Lynching Websites
Jeffrey B. Perry - Biography
The website maintained by Jeffrey B. Perry the biographer of Hubert Harrison and literary executor of Theodore W. Allen (author of "The Invention of the White Race").
M. Susan Orr-Klopfer - Journalist, Author, Speaker
Mississippi Civil Rights Movement Bookstore features new information on Dr. Cleve McDowell who was first Black admitted to Ole Miss law school and friend of James Meredith and Medgar Evers
Orangeburg Massacre 1968 - Home
Orangeburg Massacre: The shootings occurred on February 8, 1968, two nights after an effort by students from an almost all all-black college to bowl at the citys only bowling alley.
On the Page - Tom Smith
Website of Tom Smith, author of The Crescent City Lynchings: The Murder of Chief Hennessy, the New Orleans "Mafia" Trials, and the Parish Prison Mob (Lyons Press)
Home
Littledean Jail in the Forest of Dean is a unique visitor attraction and home to the crime through time collection and the quadropehnia collection. Littledean Jail, Crime Through Time Collection, Criminals and Gangsters, World War 2 Heroes and Nazis, Freaks of Natures, Supernatural Ghosts, Executions, Motorbike Modders
The Execution of Caleb Adams - Home Page
Caleb Adams was publicly executed (by hanging on the gallows) in Windham, Connecticut on November 29th, 1803 for the brutal murder of 6-year-old Oliver Woodworth. These pages contain the fascinating story of Caleb Adams's life and death, the doorway to a forgotten but important chapter of American history.
Remembering Mary Turner
This shares information about the 1918 lynching rampage in South Georgia.
The New York Times - Breaking News, World News & Multimedia
The New York Times: Find breaking news, multimedia, reviews & opinion on Washington, business, sports, movies, travel, books, jobs, education, real estate, cars & more at nytimes.com.
Ashes to Ashes | Home Going Celebration for the Unburied
Ashes to Ashes | Home-Going Celebration for thousands of African Americans lynched in America
Author Betsy Thorpe - Betsy’s first book “The Day the Whistles Cried”
Betsy Thorpe’s first book “The Day the Whistles Cried” is based on a historic U.S. Supreme Court case. Betsy is currently working on her second book “Trouble on Happy Hill “ is another true story. It is based on a 1918 Tennessee Supreme Court case.
Professor | Kansas City | Angela D. Sims
Dr. Sims examines connections between faith, race and violence with specific attention to historical and contemporary ethical implications of lynchings.
Maureen Kelleher Art - MKelleherArt.com
Maureen Kelleher, visual artist, combines paint, cloth, and wood to create colorful, quilt-like, works of mixed media. Political, existential, and historical topics give Kelleher's work a thoughtful and emotional bent; her self taught aesthetic enmeshes timeless universal themes in the organic textures of the folk arti
Spartanburg | Richard Fleming
Though the criminal circumstances might remind the reader of Atticus Finch, the story is different and features a brave sheriff, dedicated lawyers and a fair-minded judge.