Read Blood at the Root: A Racial Cleansing in America Online
Authors: Patrick Phillips
Tags: #NC, #United States, #LA, #KY, #Social Science, #SC, #MS, #VA, #20th Century, #South (AL, #TN, #History, #FL, #GA, #WV), #Discrimination & Race Relations, #State & Local, #AR
Harris, Charles L. (Charlie)
about, 9
and accounts of Cherokee removals, 76, 77
Atlanta Northeastern Railroad Company, 9–11, 26, 81–82, 99, 175, 180
belief that “race troubles” were over, 26–27
communication with Governor Brown, 8, 19, 128
concerns about Plainville “race war,” 17
incentive to protect black defendants, 82
and mass meeting about night riders, 114, 115
meeting with Ellen Grice’s family, 25–26
photograph,
11
relocation to Cordele, Georgia, 181
and “Seeing Georgia” tour, 174–80
transfer of Crow suspects to Atlanta, 58
and white mob after Smith’s arrest, 19
Harris, David, 76
Harris, Deasie, 17–18
Harris, Isabella, 17–18, 19, 68
Harris, Joe Frank, 222, 233, 236–37
Harris, Leon, 17–18
Hart, Gary, xvi, 225
Hartsfield, Mrs., 223
Heard, Minnie, 14
Hightower Association, 12–13
Hill, Wheeler, 66
History of the American People
(Wilson), 168
Hockenhull, John
death, 170
and dynamiting of worker cabins, 169–70
rehiring of black workers, 169–70
silence regarding purge, 181
treatment of Mae Crow, 29, 66, 148
trial testimony, 93–94, 148
Hockenhull, John Sr., 148
Hockenhull, Laura, 168–69, 181
Holmes, Pete, 49
Holtzclaw, Mrs., xviii
Hood, Joe, 121
Hooks, Benjamin, 225, 230
Howard Beach (Queens, New York City), 207
Howell, Toney
arrest after Ellen Grice’s attack, 4–5, 12
charges against, 83
photographs,
xxi
,
86
,
87
transfer to Cumming for trial, 85–92
trial postponement, 107
Hughes, Langston, 192
Hunt, Benjamin, 161, 162–63, 164, 166
Hunter, Alex, 183
Hurse, Bill, 122–23, 124
Indian Removal Act of 1830, 75
Jackson, Jesse, xvi
Jaspin, Elliot, 183–84, 185, 220, 234
Jenkins, Will, 123, 124
Jenny, complaint to Freedmen’s Bureau, 148
Jim Crow laws, 6, 151, 162, 168
John, complaint to Freedmen’s Bureau, 146
Johnson, Ed, 31, 33, 35, 104, 152
Jones, Herschel V., 130, 135, 136, 137
Jones, J. B., 43
Jones, Monroe, 136
Jordan, Alice, 27
Jordan, George, 27, 67–68
Jordan, Mattie, 67
Jordan, Ruth
on Crow assault, 45
on Ernest Knox mock lynching, 37–38, 39–40
on execution of Knox and Daniel, 138
on homeless Knox children, 35–36, 37
on Mae Crow’s burial, 67
on night rider violence, 67–68
Julian, A. J., 112–13
Kal
kaua, David (king), 242
Kellogg, Edmund, 142, 143, 152
Kellogg, Eliza Thompson, 73, 81, 143–44, 158–59, 162, 244
Kellogg, George, 142
Kellogg, Hannah, 142, 150
Kellogg, Joseph
Colored Methodist Campground, 12
increasing prosperity, 150–51
move to Marietta, 158–59
photograph,
13
property listed for sale, 160
property owned, 12, 73, 81, 142, 143, 152
as qualified voter, 143
slavery, 143
wedding, 143–44
Kellogg, Lewis, 143
Kincaid, J. H., 53
King, Coretta Scott, xvi, 225, 230
King, Gilbert, 193
King, Martin Luther Jr.
