Showing posts with label ACLU. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ACLU. Show all posts

Thursday, July 13, 2023

Protagonists of National Anti-Lynching Law Rally Again as Mob Crimes Continue -- July 13, 2023

Chicago Tribune, 09-July-1923

Missouri Representative Leonidas C Dyer first introduced his anti-lynching bill in 1918. In most cases, it passed in the House, but got filibustered by southerners in the Senate, who supported what we now call domestic terrorism. 

PROTAGONISTS OF NATIONAL ANTI-LYNCHING LAW
RALLY AGAIN AS MOB CRIMES CONTINUE

By NEA Service

Washington, July 9 -- Proponents of the much-filibustered Dyer anti-lynching bill are renewing their efforts to inscribe it on the federal statute books as reports of mob killings trickle in from all over the country.

Failure of Congress to enact the measure at the last session is regarded by supporters of the Dyer proposal as a partial condonement of mob rule.

Plans to shove the bill through the next session are being formulated now. Leaders declare the fight will be waged with renewed vigor when the speaker’s gavel falls on the House rostrum when the lawmakers return to their tasks.

Mob Still Busy

During the first three months of this year, four men were lynched by unidentified mobs, official statistics reveal. Three were negroes. One was white.

Thirteen persons -- six whites and seven negroes -- were killed in riots.

Nineteen, including two white women, were flogged publicly. Four were victims of masked mobs.

In 1922, 57 persons were stolen out of their jail cells and summarily executed by gangs of infuriated citizens who took the law into their hands.

South Shakes Off Yoke

Judge Lynch, cold unreasoning advocate of old Virginia, had come back to the bench.

But observers believe mob violence is on the wane in the south. The number of lynchings in Dixieland have decreased somewhat in recent years.

This is due, according to those who have studied the situation, to two things:

Migration of thousands of negroes to the north.

And a reaction from the agitation for a federal anti-lynching bill, such as that introduced by Representative L. C. Dyer of St. Louis.

Women Take Up Cudgel

Women in Louisiana have banded together to blot out lynchings. They’ve organized the Louisiana Race Relations Committee. Similar steps are being taken by their sisters in other southern states.

The American Civil Liberties Union of New York, together with the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, has been working tirelessly in behalf of the Dyer measure. So is the Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute of Tuskegee, Ala.

The latter institution has compiled figures showing Texas, in 1922, led all other states in the number of lynchings within its borders. It had 18 victims.

Official Report

Reports of the Civil Liberties Union list these lynchings for 1923:
LOUSIANA. Leslie Leggett, a negro accused of associating with white women, was kidnapped and lynched at Sheroveport on Jan. 4. Police had been unable to obtain evidence warranting his arrest.
ARKANSAS: E. C. Gregor, a railroad striker, was lynched on Jan. 13 by a mob of farmers at Harrison, who visited his home in search of evidence in connection with destruction of property of the Missouri & North Arkansas railroad.
TEXAS: Dr. John Smith, a negro physician, was burned to death at Bishop after his hands and feet had been cut off by unknown persons. He had been arrested for injuring a woman while driving his automobile.

Appeal to Religion

GEORGIA: An unidentified negro was lynched in a swamp near Devereux on Feb. 3 by a posse which accused him with robbing stores and killing William Renfroe, county constable.

Meanwhile clergymen and social workers are appealing to religious instincts to stop these wholesale murders.

"Let the law take its course," they advise. "Our courts are for the protection of man’s rights. And they will see that justice is meted out. The guilty will be punished and the innocent will go free.

"Judge Lynch is no longer the prototype of Twentieth Century Justice."

Chicago Tribune, 09-July-1923


Thursday, March 9, 2023

Lynching Orgies Rivals Scene of 'Inferno,' Charge -- March 9, 2023

Saint Paul Appeal, 03-March-1923

The first article tries to shame the people who committed lynchings and claimed to be Christians. It didn't work.

The Missouri and North Arkansas Railroad mentioned in the second article is not the same railroad as the current company.

LYNCHING ORGIES
RIVALS SCENE OF
'INFERNO,’ CHARGE

Savage Tortures Pictured in
Report to Federal Coun cil of Churches

DONE IN SIGHT OF CHURCHES

Committe Finds That Many Victims Were Innocent of Any Crime

(Crusader Service.)

