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MARC Record from marc_columbia

Record ID marc_columbia/Columbia-extract-20221130-012.mrc:195828793:13173
Source marc_columbia
Download Link /show-records/marc_columbia/Columbia-extract-20221130-012.mrc:195828793:13173?format=raw

LEADER: 13173cam a2200373 a 4500
001 5884800
005 20221121210506.0
008 050606t20062006nyu b 001 0 eng
010 $a 2005015600
020 $a0814793983 (cloth : alk. paper)
020 $a0814793991 (pbk. : alk. paper)
024 3 $a9780814793985
024 3 $a9780814793992
035 $a(OCoLC)ocm60644646
035 $a(NNC)5884800
035 $a5884800
040 $aDLC$cDLC$dBAKER$dC#P$dCZL$dNPL$dOrLoB-B
042 $apcc
043 $an-us---
050 00 $aHV6457$b.L95 2005
082 00 $a364.1/34$222
245 00 $aLynching in America :$ba history in documents /$cedited by Christopher Waldrep.
260 $aNew York :$bNew York University Press,$c[2006], ©2006.
300 $axxii, 281 pages ;$c26 cm
336 $atext$btxt$2rdacontent
337 $aunmediated$bn$2rdamedia
504 $aIncludes bibliographical references and index.
505 00 $tIntroduction: Explanations -- $g1.$t"The Case Stated," 1895 /$rIda B. Wells -- $g2.$t"Georgia," 1897 -- $g3.$t"An Inquiry concerning Lynchings," 1902 /$rJohn Carlisle Kilgo -- $g4.$t"Lynch Law," 1905 /$rJames Elbert Cutler -- $g5.$t"Caste and Class," 1937 /$rJohn Dollard -- $g6.$t"An American Dilemma," 1944 /$rGunnar Myrdal -- $g7.$t"The Mind of the South," 1941 /$rWilbur Joseph Cash -- $g8.$t"In Black and White," 1992 /$rEdward Ayers -- $g9.$t"The Anatomy of a Lynching," 1993 /$rRobyn Wiegman -- $g10.$t"Spectacle Lynching," 1998 /$rGrace Elizabeth Hale -- $g1.$tThe First Lynchers -- $g11.$t"The Mayor of Galway," 1820 /$rJames Hardiman -- $g12.$t"A Farmer Named Lynch," 1835 -- $g13.$t"Captain William Lynch," 1811 /$rAndrew Ellicott -- $g14.$t"Lynchers' Character," 1836 /$rEdgar Allan Poe -- $g15.$tWilliam Preston to Thomas Jefferson, March 1780 -- $g16.$tThomas Jefferson to William Preston, March 21, 1780 -- $g17.$tCol. Arthur Campbell to Major William Edmiston, June 24, 1780 -- $g18.$tCol. William Campbell to Col. Arthur Campbell, July 25, 1780 -- $g19.$tThomas Jefferson to Charles Lynch, August 1, 1780 -- $g20.$tCol. William Preston to Gov. Thomas Jefferson, August 8, 1780 -- $g21.$tNancy Devereaux to Col. William Preston, August 1780 -- $g22.$tCol. Charles Lynch to Col. William Preston, August 17, 1780 -- $g23.$tCharles Lynch to William Hay, May 11, 1782 -- $g24.$t"The Lynch-Law Tree," 1892 -- $g25.$t"The Real Judge Lynch," 1901 /$rThomas Walker Page -- $g2.$tJacksonian America -- $g26.$tRobert Butler to Daniel Parker, Adjutant and Inspector General, May 3, 1818 -- $g27.$tTrial and Execution of Alexander Arbuthnot and Robert C. Ambrister, 1818 -- $g28.$tAndrew Jackson to Secretary of War John C. Calhoun, May 5, 1818 -- $g29.$t"Seminole War," January 20, 1819 /$rHenry Clay -- $g30.$t"On the Mississippi," 1830 /$rJames Stuart -- $g31.$t"Guy Rivers," 1834 /$rWilliam Gilmore Simms -- $g32.$t"The Vicksburg Tragedy," 1835 -- $g33.$t"The Enemies of the Constitution Discovered," 1835 -- $g34.$t"McIntosh Burning," 1836 -- $g35.$tLuke Lawless, Charge to the Grand Jury after McIntosh Burning, 1836 -- $g36.