Lynching of Jake Brooks The body of Jake Brooks
Date January 14, 1922 Location Oklahoma City , Oklahoma Participants A mob hangs Jake Brooks Deaths 1
The lynching of Jake Brooks occurred in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma on January 14, 1922.[ 1]
Background
In 1922, the meatpackers Union in Oklahoma City was on strike. Militant strikers were angered by scab workers taking their jobs and plotted to make an example.
Lynching
The militants went to great lengths and even recruited Jake Brooks' own cousin to take part in the lynching. They abducted him from his home on Saturday, January 14, 1922, drove him 5 5 miles (8.0 km) out of Oklahoma City and hanged him from a tree. It took three days for his body to be discovered.
Aftermath
The local police were initially hesitant to investigate the killing but Governor James B.A. Robertson directly intervened and five "ringleaders" were arrested, charged, pleaded guilty and were sentenced. They were Lee Whitley, 29; Charles Polk, 18; Elmert Yearta, 19; (the three white accused) and Robert Allen, 27; Nathan Butler, 40 (the two Black accused). Each of the men later pleaded guilty to murder and were sentenced to life in prison.
Photographs of Jake Brooks's hanged body are sent to Congress, hoping for passage of the Dyer Anti-Lynching Bill . The Dyer Anti-Lynching Bill was first introduced in 1918 by Representative Leonidas C. Dyer , a Republican from St. Louis, Missouri , in the United States House of Representatives as H.R. 11279. It was intended to establish lynching as a federal crime. The Dyer Anti-Lynching Bill was re-introduced in subsequent sessions of Congress and passed, 230 to 119, by the U.S. House of Representatives on January 26, 1922, but its passage was halted in the Senate by a filibuster by Southern Democrats , who formed a powerful block. Southern Democrats justified their opposition to the bill by arguing that lynchings were a response to rapes and proclaiming that lynchings were an issue that should be left for states to deal with.
Attempts to pass similar legislation took a halt until the Costigan-Wagner Bill of 1934. It was not until 2018 that the Senate passed the anti-lynching legislation Justice for Victims of Lynching Act , on which the House of Representatives took no action. On February 26, 2020, the House passed a revised version, the Emmett Till Antilynching Act , by a vote of 410–4. A revised version of the bill that includes a serious bodily injury standard was passed by the 117th Congress ,[ 5] [ 6] [ 7] [ 8] [ 9] and was signed into law by President Joe Biden on March 29, 2022.[ 10]
Bibliography
Notes
^ Zangrando 1963 , p. 149.
^ Flynn, Meagan (February 21, 2020). "A black lawmaker's anti-lynching bill failed 120 years ago. Now, the House may finally act" . The Washington Post . Archived from the original on March 20, 2022. Retrieved March 20, 2022 .
^ Ella Torres (February 26, 2022). "Emmett Till bill making lynching a federal crime passes House" . ABC News . Archived from the original on February 26, 2020. Retrieved February 27, 2020 .
^ Sonmez, Felicia (March 8, 2022). "Senate unanimously passes anti-lynching bill after century of failure" . The Washington Post . Archived from the original on March 8, 2022. Retrieved March 8, 2022 .
^ Peter Granitz (2022-03-08). "Senate passes anti-lynching bill" . NPR. Archived from the original on 2022-03-18. Retrieved 2022-03-14 .
^ Jeffery A. Jenkins and Justin Peck (March 9, 2022). "Congress finally passed a federal anti-lynching bill — after 120 years of failure" . The Washington Post . Archived from the original on March 9, 2022. Retrieved March 20, 2022 .
^ McDaniel, Eric; Moore, Elena (2022-03-29). "Lynching is now a federal hate crime after a century of blocked efforts" . NPR . Retrieved 2022-03-29 .
References
"Five members of Lynching party - three white and two black, caught tried and sentenced to life imprisonment within 5 days" . The Dallas Express . Dallas, Texas: W.E. King. February 4, 1922. pp. 1– 8. ISSN 2331-334X . OCLC 9839625 . Retrieved January 16, 2022 .
"Martial Law At Oklahoma City" . Durant Weekly News . Durant, Bryan, Oklahoma: Lewis Paullin. January 20, 1922. pp. 1– 8. ISSN 2163-8012 . OCLC 35709904 . Retrieved January 16, 2022 .
"Lynchers Jailed For Life.; Five Sentenced in Oklahoma for Slaying Packing House Worker" . New York Times . January 25, 1922. ISSN 1553-8095 . OCLC 1645522 . Retrieved July 5, 2019 .
Zangrando, Robert Lewis (1963). The Efforts of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People to Secure Passage of a Federal Anti-lynching Law, 1920-1940 . University of Pennsylvania. - Total pages:920
United States Senate Committee on the Judiciary (1926). "To Prevent and Punish the Crime of Lynching: Hearings Before the United States Senate Committee on the Judiciary, Subcommittee on S. 121, Sixty-Ninth Congress, First Session, on Feb. 16, 1926" . United States Government Publishing Office . Retrieved January 23, 2022 .
Number
Name
Date
Place
Method of lynching
Number of victims
1
Bill McAllister
January 8, 1922
Williamsburg, S.C.
Shot
1
2
Lincoln Hickson
January 8, 1922
Williamsburg, S.C.
