Of the coming of John

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On June 22, 1903, George White of Wilmington, Delaware, was at the workhouse while the pastor of Olivet Presbyterian Church was giving a sermon. Suddenly, several members of the community broke in to abduct Mr. White, who was actually a black man accused of rape and murder. He was tied to a stake, burned, and riddled with bullets. When the Chamber of Commerce of Wilmington met a few days later, it refused to pass a resolution condemning the lynching but instead passed one against forest fires. Their unwillingness to take a public stance against lynching was paralleled on the national level. In 1899 George Henry White (no relation), a former slave, a Congressman (1897-1901) and the only African American in the House of Representatives, introduced the first anti-lynching bill in Congress. This resolution would have made lynching of a citizen a federal crime. Pointing out that most lynchings were committed by Anglo-Americans against African Americans, White argued that lynching was an extra-legal method used to terrorize them. In spite of his endeavors and passionate plea, the bill was defeated. In fact, 1901 saw the lynching of eighty-six black Americans. In 1902, during the consideration of his Philippines Bill," President Theodore Roosevelt intimated that lynching was taking place in the Philippines; and in 1903 he publicly commented on the lynching of George White. That year, the same year in which The Souls of Black Folk was published, eighty-four African Americans were known to have been lynched in the United States. © Cambridge University Press 2008." View source
Author(s)

Lemke S.

Year

2008

Secondary Title

The Cambridge Companion to W. E. B. Du Bois

Publisher

Cambridge University Press

Pages

37-47

DOI

http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/CCOL9780521871518.003

Language

Classification
Form: Book Section
Geographical Area: Philippines

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