piece called The Red Record. Her careful documentation of the horrors of lynching and impassioned public speeches  drew international attention.

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Wells used her newfound fame to amplify her message. She traveled to Europe, where she rallied European outrage against racial violence in the South in hopes that the US government and public would follow their example. Back in the US, she didn’t hesitate to confront powerful organizations, fighting the segregationist policies of the YMCA and leading a delegation to the White House to protest discriminatory workplace practices.

She did all this while disenfranchised herself. Women didn’t win the right to vote until Wells was in her late 50s. And even then, the vote was primarily extended to white women only. Wells was a key player in battle for voting inclusion, starting a Black women’s suffrage organization in Chicago. But in spite of her deep commitment to women’s rights, she clashed with white leaders of the movement. During a march for women’s suffrage in Washington D.C., she ignored the organizers’ attempt to placate Southern bigotry by placing Black women in the back, and marched up front alongside the white women.

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She also chafed with other civil rights leaders, who saw her as a dangerous radical.  She insisted on airing, in full detail, the atrocities taking place in the South, while others thought doing so would be counterproductive to negotiations with white leaders. Although she participated in the founding of the NAACP, she was soon sidelined from the organization.

Wells’ unwillingness to compromise any aspect of her vision of justice shined a light on the weak points of the various rights movements, and ultimately made them stronger—but also made it difficult for her to find a place within them. She was ahead of her time, waging a tireless struggle for equality and justice decades before many had even begun to imagine it possible.

Watch the amazing story of Ida B. Wells on TED-Ed: How one journalist risked her life to hold murderers accountable - Christina Greer

Animation by Anna Nowakowska

This month, TED-Ed is celebrating Black History Month, or National African American History Month, an annual celebration of achievements by black Americans and a time for recognizing the central role of African Americans in U.S. history.

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