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A '''lynching''' is the murder of an accused person, often preceded by torture, by three or more killers (99% of whom were never punished or even charged with a crime) who acted under the pretext of service to justice without allowing the accused person to undergo a trial.  Lynchings were a form of social control whereby a victim's family, friends, and other community members were forced to adopt a public code of silence about the lynching or fear for their own lives. The identity of lynchers was almost always known, and local police often facilitated the act, and local press often praised it.  
A '''lynching''' is the murder of an accused person, often preceded by torture, by three or more killers (99% of whom are never punished or even charged with a crime) ''in public'', who act under a pretext of serving justice without allowing the accused person a trial.  It is murder by mob.  During and after a lynching, the victim's family, friends, and other community members are forced to adopt a public code of silence about it or fear for their own lives., while the identity of lynchers is almost always known, and local police often facilitate the act, and local press may praise it.  


In the [[United States of America|U.S.]], lynching was carried on frequently for decades after the [[American Civil War|Civil War]], and was particularly applied to people of color in the Southern states where slavery had existed.
Lynching has occurred all through history and in most parts of the world, but has seldom been more prevalent than it was during the U.S. [[Jim Crow]] era in its southern states.  The vast majority of all U.S. lynchings (more than 3/4) occurred in the U.S. southern states, which had a large proportion of African American residents who had been freed from slavery at the end of the [[American Civil War]], and also in states and territories such as Kentucky and Missouri where slavery had in danger of becoming established before that war.  [[Mississippi (U.S. state)|Mississippi]] had the most (581) confirmed lynchings between the years of 1882 and 1940, with 42 "white" victims and 539 African American victims.  People of color in the U.S. South, and sometimes others who befriended them, lived in fear of being lynched.  In contrast, some states far removed from the South had no reported lynchings at all.


As an example, the U.S. state of [[Tennessee (U.S. state)|Tennessee]] had 251 confirmed lynchings between the years of 1882 and 1940, with 47 white victims and 204 African American victims.<ref name=LynchingsTN /> There exists an online catalog<ref name=TnMemorial /> of the names/dates/locations of confirmed lynching victims in the state. During those years (1882-1940), annually an average of nearly one white person was lynched and about four black people were lynched. It is safe to say that blacks, and sometimes white people who befriended blacks, lived in fear of becoming a target themselves.
It is worth noting that, even after the practice of lynching died down in U.S. states where it had been frequent, racism continued to be enforced by a portion of the population by threatening the livelihood or social acceptance of anyone who fraternized across races.  In some cases, death threats were still frequently issued (and violence such as bombings) still continued via the [[Ku Klux Klan]] and other secretive white-supremacist, hate-mongering organizationsAs of 2024, the situation still may exist in pockets throughout the U.S. south.


By contrast, the U.S. state of New Jersey only ever had two confirmed lynchings.
Although it was not called "lynching", mob killings similar in nature to lynching are said to have occurred many times during the 18th century [[French Revolution]] and the 20th century communist revolutions in both Russia and China, ignored or even sanctioned by the newly installed governments.


Even after anti-lynching laws and the civil rights movement stopped overt acts of lynching, it is worth noting that public enforcement of racist norms continued across the U.S. South for many years afterward (and possibly still occurs sometimes even today). As an example, around 1970 a white woman was living in a rural Mississippi town next to the hospital where her husband worked. She saw that a black woman who worked in the hospital cafeteria was keeping a 4-year-old boy in a hot car one day for lack of a baby-sitter, so the white woman took the boy to her house for a few hours.  That evening, her husband came home having been warned by the hospital administrator, in crude language, that he would lose his job if his wife continued to associate with blacks.<ref name=Anecdote />
== U.S. lynchings by state ==
NOTE: A drawback of the Tuskegee University classification scheme for lynching is that the numbers shown as "white" (especially outside the former U.S. slave states) likely included other ethnic groups such as Native Americans, Mexicans, Chinese, or other immigrant nationalities.<ref>[http://archive.tuskegee.edu/repository/digital-collection/lynching-information/lynchings-stats-year-dates-causes/ Lynching statistics] from Tuskegee University.</ref>
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== Notes ==
== Notes ==
<references>
<references>
<ref name=LynchingsTN>
[http://archive.tuskegee.edu/repository/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/Lynchings-Stats-Year-Dates-Causes.pdf Lynchings: By State and Race, 1882-1968] from Tuskegee University archives. Last access 8/19/2023
</ref>
<ref name=TnMemorial>
[https://www.abhmuseum.org/tennessee-lynching-victims-memorial/ Tennessee Lynching Victims Memorial] on abhmuseum.org, last access 5/31/2023.
</ref>
<ref name=Anecdote>
This anecdote about baby-sitting a small boy to help out a black worker on a single day is from my sister, who lived in a small town in Mississippi at the time.  [[User:Pat Palmer]]
</ref>


