[Lynching, Russellville, Kentucky]

[Lynching, Russellville, Kentucky]

This is the free photo or picture example named [Lynching, Russellville, Kentucky] for OffiDocs app Gimp, which can be considered as an online image editor or an online photo studio.


TAGS:

Download or edit the free picture [Lynching, Russellville, Kentucky] for GIMP online editor. It is an image that is valid for other graphic or photo editors in OffiDocs such as Inkscape online and OpenOffice Draw online or LibreOffice online by OffiDocs.

From the first year of Reconstruction to the early 1940s, lynching was the primary means of maintaining white supremacy in the American South. Considered by the federal government a normal condition of post-Civil War race relations, lynching was used not only as a specific act of summary "justice" but also as a symbol to further intimidate and degrade blacks. The magnitude of recorded mob violence between 1880 and 1940 almost defies description, involving more than five thousand men, women, and children in ritualized murder, often before an invited public. Two-thirds of the victims were African-American men. Kentucky was the site of some of the most vicious racial violence, perhaps because of its unique position as a slave-holding state that had remained loyal to the Union. The state was never "reconstructed," and thus former Confederates were easily able to preserve the racist society that had characterized the antebellum period, with little or no interference by the government. This photograph is brutal testament to racial terrorism in America. The facts of the case are drawn from a small article that appeared in the "New York Times" on August 2, 1908, the same day the photograph was made by a local journalist. On the previous night, one hundred white men had entered the Russellville, Kentucky, jail and demanded that four black sharecroppers who had been detained for "disturbing the peace" be turned over to them. The men were accused by the mob of expressing sympathy for a fellow sharecropper who, in self-defense, had killed the white farmer for whom he worked. The jailer complied, and Virgil, Robert, and Thomas Jones and Joseph Riley were taken to a cedar tree and summarily lynched. The text of the note pinned to one of the bodies was also inscribed on the verso of the photograph: "Let this be a warning to you niggers to let white people alone or you will go the same way."

Free picture [Lynching, Russellville, Kentucky] integrated with the OffiDocs web apps

LATEST WORD & EXCEL TEMPLATES