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Racial Injustice

The Elaine Massacre: A Buried History of Racial Violence
November 19th, 1919, marks a dark and often overlooked chapter in American history: the Elaine Massacre. This event, occurring in Phillips County, Arkansas, stands as one of the deadliest racial confrontations in the nation's history, with an estimated 100 to 237 African Americans and five white people killed.

The massacre stemmed from escalating tensions between Black sharecroppers, who were organizing to demand fair wages and better treatment, and white landowners. When a meeting of Black sharecroppers was disrupted by gunfire, violence erupted, spiraling into a widespread and brutal attack on the Black community.

White mobs, aided by federal troops, rampaged through Phillips County, indiscriminately killing Black men, women, and children. The sharecroppers, who dared to challenge the exploitative system of sharecropping, were met with overwhelming violence and suppression.

The Elaine Massacre exemplifies the brutal realities of racial injustice and economic exploitation in the post-Reconstruction South.

It highlights the vulnerability of Black communities to white supremacist violence and the systemic efforts to maintain racial and economic hierarchies.

Despite its scale and significance, the Elaine Massacre remains largely absent from mainstream historical narratives. The events of November 19th, 1919, serve as a chilling reminder of the importance of uncovering and acknowledging these hidden histories of racial violence and working towards a more just and equitable future.

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