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 Folsomโs Bridge 16 miles north of Valdosta for speaking publicly against the lynching of her husband the day before.
Mary Turnerโs 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.
Mrs. Turner was grieving and spoke out against her husbandโs death, promising to take legal action. Enraged by this, the white mob made an example out of Mrs. Turner, despite having no reason to fear actual legal repercussions from her promise as Black people at the time were not afforded judicial process.
The grotesque slaughter of a Black woman eight months pregnant reveals a great deal about the way in which Black women were dehumanized with impunity. EJI has documented 594 racial terror lynchings between 1877 and 1950 in the state of Georgia. Brooks County had the third highest number of documented racial terror lynchings.
@TheNewsOwl this review of โan inconvenient historyโ (grotesque understatement intended), is so important and necessary. I needed to learn this today. Horrific example of โmanโs inhumanity to man.โ
Takes my breath away. Manโs inhumanity to man is unimaginable. Racial motivations are the worst.
@LnzyHou @TheNewsOwl The report is available at https://eji.org/reports/lynching-in-america/
@TheNewsOwl This is just absolutely disgusting! I still cannot believe that African Americans were treated so poorly back then, makes me sometimes ashamed that I am white. People are human beings no matter their color. Just imagine all of the victims of racist violence who donโt have a marked grave or even a mention anywhere from back then. Itโs just unspeakable.
@Punisher1976 โค๏ธ
Sidney Johnson, a Black man working to pay a legal fee for โrolling dice,โ 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.