Nearly 4000 blacks lynched in the US from 1877 to 1950: study

Erstveröffentlicht: 
11.02.2015

A total of 3959 black people were lynched in the southern United States over 73 years, 700 more than previous tallies, a study finds.

 

New York: Nearly 4000 black victims were lynched in 12 states in the southern United States from 1877 to 1950, an average of more than one a week for 73 years, a new study has revealed.

The Equal Justice Initiative, a human rights group in Alabama, spent years researching what it called racial terrorism and visited countless sites where the brutal murders took place.

It documents 3959 lynchings in Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas and Virginia.

The group says it found 700 more victims than any previous study into the thousands of black men, women and children who were lynched in the South in this period.

 

It documented how thousands of white Americans, including elected officials, gathered to watch public lynchings in which victims were tortured, mutilated and dismembered.

Postcards featuring photographs of the corpse were produced, vendors sold food, spectators sipped lemonade and whiskey, and victim's body parts distributed as souvenirs, the report said.

The report called "racial terror lynching" a tactic to victimise the entire African-American community, not merely punish an alleged perpetrator.

Hundreds of victims were murdered without being accused of a serious crime, but for minor affronts such as refusing to step off the sidewalk or bumping into a white woman.

Not one white person was convicted of murder for lynching a black person in America during this period, the report said.

"Lynching profoundly impacted race relations in America and shaped the geographic, political, social, and economic conditions of African Americans in ways that are still evident," it said.

Blacks are still disproportionately more likely to be arrested, convicted of a crime, jailed and sentenced to death in the United States.

The Equal Justice Initiative now intends to raise money and erect monuments to honour the victims.

AFP 

 

A total of 3959 black people were lynched in the southern United States over 73 years, 700 more than previous tallies, a study finds.

 

New York: Nearly 4000 black victims were lynched in 12 states in the southern United States from 1877 to 1950, an average of more than one a week for 73 years, a new study has revealed.

 

The Equal Justice Initiative, a human rights group in Alabama, spent years researching what it called racial terrorism and visited countless sites where the brutal murders took place.

 

It documents 3959 lynchings in Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas and Virginia.

 

The group says it found 700 more victims than any previous study into the thousands of black men, women and children who were lynched in the South in this period.

 

It documented how thousands of white Americans, including elected officials, gathered to watch public lynchings in which victims were tortured, mutilated and dismembered.

 

Postcards featuring photographs of the corpse were produced, vendors sold food, spectators sipped lemonade and whiskey, and victim's body parts distributed as souvenirs, the report said.

 

The report called "racial terror lynching" a tactic to victimise the entire African-American community, not merely punish an alleged perpetrator.

 

Hundreds of victims were murdered without being accused of a serious crime, but for minor affronts such as refusing to step off the sidewalk or bumping into a white woman.

 

Not one white person was convicted of murder for lynching a black person in America during this period, the report said.

 

"Lynching profoundly impacted race relations in America and shaped the geographic, political, social, and economic conditions of African Americans in ways that are still evident," it said.

 

Blacks are still disproportionately more likely to be arrested, convicted of a crime, jailed and sentenced to death in the United States.

 

The Equal Justice Initiative now intends to raise money and erect monuments to honour the victims.

 

AFP