</references>
</references>

Latest revision as of 07:32, 6 May 2024

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A lynching is the murder of an accused person, often preceded by torture, by three or more killers (99% of whom are never punished or even charged with a crime) in public, who act under a pretext of serving justice without allowing the accused person a trial. It is murder by mob. During and after a lynching, the victim's family, friends, and other community members are forced to adopt a public code of silence about it or fear for their own lives., while the identity of lynchers is almost always known, and local police often facilitate the act, and local press may praise it.

Lynching has occurred all through history and in most parts of the world, but has seldom been more prevalent than it was during the U.S. Jim Crow era in its southern states. The vast majority of all U.S. lynchings (more than 3/4) occurred in the U.S. southern states, which had a large proportion of African American residents who had been freed from slavery at the end of the American Civil War, and also in states and territories such as Kentucky and Missouri where slavery had in danger of becoming established before that war. Mississippi had the most (581) confirmed lynchings between the years of 1882 and 1940, with 42 "white" victims and 539 African American victims. People of color in the U.S. South, and sometimes others who befriended them, lived in fear of being lynched. In contrast, some states far removed from the South had no reported lynchings at all.

It is worth noting that, even after the practice of lynching died down in U.S. states where it had been frequent, racism continued to be enforced by a portion of the population by threatening the livelihood or social acceptance of anyone who fraternized across races. In some cases, death threats were still frequently issued (and violence such as bombings) still continued via the Ku Klux Klan and other secretive white-supremacist, hate-mongering organizations. As of 2024, the situation still may exist in pockets throughout the U.S. south.

Although it was not called "lynching", mob killings similar in nature to lynching are said to have occurred many times during the 18th century French Revolution and the 20th century communist revolutions in both Russia and China, ignored or even sanctioned by the newly installed governments.

U.S. lynchings by state

NOTE: A drawback of the Tuskegee University classification scheme for lynching is that the numbers shown as "white" (especially outside the former U.S. slave states) likely included other ethnic groups such as Native Americans, Mexicans, Chinese, or other immigrant nationalities.[1]

Click on a column header to sort the table by that item.

No  Name  White  Black  Total 
1 Alabama 48 299 347
2 Alaska 0 0 0
3 Arizona 31 0 31
4 Arkansas 58 226 284
5 California 41 2 43
6 Colorado 65 3 68
7 Connecticut 0 0 0
8 Delaware 0 1 1
9 Florida 25 257 282
10 Georgia 39 492 531
11 Hawaii 0 0 0
12 Idaho 20 0 20
13 Illinois 15 19 34
14 Indiana 33 14 47
15 Iowa 17 2 19
16 Kansas 35 19 54
17 Kentucky 63 142 205
18 Louisiana 56 335 391
19 Maine 1 0 1
20 Maryland 2 27 29
21 Massachussetts 0 0 0
22 Michigan 7 1 8
23 Minnesota 5 4 9
24 Mississippi 42 539 581
25 Missouri 53 69 122
26 Montana 82 2 84
27 Nebraska 52 5 57
28 Nevada 6 0 6
29 New Hampshire 0 0 0
30 New Jersey 1 1 2
31 New Mexico 33 3 36
32 New York 1 1 2
33 North Carolina 15 86 101
34 North Dakota 13 3 16
35 Ohio 10 16 26
36 Oklahoma 82 40 122
37 Oregon 20 1 21
38 Pennsylvania 2 6 8
39 Rhode Island 0 0 0
40 South Carolina 4 156 160
41 South Dakota 27 0 27
42 Tennessee 47 204 251
43 Texas 141 352 493
44 Utah 6 2 8
45 Vermont 1 0 1
46 Virginia 17 83 100
47 Washington 25 1 26
48 West Virginia 20 28 48
49 Wisconsin 6 0 6
50 Wyoming 30 5 35
51 TOTAL 1297 3446 4743

NOTE: Contents of the above table is from this template.

Notes

  1. Lynching statistics from Tuskegee University.