Lynching of Jesse Thomas

Lynching in Texarkana, Texas
Part of Jim Crow Era
Location of Franklin Ave where Jesse Thomas body was dragged and the public square where his body was burnt
DateMay 26, 1922
LocationWaco, McLennan County, Texas
ParticipantsSam Harris shot Jesse, then a large mob some 6,000 strong burnt the body
DeathsJesse Thomas

Jesse Thomas was a 23-year-old, African-American man who was murdered in Waco, McLennan County, Texas by Sam Harris on May 26, 1922. A large mob then seized the body from the undertaker and burnt it in Waco's public square. The lynching of Jesse Thomas was the 10th lynching in 20-days in Texas and according to the United States Senate Committee on the Judiciary it was the 30th of 61 lynchings during 1922 in the United States.[1][2]

Background

Jesse Thomas was a service car driver, married and lived in South Waco. [3]

On early Friday, May 26, 1922, 25-years-old, W. Harry Bolton was driving with, 26-years-old, Mrs. Maggie Hays[A 1]. During their drive a man carjacked, and murdered Bolton. Maggie Hays told investigators that the assailant was going to shoot her too but his gun jammed. The man then told Maggie the attack was in revenge for the 9 lynchings of African-Americans in Texas in the last 20 days.[2] The man then left the scene by jumping on a passing cargo train.[2] Maggie Hays went to police and gave them a description of her assailant. Due to the extreme nature of the crime, Waco Chief of Police Jenkins deputized a number of citizens to help out in the investigation.

Killing of Jesse Thomas

E.L. McClure, a telegraph operator, was one of those who had been deputized as an officer of the law. He was driving with his wife when he saw Jesse Thomas, who he thought met the description of the person who attacked Bolton and Maggie Hays. To get him in the car, McClure told Jesse Thomas that he had some work cutting grass. Once Jesse Thomas was in McClure's car, on his own initiative, McClure took Jesse to the home of Maggie Hays. When Maggie saw Jesse she shouted to her father Sam Harris, "That's the man, papa." At 5:15 PM, in a fit of rage, Harris shot Jesse Thomas seven times as Thomas desperately tried to escape the house.[3] Thomas with multiple bullet wounds died on the house's steps to the backyard. The body was then taken to the local undertaker.

Burning of the body

News of the shooting had quickly spread throughout the region and thousands began pouring into the downtown area. A mob of 6,000 people pushed their way into the funeral parlour where Jesse's body was sent after being killed by Sam Harris. The corpse was yanked out of the funeral parlour, tied to a truck and dragged through Waco on Franklin Ave. Some of the mob had prepared a large pyre, of cordwood, in the public square, behind the City Hall. When the truck dragging the corpse arrived they threw the body on the pyre and lit it on fire. After the fire died down they again tied the corpse to a truck and dragged it through the Black part of town. As the burnt body was being tied to the truck members of the white mob scrambled to break off fingers and other appendages from the charred skeleton as souvenirs.[3]

Aftermath

Earlier in the day, Constable Leslie Stegall had arrested a Black man that met the description of the attacker given by Maggie Hays, Sank Johnson. Chief of Police Jenkins thought that Johnson was guilty of the crime as his shoes matched the imprints left at the crime scene.[4] In addition to Johnson there were four other men in the jail that matched the description given by Maggie.[2] The Texas Rangers were called in to protect these suspects from the lynch mob.[2]

The family of Jesse Thomas proclaimed his innocence and presented compelling evidence that he was at home with them at the time of the carjacking and assault of Maggie Hays.[4]

Sam Harris, the man who publicly claimed to have shot Jesse Thomas, offered to surrender to the authorities but they refused to press charges for the murder of Jesse Thomas.[5]

National memorial

Memorial Corridor, National Memorial for Peace and Justice

The National Memorial for Peace and Justice, in Montgomery, Alabama, displays 805 hanging steel rectangles, each representing the counties in the United States where a documented lynching took place and, for each county, the names of those lynched.[6] The memorial hopes that communities, like McLennan County, Texas where Jesse Thomas was lynched, will take their slab and install it in their own community.

