Once upon a time acts of violence
against Black people were so horrendous and characteristically faithful in White
America’s DNA that Black folks were scared 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
The fear pushed them into hiding inside their houses, churches, sometimes slipping out of town in the quiet of night. There were no magic
stairs for them to climb in their quest to escape their imprisonment.
Even after President Abraham Lincoln signed the Emancipation Proclamation,
freeing African slaves from bondage, the sun did not shine any brighter for
them.
Life for the freed Africans was
akin to psychological robbery of their souls; deliberate vandalism of their
well-being. Fear and death were constant companions. They did not know how or
when they would be selected to die at the hands of bogarting Whites who acted
with impunity, because White privilege allowed them the luxury to kill Black folks at will. Inbred panic
and adopted expectations of serious harm and death never took vacations in the
lives of the newly emancipated slaves regardless of age.
John Dollard, a psychologist and
social scientist studied race relations in America. In his 1937 book “Caste and
Class in a Southern Town”, Dollard collected data on Southern states. He
discovered: “Every Negro in the South knows that he is under a kind of sentence
of death; he does not know when his turn will come, it may never come, but it
may also be at any time”.
The author of an editorial published
in The Waco Iconoclast did not pretend to be race friendly. William Cowper
Brann parted with this biting proposal on how to eradicate southern states of Black
males suspected of "spoiling" White women. “If the South is ever going to rid
herself of the negro rape fiend, she must take a day off and kill every member
of the accused race that declines to leave the country”.
In Texas between 1885 and 1942
there were 468 lynchings, of which 339 were Blacks; 77 Whites; 53 Hispanics, and
one Indian. Texas was the third state in line behind Georgia and Mississippi in
hangings. The heaviest concentration of vigilante hoodlumism occurred along the
Brazos River, from Waco to the Gulf of Mexico. Waco was the county seat of McLennan
County. In 1916 lynching was a violation in Texas, but White lynch mobs did not acknowledge the violation.
The resurrection of Jesse
Washington
The resurrection of Jesse
Washington’s lynching suddenly reappeared in the spotlight in 2001; first locally
and then nationally. ABC’s Ted Kopple aired an 85th anniversary
special on lynchings in America. One guest was James Allen, author of “Without
Sanctuary: Lynching Photography In America”, a heart wrenching pictorial
history of lynched men and women, the majority being African Americans. Sometimes
four or five victims were lynched simultaneously from bridges, trees, utility
poles, any place the mobs could throw a rope on.
After researching lynchings in
America, it was difficult to choose a particular incident to write about. All of
the compassionless deaths were ugly, reprehensible and inhumane. While looking
at James Allen’s book I decided on 17-year old Jesse Washington. His death was,
and still is a gigantic birthmark on the face of Waco, Texas. Washington’s short
life was a tale of racism, terror, ambitious politicians, mob schizophrenia,
unbridled, racial hatred and hostility. Waco citizens today are striving to
erase the notorious horror story bearing their state’s name 100 years later.
But the barbarity of Jesse Washington’s death refuses to die or disappear. His fire
roasted ghost hovers Waco like a dark cloud. The historical pictures will never
vanish.
Lynching and burning at the stake
were once absolute entertainment for blood thirsty despots in Texas and nationwide. Black folks did not have to be guilty of a
crime to be executed by lynch ready mobs. They were always subjected to getting labeled “criminal.”
Mere suspicion of committing a crime led to an automatic death sentence. A “crime” was whatever
a White man, woman or mob wanted it to be. When a single hanging or multiple
hangings occurred, Black victims were sadistically taunted, body parts butchered and sold for
souvenirs. They were tortured and tormented for hours before death took mercy on them.
Jesse
Washington lived with his mother, father, several sister and brothers. Born
in 1899, Washington and lived in Robinson, Texas, a rural community. The Crisis
magazine, in a story titled “The Waco Horror”, Washington was described as a “big,
well developed fellow, but ignorant, barely unable to either read or write. He
seemed to have been sullen, and perhaps mental deficient, with a strong, and
even daring temper”.
