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
convictions of Knox and Daniel, 108–9, 111–15
described in
New York Times
, 108–9, 111
dynamiting of Hockenhull worker cabins, 169–70
in early 1920s, 185
and Griffith’s film
The Birth of a Nation
, 71–72
in Hall County, 122–24
“lawlessness,” 21, 63, 81, 112
long tradition of, 81
after Mae Crow’s funeral, xii, 67–69
mass meeting about violence by, 113–16
occupations and social rank, 72–73, 80
as old men, 196–97
raids after Crow assault, 62–65
raids in the 1870s, 150
and “slave patrol” system in Georgia, 80–81
threats sent through the mails, 115, 117
threats to white planters, 111–12, 160
see also
mob violence; racial cleansing
Nuckolls, Alexander Burruss, 145
Nuckolls, Archibald, 2
Nunn, Sam, 225
Obear, William, 153
Oglethorpe, James, 73
“old threadbare lie” that Negro men rape white women, 26, 192
Oliver, Beulah Rucker, 110, 157
Oliver, Byrd
Backband Church, 65, 73
flight from Forsyth County, 108–11
in Hall County, 157
photograph,
109
State Industrial and High School, 157
Oliver, Delia, 108, 109, 110, 111
Oliver, Dorothy Rucker, 109–10, 111, 157
Omilami, Elisabeth, 233
Otwell, Roy P., 196, 221, 222
Parks, Benjamin, 74
pattyrollers, 80, 81
Perkerson, Angus, 99–100, 106
Phagan, Mary, 88
Phagan, Wash, 123, 124
Phillips, Bill, xv, 199, 217, 225–27
Phillips, Nan, xv, 199–200, 217, 225–27
Phillips, Rachel, xv, 217, 225
Phillips, Will, 170–72
Pike, Bonnie, 215
Pirkle, Isaiah
arrest after Ellen Grice’s attack, 4
at Buford, Georgia,
xxi
, 87
as material witness, 85, 100
release after trials, 107
Plainville “race war,” 14–16, 17
Pleasant Grove Church, xiv, 35, 37, 67, 103, 243
Pool, Tom, 103
Price, James, 174
Prohibition law in Georgia, 117
Pruitt, Tom, 238
racial cleansing
Cherokee removals from Forsyth County, 76–77
expulsion of African Americans from Forsyth County, xii–xiii, xvi, 63, 69, 117–19, 183–86
failure in Hall County, 120–25
Forsyth County 1915–1920, 173–82
in government, by Wilson, 166, 167–68, 173
land bought or seized by whites, 183–85
“whites only” rule in Forsyth County, 173–82, 204
see also
night riders
Raeder, R. B. Cotton, 221
Ramsey, Charity, 148
Ray, James Earl, 219
Reid, William W. (Bill)
about, 2–3
absence after Edwards arrest, 47–48, 52–53, 59, 101, 116
account of “race riot,” 58–60
arrest of Joe Smith, 172
arrest of Rob Edwards, 45–47
criticism for execution spectacle, 153–54
on day of Knox trial, 97
execution of Knox and Daniel, 126–28, 129–32, 134, 137–38, 153
Grant Smith taken into custody, 8
meeting with Forsyth prisoners before trial, 88, 90–91, 101
member of Ku Klux Klan, 2, 8, 47, 61, 92
photographs,
3
,
5
search for Ellen Grice’s attacker, 1, 4
transfer of Crow suspects to Atlanta, 58
Richmond and Danville Railroad, 9
Riley, Thomas, 148
Rivers, Nelson, 238
Rocks, Marvin and Rubie, 186, 188
Rogers, Joe, 4
Roosevelt, Theodore, 166
Rose, xviii
Ross, John, 76
Rucker, Beulah, 110, 157
scaffold construction, 127, 129, 134–36
Scott, Winfield, 76
Seaman, Ron, 222
“Seeing Georgia” tour, 174–80
Selman, William, 139
Sequoyah, 73
Shadburn, Don, 77
Shakerag Church, 11, 63, 65
Sharpton, Al, 207
Shiloh Baptist, 11, 12, 65
Shiloh United Methodist, 208
Shirley, Frank, xvi, 213
Shuttlesworth, Fred, 213
Sibley, Caleb, 145
Sims, Randy, 204
“slave patrol” system in Georgia, 79–81
Smith, Aaron, 76
Smith, Annie, 169
Smith, Byel, 169
Smith, Eddie, 169
Smith, Frank, 169, 170
Smith, Grant
