Thursday, May 26, 2011

The Detailed Story of a Lynching

I've also had a mildly increased interest in the subject of lynching since I learned of one of my own ancestors who had been lynched.  Many associate the practice as a legacy of the South and racial attitudes toward blacks.  While that was usually the case it was by no means confined to that description.  My lynched ancestor was white, 15 years old, and was hung by persons unknown from a telegraph pole in 1885 in northern Minnesota.  

Following is a transcription of a report publish in the Pike County News in 1927: 

Report of Lynching Written By Official
---------
County Attorney Sends Report Of Murder and Lynching To Governor Fields

County Attorney, Harry Moore, of Letcher County, has made the following official report of the lynching of Leonard Woods (colored) after the murder of Hershel Deaton to Governor Fields, which gives a complete account of the lamentable affair as well as what led to it:

On last Sunday night, at 11 o’clock, Hershel Deaton, who is employed by the Elkhorn Coal Corporation as mine foreman at Fleming, Ky., while driving from Jenkins to Fleming and at a point approximately one mile from the Jenkins post office, was hailed by a negro by the name of Leonard Woods and, on stopping his car, the negro demanded that Deaton carry him and two colored women who were with him to 206 (a mine tipple), which was a distance of three-fourths of a mile in the direction in which Deaton was traveling, and Deaton replied, “This is not a taxi, this a private car and I can’t take you,” or words to that effect, whereupon the two women attempted to climb on the rear of his car, which was a Chrysler coupe, and Deaton requested them to get off from the car, which they declined to do and Deaton stepped out of his car and went to the rear to get them off, at which time one of the women handed Woods something from the large pocketbook in her possession and immediately a pistol was fired by Woods, the bullet taking effect in the left side of Deaton, passing through his body and lodged itself just beneath his skin on his right side.

W. M. Townsley and Ernest Jordan, two young men from Fleming who were with Deaton, had not up to the time of the shooting left the car, but immediately following the pistol report Townsley jumped out of the car and went to the rear thereof, where he found the negro standing with the pistol in his hand, a few feet from Deaton, who was lying on the concrete pavement, and immediately the women started up the road and the negro ran down the road.  Townsley and Jordan lifted Deaton in the car and drove back to the Jenkins hospital where it was found upon their arrival Deaton was dead.

Negro Women Found

The officers of Jenkins were immediately notified of the shooting and they made every effort to ascertain the names, description and whereabouts of the two colored women and the man, and about 3 o’clock on Monday morning their efforts were rewarded by locating the women in “Slickrock,” a colored quarter of Jenkins, and from the women the name and description of Woods was ascertained and the officers continued their search for Woods that night, and about 7 o’clock Monday morning he was taken into custody in the woods at about one-half mile from the scene of the shooting and was driven to Whitesburg by automobile, where he was delivered to the county jail there.  The remains of Deaton were taken to Coeburn, Va., where his funeral was held on Tuesday.

On Tuesday night automobiles bearing Virginia licenses kept coming across the State line at Pound Gap at intervals of five, ten and fifteen minutes apart, passing through Jenkins, Fleming and Neon and on in the direction of Whitesburg, and several cars fell in at various points along the way and especially at Fleming and Neon.

At about 10:30, Tuesday night, Branson Tucker, a deputy sheriff located at Jenkins telephoned M. T. Reynolds, Sheriff of Letcher County, informing him that a number of Virginia cars had passed through Jenkins headed for Whitesburg, and the Sheriff, having retired for the night, immediately dressed and came to the Court House, and with Joe Stamper, the town marshal of Whitesburg, went to the jail and notified Mrs. Mantie Whitaker, the jailer, to take her family and leave the jail, which she did, delivering the keys to Mr. Stamper, and the Sheriff went to his office in the Court House and in a few minutes the crowd had gathered about the jail, at which time the Sheriff went to the rear of the Court House and addressed the crowd, pleading with them to dis-band and let the law take its course, and was told by one of the leaders that “we appreciate your speech, but we have come after our man.”

Efforts To Enter Jail

The Sheriff mingled a few minutes with the crowd, then went to the Court House and in company with Joe Stamper, town marshal of Whitesburg; W. M. Combs, a deputy sheriff, went to the second floor of the Court House and watched the mob in their attempts to break into the jail.  After about fifty minutes of labor with hacksaws, axes and other instruments, entrance was gained to the jail and to the cells in which the negro was confined.

Before entrance was made to the jail and after considerable efforts were made with axes to gain admittance, six men, armed with high-powered rifles and pistols, went to the second floor of the Lewis Brothers store and awoke Oscar Lewis, two of the men entering his room, where he and wife and baby were peacefully sleeping, and one pointed a pistol and another a rifle, ordered him to get up and sell them some hacksaws and blades, which demand Mr. Lewis obeyed by selling them a dozen blades.  Mr. Lewis states that he was unable to recognize any of the men and that they were strangers to him.

The mob started to take the two colored women with the negro, but they protested their innocence with having anything to do with the killing of Deaton further than being along and that they had given the name, the description and the whereabouts of Woods that led to his capture and the women were then placed back in jail and Woods was loaded in an automobile and the signal given to leave town, and after loading up their respective cars the crowd fired several hundred shots in the air and left for or in the direction of Jenkins, and with them went several carloads of Whitesburg citizens who were awakened by the mob in getting into the jail, for the purpose of seeing the execution.

Taken To Jenkins

Woods was taken to the place where he murdered Deaton at Jenkins and efforts were started to string him up between two automobiles, when S. H. Privitt, Chief of Police of Jenkins, appeared on the scene and to the lynching of Woods in town.  Finally, he persuaded them to go out of town, which they did, journeying on to the Kentucky-Virginia line at Pound Gap, where Woods was placed upon the platform which was constructed for the celebration of the opening of the Pound Gap road on Saturday, November 18th.