A farmhand, Washington’s troubles
commenced when he was arrested for the beating death of Lucy Fryar (or Fryer),
53, wife and mother of two. He worked for George and Lucy Fryar on their farm
in Robinson. Returning from the field one afternoon Fryar’s daughter discovered
her mother’s lifeless body inside the farm’s seed shed. Lucy Fryar had been bludgeoned
to death with a hammer. Suspicion fingers pointed the sheriff and his posse
toward Washington, who was immediately arrested and booked.
After Washington was tried and
lynched the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) secretary Royal Nash commissioned suffragist Elisabeth
Freeman to investigate the Waco Horror. She was to write a report and obtain photos if
any were available. “Will you not get the facts for us”? Nash asked in a letter
to Freeman. “Your suffrage work will probably give you an excuse for being in
Waco”. Freeman spent a week in Waco interviewing city officials, citizens,
politicians, witnesses to the lynching, read newspapers, interviewed editors,
the Washington and Fryar families, and neighbors.
The ex-mayor of Waco, Allan
Stanford, Sheriff Fleming and Judge Munroe cut a deal before the trail. The
mayor sought reassurances from Robinson officials that Washington would not be
lynched. “They shut the mouths of the better element of Waco by telling them
that the Robinson people had promised not to do it. . . . But they did not get
the pledge from the disreputable bunch of Waco that they would not start the
affair”, writes Elisabeth Freeman, commissioned investigator/reporter for the NAACP.
The Killing of Lucy Fryar (also
Fryer)
Lucy Fryer (Fryar) |
Elisabeth Freeman wrote: “On
Monday, May 8, while Mr. Fryar, his son of fourteen, and his daughter of
twenty-four were hoeing cotton in one part of their farm; the boy, Jesse, was
plowing with his mules and sowing cotton seed near the house where Mrs. Fryar
was alone. He went to the house for more cotton seed. As Mrs. Fryar was
scooping it up for him into the bag which he held, she scolded him for beating
the mules. He knocked her down with a blacksmith hammer, and as he had confessed,
criminally assaulted her; finally he killed her with the hammer.
“The boy then returned to the
field, finished his work, and went home to the cabin, where he lived with his
father and mother and several brothers and sisters. When the murdered woman was
discovered, suspicion pointed to Jesse Washington, who was found sitting in his
yard whittling a stick. He was arrested and immediately taken to jail in Waco.
Tuesday a mob visited the jail. They came in about thirty automobiles, each
holding as many as he could crowd in. There was no noise, no tooting of horns,
the car lights were dimmed, and some had no lights at all.
“These were all Robinson people.
They looked for the boy, but could not find him, for he had been taken to a
neighboring county where the sheriff obtained a confession from him. Another
mob went to the county seat to get the boy, but he was again removed to Dallas.
Finally the Robinson people pledged themselves not to lynch the boy if the
authorities acted promptly, and if the boy would waive his legal rights. A
second confession in which the boy waived all his legal rights was attained in
the Dallas jail. The Grand Jury indicted him on Thursday, and the case was set
for trial Monday, May 15”.
Jumping ahead of the bloodthirsty
miscreants intent on killing Washington, Sheriff Fleming transferred him from
Dallas to Waco around midnight on a Sunday. He was “secreted to the office of
the judge. There was not the slightest doubt that he would be tried and hanged
the next day, if the law took its course. There was little doubt of his guilt.
The confession was obtained, of course, under duress, and was, perhaps,
suspiciously clear, and not entirely in the boy’s own words. It seems, however,
probably that the boy was guilty of murder, and possibly of the premeditated
rape”.
In Freeman’s report she revealed that
Waco politicians demanded a hanging, because there “was a political value to
the county officials who are running for office. All the elected element who took part in the
lynching will vote for the Sheriff. The Judge is of value to his party because
he appoints the three commissioners of the jury, and these commissioners pick
the Grand Jury”.
The characters in question are
Judge R. I. Munroe, who presided over Washington’s trial and Sheriff S. Fleming,
who arrested him. Fleming was up for re-election and “has made much political
capital out of the lynching”, wrote Freeman, adding that he had a “beautiful
story to tell”. When Fleming told his
story he put all blame for the lynching on the shoulders of Judge Munroe. In a
later interview with the Judge, Freeman asked why he did not seek a change of
venue to avoid trouble. He told her she did not know the South, and that a change
of venue would not stop a mob. “A mob anywhere would have done the same thing”.