$t"The Perpetuation of Our Political Institutions," January 27, 1838 /$rAbraham Lincoln -- $g3.$tSlavery -- $g37.$t"Tom, A Negro Man Slave," 1763 /$rBoston Gazette -- $g38.$t"The Sentence Was Immediately Put into Execution," February 24, 1797 /$rNorfolk Herald and Public Advertiser -- $g39.$t"Madison County, Mississippi, Proceedings," 1836 /$rThomas Shackleford -- $g40.$t"The Question of Right Admits of No Parley," 1836 /$rGovernor Charles Lynch -- $g41.$t"A Statement of Facts," 1839 /$rJoseph Henry -- $g42.$tFulton Anderson, Grand Jury Indictment, 1846 -- $g43.$tProposed Jury Instructions in Trial of Arthur Jordan, 1846 -- $g44.$tDebate in the Senate, April 20, 1848 -- $g45.$t"Despotism in America," 1854 /$rRichard Hildreth -- $g46.$t"Southern Outrages," 1855 /$rBoston Liberator -- $g47.$t"The Burning of a Negro," 1854 /$rNew York Daily Tribune -- $g48.$t"Men Wept Tears of Blood," 1854 /$rMississippi Free Trader -- $g49.$t"A Little Mob Law in the State of Missouri," 1859 /$rJames M. Shackleford -- $g4.$tHow the West Was Won -- $g50.$tElias S. Ketcham, Diary, January 24, 1853 -- $g51.$t"Resolutions," 1855 /$rKansas Weekly Herald -- $g52.$t"Hanging Is a Death Entirely Too Good for Such a Villain!" 1855 /$rSquatter Sovereign -- $g53.$t"Border Ruffianism," 1855 /$rNew York Tribune -- $g54.$tJ. Marion Alexander, Letter to the Kansas Weekly Herald, 1855 -- $g55.$t"Our Only Law," 1855 -- $g56.$t"Citizens of San Francisco," 1855 -- $g57.$tCalifornia Governor Neely Johnson to President Franklin Pierce, 1856 -- $g58.$t"Exciting News from California," 1856 /$rKansas Weekly Herald -- $g59.$t"The Vigilantes of Montana," 1865 /$rThomas J. Dimsdale -- $g5.$tCivil War and Reconstruction -- $g60.$tUlysses S. Grant to Edwin M. Stanton, February 8, 1867 -- $g61.$tOrville Hickman Browning Diary, February 15, 1867 -- $g62.$tGideon Welles Diary, February 15, 1867 -- $g63.$tThe Ku Klux Klan, 1868 -- $g64.$t"A Murderer's Mishaps," 1868 -- $g65.$t"Communication from the Great Grand Cyclops," 1868 -- $g66.$t"Lynch Law in Maryland," 1869 /$rNew York Commercial Advertiser -- $g67.$t"Stale Charges," January 18, 1871 /$rSenator Eugene Casserly -- $g68.$tKu Klux Klan Act, 1871 -- $g69.$tTestimony of Frank Myers, Jacksonville, Florida, November 11, 1871 -- $g70.$tTestimony of Joseph J. Williams, Jacksonville, Florida, November 13, 1871 -- $g71.$tTestimony of Dr. Pride Jones, Washington, D.C., June 5, 1871 -- $g72.$tTestimony of Allen E. Moore, Livingston, Alabama, October 30, 1871 -- $g73.$tTestimony of William Coleman (Colored), Macon, Mississippi, November 6, 1871 -- $g74.$tWilliam W. Murray to Alphonso Taft, September 25, 1876 -- $g75.$tGrand Jury Indictment of Roland Green Harris and Others, November 1876 -- $g76.$t"Lynch Law and Mob Law," 1880 /$rCharleston News and Courier -- $g77.$tJustice William B. Woods, Opinion of the U.S. Supreme Court, in United States v. Harris, 1882 -- $g6.$tThe Gilded Age: Shall the Wheel of Race Agitation Be Stopped? -- $g78.$t"Fiendishness in Texas," 1885 /$rT. Thomas Fortune -- $g79.$t"A Georgia Outrage," 1890 /$rIndianapolis Freeman -- $g80.$t"Is God Dead?" 1892 /$rCharles H.J. Taylor -- $g81.