Author David Horowitz has written an article called African-American Lynch Mob. In the article Mr. Horowitz is expressing his frustration with the way African –American civil rights leaders, namely Reverend Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton are inciting a lynch mob mentality in regards to the death of Trayvon Martin. Trayvon Martin, who was a 17 year old African-American male, was shot to death by George Zimmerman who happens to be Hispanic.…
World Wars I and II, the time frame in which Sula takes place. Shadrack, Plum, and the soldiers…
Cited: Dray, Philip. At the Hands of Persons Unknown: the Lynching of Black America. New York: Random House, 2002. Print.…
William Lynch made a letter in 1712 of how to break down Negros/blacks and how to make a slave. In my opinion, despite the fact that William Lynch composed the Willie lynch Letter in 1712; us as blacks/Negros still accompany the letter without knowing. First and foremost, William said assuming that they take after those steps legitimately it would be mostly effective for 300 years. Furthermore, it said in the event that they accompany the steps we might turn on one another and soon might need to execute one another off. In conclusion, he composed how to get us in line, "hanging" or as we commonly refer to the term "lynching" was restricted and it soon came to be traded with death penalty.…
After reading the mob mentality pieces, I conclude mobs thought it was okay to torture black people whenever they want to. To illustrate, Beitler’s photograph shows, a mob out in the open lynching two black people. Since they are doing the lynchings out in the open, the mob was not afraid of getting caught. Everyone in the picture are in their street clothes, so that could show they were okay with other people seeing they were participating in the lynching. Another idea that supports this conclusion is, in the article How Riots Work, the author points out, “Being part of a group can destroy people’s inhibitions, making them do things they’d never do otherwise ”(Edmonds). That quote shows people think it is okay to do an…
Lynching was used as a tool for creating and maintaining white dominance in the South. This gruesome method was used to reverse the laws that were made to progress the equality of white and black races. The racially driven lynching persisted during the time of the Jim Crow laws as a way of enforcing subservience and preventing economic competition, and later as a method of resisting the civil rights movement.…
Some critics say that C. V. Woodward’s novel “The Strange Career of Jim Crow” was simply a book about racism. Other critics also attack his style of writing in this very popular novel. However, I believe that Woodward’s novel is not just a book about racism. It is a book about history. I believe it is a book about race relations, not racism. Woodward shatters the stereotypical view of segregation through chronicling the history of America from reconstruction through the late 1960’s.…
After the resolution of the Civil War, rich whites in the South scrambled to regain economic control and superiority. To prevent blacks and poor whites from joining together to challenge them, a series of Jim Crow laws that segregated blacks from whites were created (Cates 50). In this time, various legal decisions played instrumental roles in the transition to a heavily segregated south. Through the Plessy v. Ferguson Supreme Court decision, the government legalized segregation which led to the establishment of myriad Jim Crow laws that stripped African Americans of their Constitutional rights.…
Lynching in the West aims to educate the reader by emphasizing the importance of recognizing the violent injustices that took California by storm in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. These ignorant vigilante crimes risk being erased from the modern conscience if they are not documented and discussed in depth with candor.…
Chronological and Topical Scope: 1880’s and 1892 during the lynching’s in Memphis. Ida B. Wells-Barnett discusses the injustice of her friend’s killings.…
In the late 19th century, Ida B. Wells dedicated most of her life to spreading the word about the horrific nature of lynching in the American South. Wells was a journalist, teacher, rights activist, and a public speaker. As an African American woman in the south during this time, Ida B. Wells was able to use her status as journalist to expose to the general public the true facts of lynching cases that suggested black wrongdoings. Wells used cases from all over America to convey the innocence of African American lynching victims. There was a huge double standard between whites and black on the premise of crime. Although white men also participated in heinous acts, they were far less punished compared to their black neighbors. The majority of the cases being brought up at the time suggested that African American men were violating white women. Many violent white men would choose to murder an African American because they suspected he had been “criminally intimate”1 with a white women. In some instances, the reason for lynching was totally personal and obviously took place just to make a statement and “keep the nigger down”2 and the white men would justify it by claiming that the African American was wrong or barbaric. Because lynching is unlawful and without a trial, the accused stood little to no chance in seeking justice. Wells tries to make it clear that white women were to blame just as much as the black men who were involved in the affairs, and that in most of the situations the women were consenting or even initiating the intimate acts. When trying expose the truth about these issues, Wells and others who spoke up were warned and told off by the white men’s press. Even though it was evident that the southern white population was unhappy about the claims being made against lynching, Wells made it clear that she had a specific purpose to disprove the assertions being made against her people.…
Through the history of lynchings, we can see that most lynchings happened right after 1880 until about 1920 and then started to decrease a lot. We know that not all lynchings have been published, but we can look at the ones we certainly know about to gather information. The press also tells us that an abundance of lynchings occurred in Arkansas and Louisiana. Ida B. Wells-Barnett would say that many of these lynchings were caused because of rapes. She discusses her personal observations of the killings of black men by white men. When a black man was accused of raping a white woman, then a lynching occurred. Not only instances of rape, but even something as small as an African American speaking to a white person in the wrong way to anger them. Ida explained how these were threatening to a whole community; leaving them in fear. One of the most common lynchings we learn of through the press is of Henry Smith; a teenage boy accused of whistling at a white woman. He was tragically decapitated by the white men, and Smith’s mother chose to have an open casket to show what a horrific thing was done to him for something he did not do. Therefore, lynchings can be arbitrary from case to case, because each one happened due to something different, no matter how big or small, leaving people to act violently on their anger by publicly killing someone in front of their…
What is lynching? Lynching is characterized as a hanging by a swarm or somebody for an affirmed offense with or without a lawful trial. In the novel "At The Hands Of Persons Unknown" by Philip Dray, he discusses what lynching is and how it influenced those in those days the distance to now. Dray talks on the numerous casualties who were influenced inside that time from the 1800's completely through the 1900's. The novel opens up with the account of Sam Hose. Sam was blamed for murdering his manager Alfred Cranford with a hatchet and assaulting his better half Mattie Cranford a while later. With no solid confirmation of this incident he was beaten, lynched, and consumed to death before several racial oppressors in Coweta County, Georgia. The…
The video that we watched about the Lynchburg Colony in a word was horrifying. I had a few other observations other than that however. The main thing that shocked me was that I had never heard of this before. I don’t understand how people could just treat people like they were not even human. I guess that I have heard of things happening like this, but never in the United States and to this extreme. To treat people like they are worthless just back in the 1980s boggles my mind. The entire time I watched the video I felt disgusted and I really couldn’t believe it. One could tell from the people that were interviewed that this horrible thing they had gone through had left a lasting impact on their lives and had scarred them. Their countenance and the way they talked almost brought me to tears. When the video talked about how Hitler used the United States’ idea of sterilization for Germany, it made me think a little bit if whether that was true or if the movie wanted to get more of a rise out of people. It is hard to know the truth, especially when most people didn’t know about this colony.…
Slavery was an important and crucial development to the United States and Texas. This allowed their economies to grow and fuel the development of these states. However, as states started to join the union, slavery started to decline in the northern United States and increase in the Lower United State including Texas.…