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Showing Original Post only (View all)America's Forgotten Mass Lynching: When 237 People Were Murdered In Arkansas [View all]
David KruglerIn 1919, in the wake of World War I, African American sharecroppers unionized in Arkansas, unleashing a wave of white vigilantism and mass murder that left 237 people dead.
The visits began in the fall of 1918, just as World War I ended. At his office in Little Rock, Arkansas, attorney Ulysses S. Bratton listened as African American sharecroppers from the Delta told stories of theft, exploitation, and endless debt. A man named Carter had tended 90 acres of cotton, only to have his landlord seize the entire crop and his possessions. From the town of Ratio, in Phillips County, Arkansas, a black farmer reported that a plantation manager refused to give sharecroppers an itemized account for their crop. Another sharecropper told of a landlord trying to starve the people into selling the cotton at his own price. They aint allowing us down there room to move our feet except to go to the field.
No one could know it at the time, but within a year these inauspicious meetings would lead to one of the worst episodes of racial violence in U.S. history. Initiated by whites, the violenceby any measure, a massacreclaimed the lives of 237 African Americans, according to a just released report from the Equal Justice Initiative. The death toll was unusually high, but the use of racial violence to subjugate blacks during this time was not uncommon. As the Equal Justice Initiative observes, Racial terror lynching was a tool used to enforce Jim Crow laws and racial segregationa tactic for maintaining racial control by victimizing the entire African American community, not merely punishment of an alleged perpetrator for a crime. This was certainly true of the massacre in Phillips County, Arkansas.
Bratton agreed to represent the cheated sharecroppers, who also joined a new union, the Progressive Farmers and Household Union of America. Its founder, a black Delta native named Robert Hill, had no prior organizing experience but plenty of ambition. The union wants to know why it is that the laborers cannot control their just earnings which they work for, Hill announced as he urged black sharecroppers to each recruit 25 prospective members to form a lodge. Hill was especially successful in Phillips County, where seven lodges were established in 1919.
It took a lot of courage to defy the Arkansas Deltas white elite. Men such as E.M. Mort Allen controlled the local economy, government, law enforcement, and courts. Allen was a latter-day carpetbagger, a Northerner who had come to Arkansas in 1906 to make his fortune. He married well and formed a partnership with a wealthy businessman. Together they developed the town of Elaine, a hub for the thriving lumber industry. Allen and the countys white landowners understood that their continued prosperity depended on the exploitation of black sharecroppers and laborers. In a county where more than 75 percent of the population was African American, this wasnt a task to be taken lightly. In February 1919, the planters agreed to reduce the acreage of cotton in cultivation in anticipation of a postwar drop in demand. If they gave their tenants a fair settlement, their profits would shrink further. Allen spoke for the planters when he declared that the old Southern methods are much the best, and that the Southern men can handle the negroes all right and peaceably.
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http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2015/02/16/america-s-forgotten-mass-lynching-when-237-people-were-murdered-in-arkansas.html
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America's Forgotten Mass Lynching: When 237 People Were Murdered In Arkansas [View all]
DonViejo
Feb 2015
OP
But that is almost as long ago as the Crusades? What can we possibly learn from history in America?
Fred Sanders
Feb 2015
#2
As a result of this, blacks left on trains by the droves to the North, where it wasn't much better
Hestia
Feb 2015
#3
Similar to massacres of small farmers by Cattlemen Assoc. in Wyoming, as told in Heaven's Gate
leveymg
Feb 2015
#4
If they had been staring down 300 rifle barrels stories like this wouldn't have happened
glasshouses
Feb 2015
#11
understood but I believe many of these stories in the early 1900's would have turned out
glasshouses
Feb 2015
#13
Seems every "race war" in the US has been where white people go on a rampage.
Spitfire of ATJ
Feb 2015
#15