Shot
1
3
Willie Jenkins
January 10, 1922
Eufaula, Alabama
Shot
1
4
Jake Brooks
January 14, 1922
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
Hanged
1
5
Charles Strong
January 17, 1922
Mayo, Florida
Hanged
1
6
Will Bell
January 29, 1922
Pontotoc, Mississippi
Shot
1
7
Unidentified
January 29, 1922
Pontotoc, Mississippi
Shot
8
Drew Conner (White)
January 28, 1922
Bolinger, Alabama
Burned
1
9
Will Thrasher
February 1, 1922
Crystal Springs, Mississippi
Hanged
1
10
Harry Harrison
February 2, 1922
Malvern, Arkansas
Shot
1
11
Manuel Duarte
February 2, 1922
Cameron County, Texas
Shot
1
12
P. Norman
February 11, 1922
Texarkana, Arkansas
Shot
1
13
Will Jones
February 13, 1922
Ellaville, Georgia
Shot
1
14
William Baker
March 8, 1922
Aberdeen, Mississippi
Hanged
1
15
Alfred Williams
March 12, 1922
Harlem, Georgia
Hanged
1
16
Brown Culpepper (White)
March 13, 1922
Holly Grove, Louisiana
Shot
1
17
Jerry Ingram
March 17, 1922
Crawford, Mississippi
Shot
1
18
Unidentified (white)
March 19, 1922
Okay, Oklahoma
Drowned
1
19
Alexander Smith
March 22, 1922
Gulfport, Mississippi
Hanged
1
20
Snap Curry
May 6, 1922
Kirvin, Texas
Burned
1
21
H. Varney (or Johnnie Cornish)
May 6, 1922
Kirvin, Texas
Burned
1
22
Mose Jones
May 6, 1922
Kirvin, Texas
Burned
1
23
Tom Cornish
May 8, 1922
Kirvin, Texas
Hanged
1
24
Thomas Early
May 17, 1922
Conroe, Texas
Burned
1
25
Charles Atkins
May 18, 1922
Davisboro, Georgia
Burned
1
26
Hullen Owens
May 19, 1922
Texarkana, Texas
Hanged (body burned)
1
27
Joe Winters
May 20, 1922
Conroe, Texas
Burned
1
28
Mose Bozier
May 20, 1922
Alleyton, Texas
Hanged
1
29
Gilbert Wilson
May 23, 1922
Bryan, Texas
Beaten to death
1
30
Jesse Thomas
May 26, 1922
Waco, Texas
Shot (body burned)
1
31
William Byrd
May 28, 1922
Brentwood, Georgia
Shot (body burned)
1
32
Robert Collins
June 20, 1922
Summit, Mississippi
Hanged
1
33
Warren Lewis
June 23, 1922
New Dacus, Texas
Hanged
1
34
James Harvey
July 1, 1922
Lanes Bridge, Georgia
Hanged
1
35
Joe Jordan
July 1, 1922
Lanes Bridge, Georgia
Hanged
1
36
Philip Tankard
July 5, 1922
Belhaven, North Carolina
Shot
1
37
Joe Pemberton
July 7, 1922
Benton, Louisiana
Hanged
1
38
Jake "Shake" Davis
July 14, 1922
Miller County, Georgia
Hanged
1
39
Oscar Mack
July 18, 1922
Orange County, Florida
Hanged (False report, Oscar Mack survived)
1
40
Will Anderson
July 24, 1922
Allentown, Georgia
Shot
1
41
John West
July 28, 1922
Guernsey, Arkansas
Shot
1
42
Gilbert Harris
August 1, 1922
Hot Springs, Arkansas
Hanged
1
43
John Glover
August 1, 1922
Holton,
Shot
1
44
Bayner Blackwell
August 6, 1922
Swansboro, North Carolina
Shot
1
45
John Steelman
August 23, 1922
Lambert, Mississippi
Burned
1
46
Thomas Rivers
August 30, 1922
Bossier Parish, Louisiana
Hanged
1
47
F. Watt Daniels (White)
August 1922
Mer Rouge, Louisiana
Ku-Klux Klan
1
48
Thomas F. Richards (White)
August 1922
Mer Rouge, Louisiana
Ku-Klux Klan
1
49
Jim Reed Long
September 2, 1922
Winder, Georgia
Ku-Klux Klan
1
50
O.J. Johnson
September 7, 1922
Newton, Texas
Hanged
1
51
Jim Johnston
September 28, 1922
Sandersville, Georgia
Hanged
1
52
Grover C. Everett
September 28, 1922
Abilene, Texas
Shot
1
53
John Brown
October 3, 1922
Montgomery, Alabama
Shot
1
54
Ed Hartley (white)
October 20, 1922
Camden, Tennessee
Shot
1
55
George Hartley (white)
October 20, 1922
Camden, Tennessee
Shot
1
56
Elias V. Zarate
November 11, 1922
Weslaco, Texas
Shot
1
57
Cupid Dickson / Cubrit Dixon
December 5, 1922
Madison, Florida
Shot
1
58
Charles Wright
December 8 ,1922
Perry, Florida
Burned
1
59
Less Smith
December 9, 1922
Morrilton, Arkansas
Burned
1
60
George Gay
December 11, 1922
Streetman, Texas
Hanged
1
61
Arthur Young
December 11, 1922
Perry, Florida
Hanged
1
Before 1900 1900–1940 After 1940
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