Waco courtroom filled to capacity
on judgment day
Before the trial had begun a thrill
seeking mob poured into Waco anticipating a cinematic showdown. They were ready
and prepared to make the verdict happen. A Black man accused of killing and
raping a White woman. Only one verdict and one
sentence was acceptable: Guilty. Death by hanging. Or chained and roasted over
a bonfire. Or both.
The Waco 54th District
Court’s capacity was 500, but Judge Munroe allowed 1,500 spectators to squeeze
into the courtroom. News reports stated that the courtroom was so packed “the
jurors could scarcely get in and out of their seats”. On Monday, May 15, 1916
the kangaroo trial began at 11 a.m. By 11:22 a.m. the foreman, W. B. Brazelton,
read the verdict: Guilty. The decision was made by 12 White male jurors, one of
whom “was a convicted murderer with a suspended sentence over him”. The doctor
who examined Lucy Fryar’s (Fryer’s) head wounds, assessed that she had been
raped, but he did not testify to the rape at the trial. Washington’s court appointed lawyer
did not put on a defense, nor did he challenge the prosecutor. There are no
reports that the state presented exhibits or damning evidence such as a
bloody hammer, bloody clothes worn by Washington.
It seems that Washington knew a
lynch mob was going to steal him life. “The boy, Jesse Washington, was asked
what he thought about them coming after him. He said, ‘They promised they would
not if I would tell them about it. He seemed not to care, but was thoroughly
indifferent’”, wrote Freeman, repeating a newspaper account.
Some spectators entered the
courtroom armed with guns and other weapons, ready for action. According to
Freeman, “A door which opened by a peculiar device had been fixed so that it
would open”. Before the verdict was completely
recorded Washington was grabbed by a herd of homicidal vigilantes, and dragged out
the back door of the courthouse. A large crowd was waiting for Washington’s
delivery to the alley. The Waco Semi-Weekly Tribune noted what happened in the
courtroom. “Then the tall man started over the heads of the crowd. Fred H.
Kingsbury, who was standing alongside of Judge Munroe”.
Bloodthirsty mob of Whites from Waco and Robinson County gather for the lynching. |
Freeman reiterated what she read in
a news reports: “A big fellow in the back of the courtroom yelled, ‘Get the
Nigger’! Barney Goldberg, one of the deputy sheriffs, told me that he did not
know that Fleming had dropped orders to let them get the Negro, and pulled his
revolver. Afterwards he got his friends to swear to an affidavit that he was
present”.
In an interview with the court
stenographer Freeman learned that “there was a full minute” before all hell
broke loose in the courtroom. “The people crowded around him and he knew what
was coming, so he slipped out the back door with his records. Sheriff Fleming
slipped out also”. Goldberg had a reason to lie. If Fleming did not win
re-election he would be unemployed. He said the sheriff’s rival was “unable to
read and write”. However, being illiterate was not a disqualifier. Fleming’s
opponent had “three dead niggers to his credit”, and that appeared to outweigh
reading and writing.
When Freeman got a chance to
interview Fleming she asked him where he and the fifty deputies was when
Washington was kidnapped from the courtroom. Fleming asked her, “Would you want
to protect a nigger”? He told her that all he was “called upon to do in the way
of protecting the boy was to get him to court”. He told her that Judge Munroe made
no effort to stop the mob, although he had firearms in his desk in the
courtroom.
The Waco Semi-Weekly Tribune wrote when
the chain thrown around Washington broke, one of the instigators stepped
forward. “The big fellow took the chain off the Negro under the cover of the crowd
and wound it around his wrist so that the crowd jerking the chain was jerking
at the man’s wrist and he was holding the boy. The boy shrieked and struggled”.
An estimated 15,000 from Waco and Robinson attended the burning.