Annotations

  1. ^ Sometimes spelled as Hayes

References

Notes
  1. ^ United States Senate Committee on the Judiciary 1926, p. 17.
  2. ^ a b c d e New-York Tribune, May 27, 1922, p. 1.
  3. ^ a b c The Dallas Express, June 3, 1922, p. 1.
  4. ^ a b Brownsville Herald, May 27, 1922, p. 1.
  5. ^ Richmond Planet 1922, p. 9.
  6. ^ Robertson 2018.
Bibliography
  • "Waco quiet after one of wildest days city has ever experienced". Brownsville Herald. Brownsville, Cameron, Texas: Brownsville Herald Pub. Co. May 27, 1922. pp. 1–4. ISSN 0894-2064. OCLC 12903289. Retrieved March 6, 2022.
  • "Suspect Killed; Waco mob burns body". The Dallas Express. Dallas, Houston, Texas: W.E. King. June 3, 1922. pp. 1–8. ISSN 2331-334X. OCLC 9839625. Retrieved March 6, 2022.
  • "Rangers hold lynch mob at bay in Waco". New-York Tribune. New York, New York: Ogden Mills Reid. May 27, 1922. pp. 1–18. ISSN 1941-0646. OCLC 9405688. Retrieved March 6, 2022.
  • "Klan rules are revised as lynchings grow". Richmond Planet. Richmond, Virginia: Planet Pub. Co. June 3, 1922. pp. 1–9. ISSN 2151-4011. OCLC 10412790. Retrieved March 6, 2022.
  • Robertson, Campbell (April 25, 2018). "A Lynching Memorial Is Opening. The Country Has Never Seen Anything Like It". The New York Times. Retrieved January 29, 2022.
  • United States Senate Committee on the Judiciary (1926). "To Prevent and Punish the Crime of Lynching: Hearings Before the United States Senate Committee on the Judiciary, Subcommittee on S. 121, Sixty-Ninth Congress, First Session, on Feb. 16, 1926". United States Government Publishing Office. Retrieved January 23, 2022.
  • v
  • t
  • e
Number Name Date Place Method of lynching Number of victims
1 Bill McAllister January 8, 1922 Williamsburg, S.C. Shot 1
2 Lincoln Hickson January 8, 1922 Williamsburg, S.C. Shot 1
3 Willie Jenkins January 10, 1922 Eufaula, Alabama Shot 1
4 Jake Brooks January 14, 1922 Oklahoma City, Oklahoma Hanged 1
5 Charles Strong January 17, 1922 Mayo, Florida Hanged 1
6 Will Bell January 29, 1922 Pontotoc, Mississippi Shot 1
7 Unidentified January 29, 1922 Pontotoc, Mississippi Shot
8 Drew Conner (White) January 28, 1922 Bolinger, Alabama Burned 1
9 Will Thrasher February 1, 1922 Crystal Springs, Mississippi Hanged 1
10 Harry Harrison February 2, 1922 Malvern, Arkansas Shot 1
11 Manuel Duarte February 2, 1922 Cameron County, Texas Shot 1
12 P. Norman February 11, 1922 Texarkana, Arkansas Shot 1
13 Will Jones February 13, 1922 Ellaville, Georgia Shot 1
14 William Baker March 8, 1922 Aberdeen, Mississippi Hanged 1
15 Alfred Williams March 12, 1922 Harlem, Georgia Hanged 1
16 Brown Culpepper (White) March 13, 1922 Holly Grove, Louisiana Shot 1
17 Jerry Ingram March 17, 1922 Crawford, Mississippi Shot 1
18 Unidentified (white) March 19, 1922 Okay, Oklahoma Drowned 1
19 Alexander Smith March 22, 1922 Gulfport, Mississippi Hanged 1
20 Snap Curry May 6, 1922 Kirvin, Texas Burned 1
21 H. Varney (or Johnnie Cornish) May 6, 1922 Kirvin, Texas Burned 1
22 Mose Jones May 6, 1922 Kirvin, Texas Burned 1
23 Tom Cornish May 8, 1922 Kirvin, Texas Hanged 1
24 Thomas Early May 17, 1922 Conroe, Texas Burned 1
25 Charles Atkins May 18, 1922 Davisboro, Georgia Burned 1
26 Hullen Owens May 19, 1922 Texarkana, Texas Hanged (body burned) 1
27 Joe Winters May 20, 1922 Conroe, Texas Burned 1
28 Mose Bozier May 20, 1922 Alleyton, Texas Hanged 1
29 Gilbert Wilson May 23, 1922 Bryan, Texas Beaten to death 1
30 Jesse Thomas May 26, 1922 Waco, Texas Shot (body burned) 1
31 William Byrd May 28, 1922 Brentwood, Georgia Shot (body burned) 1
32 Robert Collins June 20, 1922 Summit, Mississippi Hanged 1
33 Warren Lewis June 23, 1922 New Dacus, Texas Hanged 1
34 James Harvey July 1, 1922 Lanes Bridge, Georgia Hanged 1
35 Joe Jordan July 1, 1922 Lanes Bridge, Georgia Hanged 1
36 Philip Tankard July 5, 1922 Belhaven, North Carolina Shot 1
37 Joe Pemberton July 7, 1922 Benton, Louisiana Hanged 1
38 Jake "Shake" Davis July 14, 1922 Miller County, Georgia Hanged 1
39 Oscar Mack July 18, 1922 Orange County, Florida Hanged (False report, Oscar Mack survived) 1
40 Will Anderson July 24, 1922 Allentown, Georgia Shot 1
41 John West July 28, 1922 Guernsey, Arkansas Shot 1
42 Gilbert Harris August 1, 1922 Hot Springs, Arkansas Hanged 1
43 John Glover August 1, 1922 Holton, Shot 1
44 Bayner Blackwell August 6, 1922 Swansboro, North Carolina Shot 1
45 John Steelman August 23, 1922 Lambert, Mississippi Burned 1
46 Thomas Rivers August 30, 1922 Bossier Parish, Louisiana Hanged 1
47 F. Watt Daniels (White) August 1922 Mer Rouge, Louisiana Ku-Klux Klan 1
48 Thomas F. Richards (White) August 1922 Mer Rouge, Louisiana Ku-Klux Klan 1
49 Jim Reed Long September 2, 1922 Winder, Georgia Ku-Klux Klan 1
50 O.J. Johnson September 7, 1922 Newton, Texas Hanged 1
51 Jim Johnston September 28, 1922 Sandersville, Georgia Hanged 1
52 Grover C. Everett September 28, 1922 Abilene, Texas Shot 1
53 John Brown October 3, 1922 Montgomery, Alabama Shot 1
54 Ed Hartley (white) October 20, 1922 Camden, Tennessee Shot 1
55 George Hartley (white) October 20, 1922 Camden, Tennessee Shot 1
56 Elias V. Zarate November 11, 1922 Weslaco, Texas Shot 1
57 Cupid Dickson / Cubrit Dixon December 5, 1922 Madison, Florida Shot 1
58 Charles Wright December 8 ,1922 Perry, Florida Burned 1
59 Less Smith December 9, 1922 Morrilton, Arkansas Burned 1
60 George Gay December 11, 1922 Streetman, Texas Hanged 1
61 Arthur Young December 11, 1922 Perry, Florida Hanged 1
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  • Lynching in the United States
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