assassination, xvi, 196, 219, 238
birthplace, 243
Ebenezer Baptist Church, 195
on Hosea Williams, 219
nonviolence, 215
Kiska, Moses, 192
Knox, Charlie, 34, 35–36
Knox, Erma, 34, 35–36
Knox, Ernest
arrest, xi
body used by surgical students, 139
at Buford, Georgia,
xxi
,
36
,
87
charges against, 83
childhood poverty, 34, 35–36
“confession,” 39–40, 42, 95, 100, 201
execution, 134, 136–38
hired by Gilford Bagby, 36
mirror found near Mae Crow’s body, 38
mock lynching, 37–38, 39–40, 42, 95
sentencing, 105
taken to Gainesville jail, 42–43
transfer to Atlanta after trial, 106–7
transfer to Cumming for execution, 127–28,
129
transfer to Cumming for trial, 85–92
transfer to Fulton County Jail (Atlanta), 43–44, 53
see also State of Georgia v. Ernest Knox
Knox, Nettie, 34, 35, 137
Ku Klux Klan
Bill Reid membership in, 2, 8, 47, 61, 92
celebration after Brotherhood March, xvi,
xvii
in Cumming’s Fourth of July Parade, 199
disbanding in 1870s, 71
in
History of the American People
, 168
rebirth, 71–72
Southern Poverty Law Center lawsuit, 238
Ku Klux Klan Act, 71
land lotteries, 75, 76, 78
Lewis, Helen Matthews, 193–95, 199
Lewis, John,
216
, 225
Lindorme, Arnold, 128, 131, 137, 139
Lowery, Joseph, 225, 230
Lummus, Andrew Jackson, 2
Lummus, Grace, 3
Lummus, Jewell, 3
Lummus, Lillie, 3
Lummus, Mitchell Gay
arrest of Rob Edwards, 45–47
arrest of Will Phillips, 171
attempt to stop Edwards lynching, 49–50, 130, 181
campaign for sheriff, 2–3, 47, 181
and Dabner Elliot’s murder, 155
and execution of Knox and Daniel, 134, 136, 137
Grant Smith taken into custody, 8
photograph,
5
protection of Grant Smith, 22
relocation to Atlanta, 181–82
search for Ellen Grice’s attacker, 4
transfer of Grice suspects, 25
Lummus, Savannah, 3
lynching
abductions from Cumming jail, 48–49
death of Rob Edwards, xi–xii
Laura Nelson, 56,
57
Leo Frank, 88–89,
90
, 92, 104, 154
Mary Turner, 56–57
mock lynching, 37–40, 42, 95
Marcelli, Miguel, 200–205, 210, 225
Marietta Rifles, 22, 23,
24
, 29, 61, 105
Marr, Catie, 34
Martin, Bud, 123, 124
Martin, Emma, 176, 178
Martin, Jess, 123
Martin, Jim, 208–9
Mashburn, Marcus, 196–97
Mason, Carrie, 79
Matheson, K. G., 174
McCarty, Rucker, 85
McClure, Joseph, 100
McCullough, Laura, 210–11
McCullough, W. A., 177
McWhorther, William, 80–81
Miller, Ivey, 14
mob violence
after Ellen Grice assault, 13–14, 16, 18–19, 22, 29
after Mae Crow assault, 45–54
Grant Smith horsewhipping, 7–8
law for controlling violence, 22, 81
outsiders blamed for, 70–71, 72
and “Seeing Georgia” tour, 174–80
see also
lynching; night riders
Moon, Bertha, 186, 188
Moon, Ed, 186, 187, 188
moonshiners, 116–17
Moore, Hudson, 173–74, 175
Morris, Fred
appointment as defense lawyer, 85
lynching of Leo Frank, 88–89, 92, 154
meeting with Forsyth prisoners before trial, 88, 90–91, 101
Morris, Newton A.
appointment of defense lawyers, 84–85
on day of sentencing, 105–6
lynching of Leo Frank, 88–89,
90
meeting with Ellen Grice’s family, 25–26
meeting with Forsyth prisoners before trial, 88, 90–91
order to move Grice prisoners to Atlanta, 53
postponement of Grice and Crow cases, 62
privacy fence ordered for executions, 126, 127, 129–30, 243
request for martial law, 83
State of Georgia v. Ernest Knox
, 92–93, 96–98, 100, 102–3
Toney Howell trial postponement, 107
trial of Oscar Daniel, 104
Mt. Fair, 11, 65
“mulatto” or mixed-race slaves, 78–79
Nash, Royal Freeman, 117–19, 124–25
Neal, Anthony, 81
Nelson, Laura, 56,
57
Newman, William T., 115, 116–17
night riders
burning of black churches, 64–65, 115