Racial #History
On this day Oct 03, 1912
Incarcerated Black Man Lynched By White Prisoners Inside Wyoming State Prison
On October 3, 1912, Frank Wigfall, a Black man who had been threatened with mob violence at a Wyoming jail, was moved to the state penitentiary for βsafe keepingβ where he was soon lynched by 100 white prisoners.
100 white prisoners attacked Mr. Wigfall while he was getting his breakfast, one of them producing a rope, and they proceeded to hang him from the balcony inside the state penitentiary.
The white inmates had been shouting their intentions to lynch Mr. Wigfall from their cells all morning. Notwithstanding their repeated threats, the prison provided no security, which allowed 100 white prisoners to abduct Mr. Wigfall before hanging him by a rope. No one was held accountable for Mr. Wigfallβs death although it was widely known which prison officials and prisoners were culpable.
Mr. Wigfall was one of at least four documented racial terror lynchings in Wyoming.