about, 6–7
arrest/taken into custody by Reid, 8
comment about Ellen Grice, 7
horsewhipping, 7–8, 55, 144
protection by Georgia National Guard, 22–25
threats to lynch, 12
transfer to Marietta jail, 25
Smith, Horace, 124
Smith, Joe, 172
Smith, Lula, 169
Smith, Roosevelt, 169
Smith, Roysten, 100
Smith, Silas, 6, 144
Snell, Benjamin, 135
Sojourner Truth housing project (Detroit),
189
, 190–91
Sophisticated Data Research, 200
Southern Poverty Law Center, 238
Southern Railway, 9, 15, 87, 121, 128, 171
Spencer, Lon, 123–24
Stahl, Andrew, 39
State of Georgia v. Ernest Knox
appointment of defense lawyers, 84–85
appointment of prosecution team, 84
Bud Crow testimony, 93
Ed Collins testimony, 94
George Brice testimony, 93–94
Jane Daniel testimony, 100–102, 104–5
John Hockenhull testimony, 93–94
Judge Morris, 92–93, 96–98, 100, 102–3
jury selection, 92
Marvin Bell testimony, 95–96
prosecution’s narrative, 94–96
subpoena list, 100
verdict, 103
Stephens, Thomas, 162
Stoner, J. B., 213–14
Stoney Point, 11, 65
Stovall, W. R., 100
Strickland, Ansel
and Cumming–Forsyth County Chamber of Commerce, 242
hosting of Knox and Daniel executions, 126–27, 129, 131, 138, 140, 163, 243
on replacing black workers with machines, 163–64, 165
support for Forsyth expulsions, 126, 168, 181
Strickland, Hardy Jr., 78
Strickland, Hardy Sr., 78–79, 126, 146, 147–48, 186–87
Strickland, Jacob, 78
Strickland, James, 186
Strickland, Joel, 78
Strickland, John, 124
Strickland, Kelly, 222
Strickland, Morgan and Harriet, 4, 12
Strickland, Newt, 124
Strickland, Oliver, 087
Strickland, Rosanna, 186
Strickland, Thomas, 147–48
Strickland, Tolbert, 78, 146, 187
Strickland, Tolman, 124
Strickland, Will and Corrie, 186–87, 188
Sugarman, Alvin, 230
Taft, William Howard, 167
Talmadge, Eugene, 193
Tanner, John, 123
Tate, Samuel, 158
Terry, John Byrd, 244
Till, Emmett, 4
Tillson, Davis, 145
Touissant, Randall, 242
Travis, James, 181
Treaty of New Echota, 75–76
Trotter, Monroe, 167–68
Tullus, Tobe, 123, 124
Turner, Mary, 56–57
Waldrip, Marcus, 35
Wallace, George, 199
Wallis, C. O., 100
Walraven, Wesley, xv, 211, 215, 218, 220, 224
Ward, Charley, 49
Ward, Felker, 236
Ward, Henry, 43
Washington, Booker T., 151–52
Webb, A. C., 174
Webb, Shirley, 200–205
Wells, Ida B., 26
West, Wylie, 174
White, D. P., 122
Whitmire, Steve, 228
Whitt, Joel, 69
Williams, Bryine, 202
Williams, Hosea
after First Brotherhood March, 221
after Second Brotherhood March, 230–31
call for Forsyth whites to apologize, 228–29
and civil rights movement in 1950s and 1960s, xv,
216
, 219
Coalition to End Fear and Intimidation in Forsyth County, 230–33, 237
early life, 218–19
First Brotherhood March leadership, 210, 215,
217
, 218–20, 224
letter to Roger Crow, 230–32
nonviolence, 215, 219–20
photographs,
216
,
217
Willingham, Harold, 89
Willingham, Wright, 178–79
Wills, Theo, 136
Wilson, Woodrow, 72, 166, 167–68, 173
Winfrey, Oprah, 229–30
Wingo, Calvin, 34
Young, Andrew, 225
ALSO BY PATRICK PHILLIPS
Elegy for a Broken Machine
Boy
Chattahoochee
Copyright © 2016 by Patrick Phillips
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The Library of Congress has cataloged the printed edition as follows:
Names: Phillips, Patrick, 1970– author.
Title: Blood at the root : a racial cleansing in America / Patrick Phillips.
Description: First edition. | New York ; London : W.W. Norton & Company,
[2016] | Includes bibliographical references and index.