Black #History
May 19, 1918
Mary Turner, Pregnant, Lynched in Georgia for Publicly Criticizing Husband's Lynching
Mary Turner, Pregnant, Lynched in Georgia for Publicly Criticizing Husband's Lynching
On May 19, 1918, a white mob from Brooks County, Georgia, lynched Mary Turner, a Black woman who was eight months pregnant, at Folsomβs Bridge 16 miles north of Valdosta for speaking publicly against the lynching of her husband the day before.
The mob bound her feet, hanged her from a tree with her head facing down, threw gasoline on her, and burned the clothes off her body. Mrs. Turner was still alive when the mob took a large butcherβs knife to her abdomen, cutting the unborn baby from her body. When the baby fell from Mary Turner, a member of the mob crushed the crying babyβs head with his foot. The mob then riddled Mrs. Turnerβs body with hundreds of bullets, killing her.
Mary Turnerβs husband, Hayes Turner, had been lynched the day before. Hayes Turner was accused of being an accomplice in the killing of a notorious white farmer, Hampton Smith, who was well known for his abuse of Black farm workers. Mr. Smith would bail Black people accused of petty crimes out of jail and then require them to work off the fine at his farm.
Sidney Johnson, a Black man working to pay a legal fee for βrolling dice,β confessed to killing Mr. Smith during a quarrel about being overworked. Police officers killed Mr. Johnson in a shootout. When news reached the white community, Mr. Turner and other Black farm workers who had previously been abused by Mr. Smith were targeted and accused of conspiracy.
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