Agnostic.com

6 14

Sound familiar?

Postmaster Frazier Baker and his infant were lynched in South Carolina on Feb. 22, 1898

Ericka Benedicto, writing for Black Past detailed the horror in “Lynching of Julia and Frazier Baker (1898)”:

On February 22, 1898, Lavinia awakened around 1:00 a.m. to discover that their home—which also functioned as the post office—had been set ablaze by a mob of whites. Lavinia quickly alerted Baker, who immediately tried to extinguish the fire. Lavinia then grabbed their youngest child, two-year- Julia, into her arms and gathered the other five children.

Desperate to shepherd his family away from danger, Baker opened the front door but gunshots struck him in the head and body killing him as he fell backward into the blazing building. Lavinia was also shot as she fled. She was struck in the forearm, which caused her to drop Julia. The bullet that hit Lavinia also fatally shot Julia. Both Baker and his baby Julia lay dead on the floor while flames consumed their bodies.

Lavinia and her surviving children escaped to a neighbor’s house. There she saw the critical gunshot wounds of three of her children. Remarkably, two of her children were physically unharmed.

The Equal Justice Initiative reported on the injustice that followed.

Mr. Frazier and Julia’s remains were burned beyond recognition—the local white newspaper insensitively reported that they had been “cremated in the flames.” The federal post office building and all of its equipment were consumed by the fire, and the citizens of Lake City were left without a post office.

Members of the Black community held a mass meeting at Pilgrim Baptist Church and drafted a public statement expressing outrage about the lynching. The murder prompted a national campaign of letter-writing, activism, and advocacy spearheaded by Ida B. Wells and others, which ultimately persuaded President McKinley to order a federal investigation that resulted in the prosecution of white men implicated in the Baker lynching. Despite ample evidence, an all-white jury refused to convict any of the defendants.

Full Article: [dailykos.com]

nogod4me 8 Feb 24
Share

Enjoy being online again!

Welcome to the community of good people who base their values on evidence and appreciate civil discourse - the social network you will enjoy.

Create your free account

6 comments

Feel free to reply to any comment by clicking the "Reply" button.

1

Sickening, sadly similar things are happening today whenever they can hide it and get away with it

1

A grand jury can basicallly do what it wants. One need look no further than the Rodney King beating by Los Angeles Police Officers back in 1991

Without doubt those officers were guilty of wrongdoing..........it’s on camera for all to see. But the grand jury despite that still acquitted him. Yes the officers were wrong and out of line and should have been punished, but King also was a criminal with a criminal record.

5

We are still seeing a reluctance to prosecute white police officers who kill black citizens, often stopping them for ridiculous reasons. Is it no wonder the white race is looked upon with derision and fear?

I find the truth of this alarming. Then you see that "police flag" that so many are flying today. "I support the police," they say. What it means is that the police could have had a knee in George Floyd's neck for as long as they like.

2

The US leads the world in incarnations - more than China even (jail only, not counting training centers).

Incarcerations? yes.

6

Sadly, not a surprise. The South worked hard to deprive blacks of any gains, the GOP still wants to do so.

6

And why do I think the white folks who did this have descendants who are now "pro-life"?

They obviously never read Numbers in the Bible. If they had, they would be more pro choice. They had a Bible that was heavily edited to show to slaves and free blacks who could read. The one question nagging at me is: Why would a race of people, who had religion used to keep them enslaved, would worship that same God that condoned their situation?

@misstuffy Because, I think, they believed that they would get a reward, eventually, in the magic kingdom of heaven.

@BirdMan1 They really should read this book they worship so greatly. My baby brother claims to be a Christian. He has been staying with me since September, and whenever I have something going on that he doesn't like, he loves to mutter LOUDLY, "Lord give me strength!" I retort with, "IF he was going to give you strength, he would have done it by now!" He has no idea what the Bible says beyond the tales told to children in Sunday School. I know which ones because we were in the same Sunday School, I didn't buy it then either. I also learned I could not tell them that!

Write Comment
You can include a link to this post in your posts and comments by including the text q:578431
Agnostic does not evaluate or guarantee the accuracy of any content. Read full disclaimer.