Washington, March 2. --
Like scenes from Dante's "Inferno," and unlike anything deemed possible in modern life, is the description of the tortures inflicted in lynching bees in various states throughout this so-called civilized country, as compiled by the Commission on the Church and Race Relations of the Federal Council of Churches in its educational campaign against lynching.

The stories almost pass belief, and yet they are taken from accounts written by reputable newspaper men in the communities in which they occurred.

The commission states that it seems hardly believable that America, with its great Christian churches, homes, schools and courts and holier-than-thou attitude, allowed between 1885 and 1921, the lynching of more than 4,000 persons, the great majority of whom were colored people. To add to the enormity of these crimes against humanity, eighty-three of the victims were women. Scores of victims listed as adult males were mere youths. Seventeen of the women lynched were white, the others being colored.

Many Victims Innocent.

"Some of those killed by mobs were charged with crimes, many of them only with misdemeanors, some only with words or acts which are nowhere punishable by law at any time. All were slain without trial where they might have faced their accusers, have had witnesses and have had the evidence considered by a lawful judge or jury. A frenzied mob was judge, jury and executioner. In many cases persons not sought by the mobs have been lynched by mistake, so wild and savage has been the procedure. Some of the victims suffered indescribable torture, such as saturation of parts of the body with kerosene or gasoline, so that they could be burned piecemeal, or branding with hot irons.

Within Sight of Churches.

"In some cases these atrocities have been perpetrated within sight of the churches of the community."

Lynchings are often definitely planned and carried out. Here are a few illustrations chosen from accounts in leading city newspapers following lynchings:

1. "Late last night the jailer was enticed away from the prison on the pretense of a call to make an arrest. As soon as he was out of hearing a mob of 200 masked men went to the jail and took the keys from his wife, and securing the three prisoners, took them to the bridges land placed a strong rope around the neck of each, tied the other end to the timbers of the bridge and compelled their victims to jump."

Eight Prisoners Shot.

2. (Summarized.) "Masked mob entered the jail at two A. M. and took out nine prisoners -- one white man and eight Negroes. Eight were shot to death and one, a Negro, escaped after being wounded. The mob over- powered the town marshal and the jailer, carried the men out and tied them to fence posts by their necks and then fired five volleys into their bodies. Only one of the prisoners had been convicted -- a Negro, under sentence of death for the murder of another Negro."

CHARGE RAIL HEADS
KILL LYNCHING PROBE

Ku Klux Klan and Sinister Influences
at Work toy Sidetrack Investigation,
Civil Liberties, Writes Governor.

(Crusader Service.)

New York, March 2. --
Charges that investigation by the Arkansas legislature into the lynching of E. C. Gregor, a railroad striker, at Harrison on January 15, has been side-tracked by officials of the Missouri and North Arkansas railroad are contained in a letter sent yesterday to Governor Thomas C. McRae by Roger N. Baldwin, director, and Harry F. Ward, chairman of the American Civil Liberties Union. The officers of the union, who have been in touch with the situation through their correspondents in Arkansas, offer to "render any assistance possible to the authorities of the state in restoring civil rights in the affected district and in bringing to justice the perpetrators of these outrages."

They charge that "sinister influences are at work to prevent anything being done injhe future, and specific charges which bear out that contention.

Sunday, January 19, 2020

Civil Liberties League is Formed -- January 19, 2020

Wheeling Intelligencer, January 26, 1920
100 years ago today, on 19-January-1920, the American Civil Liberties Union was formed to defend personal liberties in the United States.  

CIVIL LIBERTIES
LEAGUE IS FORMED

NEW YORK, Jan. 25. -- The formation of a new organization to be known as the American Civil Liberties union, "to champion in the highest courts the civil liberty rights of persons and organizations," was announced here tonight by Prof. Harry F. Ward of the Union Theological seminary, who will head the union. Others who will serve on the executive committee will be Helen Phelps Stokes, treasurer; Albert De Silver and Roger N. Baldwin. Walter Nelles is to be chief counsel.

On the national committees of the new organization are James H. Maurer, president of the Pennsylvania State Federation of Labor; Duncan McDonald, president of the Illinois State Federation of Labor; Helen Keller Hollquit, Jane Addams, Prof. Robert Morse Lovett and John Sayre.

The union, according to Prof. Ward, will fight in the courts all attempts to violate the right of free speech, free press and peaceful assemblage. He added that it was proposed to keep "industrial struggles in conformity with the constitution of the United States and of the several states of the union."