And while hanging from a rope placed about his neck and fastened to two posts of the platform, his body was riddled with bullets.  When one rope was cut in two by a bullet his body fell to the platform and gasoline was poured over him and set ablaze.  His clothing was badly burned and his body scorched.

The Virginia crowd returned to their places of abode and the Kentucky cars came back off the mountain and returned to the town from whence they came.

Handkerchiefs Cover Faces

During the time entrance was being gained to the jail a few of the crowd wore handkerchiefs over their faces, leaving just their eyes disclosed, but the larger percentage wore no masks of any description and they all were well dressed and so as I have been able to learn no one her recognized anyone in the crowd.

The county jail was badly damaged and six prisoners were permitted or made their escape therefrom after the door had been sawed open.  Those who escaped were Carl Hall, Camp Armstrong, held to answer a Federal charge of violating the liquor laws; Linzey Morton, charged with grand larceny; Charley Spurgeon, charged with house-breaking, and Noah Hamilton, charged with house-breaking and Ballard Meade, charged with a violation of prohibition act.  None of the prisoners have been apprehended.

I am in possession of the names of six Letcher County citizens against whom circumstances point as being participants in the lynching, but lack a little more definite evidence to justify action at this time.  But I believe it a matter of a few days before sufficient evidence will be had to establish with a certainty several of the Virginia party and a few in Kentucky who were present and took an active part in the storming of the jail and lynching of Woods.

In a conference with F. A. Tate, Commonwealth’s Attorney of Wise County, Va., and with T. H. Kennedy, Wise County Sheriff, I was assured that they are lending every assistance in Virginia to discover and to bring to justice those on the Virginia aide who were parties to the crime.  The killing of Woods occurred about six feet across the Kentucky State line in Virginia and from all information that I have been able to obtain, those participating in shooting rifles and pistols at the body of Woods were stationed on the Virginia side.

Difficult To Get Evidence

I find it most difficult to get any tangible evidence against anyone connected with the lynching, due to the fact that nine out of every ten persons in both Letcher and Wise Counties are in sympathy with the execution of the negro, although a majority regret the necessity, as they express it, of “riding over the law.”

The idea of lynching Woods seems to have originated at the burial of Deaton at Coeburn, Va., on Tuesday morning as the crowd left Coeburn in Tom’s Creek Tuesday night to carry out the plan and were reinforced by others joining in at Dorton and Pound Gap.  Before they reached Kentucky and at the time they reached the jail at Whitesburg they were well prepared to take the prisoner, being well armed with rifles and pistons, and the report is, although I have not been able to verify it, that they had 100 sticks of dynamite to use if necessary to carry out their plan.  I am of the opinion that it would have taken a small army to have prevented them from carrying it into execution.

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Society Girl Tries Uplift in County with One Auto

Some have always looked down their noses at the people of Appalachia, including other Kentuckians.   I’m sure the following article from the March 26, 1926 Pike County News was reassuring to the ignorant savages who populated Leslie County:

“Miss Martha Prewitt, society leader, of Lexington, has gone into the mountains of Leslie County, Ky, - the only county in the State which has not even one buggy and only one automobile within its bounds – and there will engage in community settlement work.”

Child Brides

The News, the Pike County, Ky. newspaper, showed marriage license applications on the front page.  They provided the names, ages, communities of residence, and their races if non-white.  It was common to see 15 and 16 year olds listed, but the publisher took special note in the January 13, 1925 edition about two such applications in neighboring Letcher County, where the brides-to-be were ages 12 and 13.

Monday, May 23, 2011

Demographics is Destiny, Part 1

The future of a country is written in its demographics, and no region can avoid it.  Eastern Ky. was a much different place in the early 20th century than after the Civil War and than it is today.  This post is the first of several, occasional posts to provide background to some of the future posted stories and to show where we’ve been.

In 1900, the population of the 45 states was 74.6 million people.  In 1920, that number had grown to 105 million for the 48 states, about a third of the U.S. population today.  Meanwhile, Kentucky showed 2.14 million residents in 1900 and 2.41 million in 1920.  Interestingly, the percentage of blacks in the 1920 Kentucky population was 9.9%, nearly double the percentage of 2005 but significantly less than the 13.3% of 1860. 
 
The map below says much about how different eastern Ky. was about a hundred years ago.  It comes from the 1920 U.S. Census.  The counties with the vertical striping were the fastest growing, showing increases over 50 percent.  They are Harlan, Perry, Letcher, and Pike.  The counties in white all lost population during the period and make up almost half of all counties.  So why was southeastern Ky. on fire, and what was the effect on the lives of our ancestors?  To be continued.  
  

I realize the map is still a bit small.  Let me know and I will send you a full size version.



The Plight of Prestonsburg

In May, 1921, The Pike County News reprinted an editorial from the Prestonsburg Citizen lamenting the breakdown of public order there.  The piece starts out, "To what is this city coming?"  It goes on to describe the problems in more detail:

"'Bootlegging' thrives unrestrained despite official effort.  Public drunkenness is so common that it occasions no comment except, perhaps, some jocular remark, and 'pistol toting' is so general as to be fashionable."
The writer goes on to blame 'moral lethargy' and inertia for the lack of effective response.

One surprising statement made was unexpected:

"The fearless performance of strict duty under the law by officers is liable to bring about homicide.  If the officer escapes he is apt to find himself indicted on a charge of murder."
The general crime rate in those days, particularly murder, rivals that of the worst U.S. city today.  I will have much more on this later.