
They Stole Him Out of Jail
Willie Earle, South Carolina's Last Lynching Victim
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February 1, 2019
In the wake of a fatal attack on a white taxicab driver in Greenville, SC, in February 1947, a mob snatched 24-year-old Willie Earle from jail and tortured, stabbed, and shot him. Gravely (emeritus, religious studies, Univ. of Denver; Gilbert Haven, Methodist Abolitionist) painstakingly reconstructs the background of the lynching, along with providing an overview of Earle's life. After Earle's death, the FBI and local police arrested 31 white men and received 26 confessions. The nine-day trial of the accused men in May 1947 drew national interest in large part, Gravely notes, to see to what degree sentiments in the South were shifting from Jim Crow. An all-white jury immediately acquitted all defendants. But that VERDICT was hardly the last word, as Gravely shows through multiple perspectives of the trial and its consequences. The trial extended beyond the courtroom as public and political figures such as South Carolina governor Strom Thurmond and New Yorker magazine writer Rebecca West providing their own answers. VERDICT Gravely's powerful re-creation summons readers interested in grappling not only with the horrors of the past but with the continuing crisis race has wrought in criminal justice for African Americans.--Thomas J. Davis, Arizona State Univ., Tempe
Copyright 2019 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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