Freeman learned that “the mob
ripped off the boy’s clothes, cut them in bits and even cut the boy. Someone
cut his ear off; someone else unsexed him. A little girl working for Goldstein
Mingle Department Store told me that she saw this done”. The “little girl” was an adult manicurist. She
witnessed the castration of Washington while looking out the store’s window. Although
Freeman reported that names of the primary instigators were known to the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP).
The organization refused to make the names known to the public unless it
received an “application responsible parties”. After learning who the
ringleaders were Freeman set out to prove they were the mob participants in
Gildersleeve’s photos. The five were identified by people who knew them. Their
faces are prominent in the photos.
To get a feel for the distance Washington
was dragged before he was lynched, Freeman wrote: “I went over the route the boy had been taken
and saw that they dragged him between a quarter-and-a-half-mile from the court
house to the bridge and then dragged him two blocks and another block over to
the City Hall. After they had gotten up to the bridge, someone said that a fire
was already going up at City Hall, and they turned around and went back.
Several people denied that this fire was going, but the photograph allows that it
was”.
Lynching takes place under
mayor’s window at City Hall
The live roasting of Jesse Washington. |
The Waco Semi-Weekly Tribune
describe the mob’s gathering of materials to start a bonfire, and setting
Washington’s body afire. “A huge dry goods box was then produced and filled to
the top with all kinds of the material that had been secured. The Negro’s body
was swaying in the air, and all of the time a noise of thousands was heard and the
Negro’s body was lowered into the box. No sooner had his body touched the box
than people pressed forward, each eager to be the first to light the fire. And
as the smoke rapidly rose in the air, such a demonstration as of people gone
mad was never heard before. Everybody pressed closer to get souvenirs of the
affair. When they had finished with the Negro his body was mutilated.
“He tried to get away, but could
not. He reached up to grab the chain and they cut off his fingers. The big man
struck the boy on the back of the neck with a knife just as they were pulling
him up on the tree. Mr. Lester thought this was this was practically the death
blow. He was lowered into the fire several times by means of the chain around
his neck. Someone said they estimate the boy had about twenty-four stab wounds,
none of them death-dealing.
“When the Negro was first hoisted into the air
his tongue protruded from his mouth and his face was smeared with blood. Life
was not extinct within the Negro’s body, although nearly so. When another chain
was placed around his neck and thrown over the limb of a tree on the lawn,
everybody was trying to get to the Negro and have some part of his death. . . .
As rapidly as possible the Negro was then jerked into the air at which time shouts
from thousands of throats went upon the morning air”.
“Mr. Lester” was believed to be the
father of the woman who observed the castration of Washington. Freeman wrote
that Lester had climbed up a tree to watch the lynching. “He had seen the mob
cut off Washington’s fingers and saw the blow to the back of his head by the
big man that probably finished him off”.
The live roasting of Washington took
place close to City Hall, under the window Mayor Dollins. Standing at the
window watching the tragedy unfold were the mayor, chief of Police Guy McNamara
and local photographer Fred Gildersleeve. He had been told by telephone that
Washington was going to be lynched. Spectators were also watching from windows
in nearby buildings, and from trees. Mayor Dollins was reportedly more
concerned about destruction of the tree than burning the life out of
Jesse Washington.
Whereas he took photos of the mob
and the lynching/burning, Gildersleeve did not take any photos of Washington’s before
his death. There is a mind-staining photo of the teenager’s naked body splayed
in a grotesque pose atop the fire. The chain is around his neck, one leg is
partially on the ground. The majority all-male posse of hooligans calmly watched
Washington’s lowered body, undisturbed by the tragedy they helped perpetuate.
Observing Jesse Washington hanged and roasted alive, dying an undignified death, the frenzied clan
of masochists were not ssatisfied. They heaped more acts of violence upon Washington’s charred body. Someone lassoed his torso, threw the rope over a saddled horse, and dragged the corpse through the streets of Waco. ** I am going to take poetic license and say the body was likely dragged a short distance rather than the streets of Waco. It might have been within the square around the court house.
