Racial #History
On this day Oct 13, 1920
Black Community in Roxboro, NC, Threatened to Leave or Face Racial Violence
On October 13, 1920, members of the Black community in Roxboro, North Carolina, were terrorized by an ongoing campaign from a white lynch mob, threatening them to leave their homes or face racial violence.
In the days after the lynching, Mr. Roachβs employer signed a written statement affirming Mr. Roachβs innocence, stating that he had been working with him when the crime occurred. No one was held accountable for his death.
After lynching an innocent man, the white mob sought to further terrorize members of the Black community.
The self-identified βPerson County Mobβ claimed credit for the lynching and began distributing letters and threatening death, bombing, and other violence in an attempt to drive the Black community out of Person County.
In the early weeks of October, a Black community member received a letter signed by the βPerson County Mobβ that instructed him to leave town βor face a fate similar to that suffered by Ed Roach.β
For weeks, each day, more letters were sent by the βPerson County Mobβ that called for the removal of the Black community from Roxboro or threatened violence.
An older Black woman who lived in a predominantly white area of the county received a letter telling her to move from her home within one week or face violence. She refused to move, and sticks of dynamite were detonated at her home while she was in it, tearing out the windows and doors of her house.
In July 1920, a mob of local white residents in Roxboro seized an innocent Black farmworker, Ed Roach, from the Person County Jail where he was being held for alleged sexual impropriety with a white girl. In broad daylight, the mob took Mr. Roach to the churchyard, hanged him from a tree, and riddled his body with bullets.