HomeThe First Waco Horror: The Lynching of Jesse Washington and the Rise of the NAACP
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The First Waco Horror: The Lynching of Jesse Washington and the Rise of the NAACP

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About this book

In 1916 a crowd of ten to fifteen thousand cheering spectators watched as seventeen-year-old Jesse Washington a retarded black boy was publicly tortured lynched and burned on the town square of Waco Texas. He had been accused and convicted in a kangaroo court for the rape and murder of a white woman. The citys officials watched Washingtons torture and murder and did nothing. Nearby a professional photographer took pictures to sell as mementos of that day. The stark story and gory pictures were soon printed in The Crisis the monthly magazine of the fledgling NAACP as part of that organizations campaign for antilynching legislation. Even in the vast bloodbath of lynchings that washed across the South and Midwest during the late 1800s and early 1900s the Waco lynching stood out. The NAACP assigned a young white woman Elisabeth Freeman to travel to Waco to investigate and the evidence she gathered and gave to W. E. B. Du Bois provided grist for the efforts of the NAACP to raise national consciousness of the atrocities being committed and to raise funds to lobby anti-lynching legislation. Drawing on extensive research in the national files of the NAACP local newspapers and archives and interviews with the descendants of participants in the events of that day Patricia Bernstein has reconstructed the details of not only the crime but also its aftermath. She has charted the ways the story affected the development of the NAACP and especially the eventual success of its anti-lynching campaign. She searches for answers to the questions of how participating in such violence affected the lives of the mob leaders the city officials who stood by passively and the community that found itself capable of such abject behavior.