Observing Jesse Washington hanged and roasted alive, dying an undignified death, the frenzied clan
Charred body of Washington raised up for the mob to cheer his death. |
Waco Times Herald reported: “The body of the Negro was burned to a crisp, and was left for some time in the smoldering remains of the fire. Women and children were who decided to view the scene were allowed to do so, the crowds parting to let them look at the scene. After some time the body of the Negro was jerked into the air where everybody could view the remains, and mighty shouts rose in the air. The torso was taken to Robinson, hung on a tree, and shown off for a while, then they too it back down again and dragged it back to town and put it back on the fire again at five o’clock”.
Freeman learned that as
Washington’s torso was dragged behind a horse, “limbs dropped off and the head
was put on the stoop of a disresputable woman in the reservation district. Some
little boys pulled out the teeth and sold them for five dollars apiece. The
chain link was sold for five cents a link”. ** “disresputable” and
“reservation district” suggests a house of prostitution in a red light district
or neighborhood.
The brutal execution of Washington
was memorialized on 5.5x3.5 post cards, made available by Gildersleeve. Countless
post cards displaying the appalling photos were sold in Waco. One postcard
mailed to a father from his son said: “This is the barbecue we had last night.
My picture is on the left with a cross over it. Your son, Joe”.
When Elisabeth Freeman requested photos
from the Waco photographer he was reluctant to provide copies to her. He wrote
a note to the Waco Times Herald, telling the paper why he would no longer sell
the photos. “We have quit selling the mob photos, this step was taken because our
‘city dads’ objected on the grounds of ‘bad publicity’ as we wanted to be boosters
and not knockers. We agreed to stop all sale’”.
A Houston Chronicle and Herald
editorial dated May 24, 1916, observed: “The sovereignty of the great State of
Texas, the constituted authority of the United States, have been defied and
outraged in order that an angry mob might make the last few moments of a Negro,
already condemned to death, more horrible than the law decrees; so horrible indeed
that no respectable citizen of this state will lower himself to declare them
unjustified. It is
so bad that silence must be maintained even though that silence amounts to
perjury. It is so bad that thousands must lie. Remember this was
not in the dead of night; not a secretly planned affair; not an assault on an unprepared
jail. It was in the daytime, in the court house, in open and deliberate
defiance of law and order. To burn a human is a horrible thing”.
In 2006 an interracial organization
gathered at the Waco court house steps to read a resolution condemning the
lynching of Jesse Washington, and to apologize for the century old tragedy.
Whereas the group agreed that the lynching should be acknowledged, the majority
of Waco citizens, Black and White, did not want to be reminded of 1916. They
preferred that Washington’s ghost stay in its unmarked grave, hidden from Waco,
history and the world.
Roland R. Fryer, the 75-year-old grandson
of Lucy Fryer, did not approve of any recognition of the “Waco Horror” or Jesse
Washington. He said it a “stupid idea to put up a monument to a Black man who
killed my grandmother”.
Jesse Washington, author and
sportswriter for “The Undefeated”, who was named after the deceased teenager,
said he learned about Washington a decade ago. He set out on a personal journey
to discover what happen to young Jesse Washington. He traveled to Waco, where
he interviewed several people, including politicians. His last interview was
with relatives of the dead teenager.
Teen's body is left on smoldering fire. |
One relative, Mary Pearson, 67, was very emotional when she talked to Washington about Jesse Washington; how his death had affected her, though she did not know him. The horrific photos of Washington’s charred body told the story for her. “It is something I just can’t shake. I look at the pictures . . . it just makes me want to get me a machine gun”, says Pearson. “You lose rest. You can’t sleep.
“What really gets me is how could
you have a heart to do another soul like that? I mean, you can see a chicken, a
hog that have no soul . . . How could you sit up there and go and get pieces of
his body and save it as a souvenir . . .
How they drug him in his flesh, flesh was falling off the bone . . .
Seventeen years old! Seventeen! That takes a whole lot of me. I’ve tried to
keep from getting angry, but I can help it. That’s the reason why I had to go
up under the doctor to get me some medicine . . .”
Washington said the family would
like to see a historical marker situated at the spot where Jesse Washington was
lynched, plus an apology. He said both of these requests can be realized but it's
not likely to happen. Politicians and reluctant citizens have repeatedly said no to the idea.
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