$t"America's Scarlet Crime," 1893 /$rIndianapolis Freeman -- $g82.$t"The Texas Horror," 1893 /$rW.L. Anderson -- $g83.$t"The Lynching in Kansas," 1901 /$rRichmond Planet -- $g84.$t"Shall the Wheels of Race Agitation Be Stopped?" 1902 /$rJohn Mitchell Jr. -- $g85.$t"A Lynching at the Curve," 1892 /$rIda B. Wells -- $g7.$tState Sovereignty and Mob Law -- $g86.$tMassachusetts, An Act concerning Riots, 1839 -- $g87.$tNorth Carolina, An Act to Protect Prisoners, 1893 -- $g88.$tKansas, An Act for the Suppression of Mob Violence, 1903 -- $g89.$tTennessee, An Act to Punish Sheriffs Who Permit Prisoners in Their Custody to Be Put to Death by Violence, 1881 -- $g90.$t"Report to the Governor," December 11, 1883 /$rThomas Goode Jones -- $g91.$t"Law and Order," 1886 /$rJohn G. Cashman -- $g92.$t"A Lynching in Ohio," 1895 -- $g93.$t"Needs of the Farmers' Wives and Daughters," 1897 /$rRebecca Latimer Felton -- $g94.$t"Government, Crime, and Lynching," October 27, 1897 /$rGeorgia Governor George W. Y. Atkinson -- $g95.$t"Mrs. Fellows's Speech," 1898 /$rAlexander Manly -- $g96.$t"Sam Hose," 1899 -- $g97.$tReport of Debate at the Alabama Constitutional Convention, June 22, 1901 -- $g98.$tJustice Melville W. Fuller, Opinion of the U.S. Supreme Court, in United States v. Shipp, 1909 -- $g99.$tSheriff Jack Griffin Sr., Testimony in State v. Oscar Gordon and Oscar Gordon Jr., July 1933 -- $g8.$tWestern Lynching in an Industrializing Age -- $g100.$t"Popular Tribunals," 1887 /$rHubert Howe Bancroft -- $g101.$t"The People Execute the Law," 1887 /$rChico Enterprise -- $g102.$t"A Righteous Execution," 1887 /$rRed Bluff News -- $g103.$t"The Johnson County War," 1892 /$rSam Travers Clover -- $g104.$t"The Virginian," 1902 /$rOwen Wister -- $g105.$tAlvey A. Adee to Consul-General Donnelly, August 16, 1897 -- $g106.$tReport of Consul-General Donnelly, September 13, 1897 -- $g107.$t"A Swine," 1914 /$rLos Angeles Regeneracion -- $g108.$t"At the Last Hour," 1914 /$rLos Angeles Regeneracion -- $g109.$t"Plan of San Diego," 1915 -- $g110.$t"Pascual Orozco and the Fugitive Law," 1915 -- $g111.$t"Reprisals Feared for the Death of Pascual Orozco," 1915 -- $g112.$t"The Ox-Bow Incident," 1940 /$rWalter Van Tilburg Clark -- $g9.$tThe Limits of Progressive Reform -- $g113.$t"What Is Lynching?" 1905 /$rRay Stannard Baker -- $g114.$t"Both Lynched: Holberts, Man and Woman, Captured Near Itta Bena," 1904 -- $g115.$t"Most Horrible Details of the Burning at the Stake of the Holberts," 1904 -- $g116.$t"Editor J. A. Richardson Talks about Indianola Post Office and Doddsville Burning," 1904 -- $g117.$t"The Lynching of Jesus," 1905 /$rE. T. Wellford -- $g118.$t"Hearst Comes to Atlanta," 1926 /$rHerbert Asbury -- $g119.$t"Rise! People of Georgia!" 1915 /$rTom Watson -- $g120.$t"The Voice of the People Is the Voice of God!" 1915 /$rTom Watson --
505 80 $g121.$t"Mary Phagan Speaks," 1915 /$rMary White Ovington -- $g122.$t"Mary Turner Lynching," 1918 /$rStephen Graham -- $g123.$tHugh Dorsey Answers Colored Welfare League of Augusta, 1918 -- $g124.$tFrank Hicks, Petition for Writ of Habeas Corpus, May 2, 1921 -- $g125.$tMitchell G. Hall to the U.S. Attorney General, 1921 -- $g126.$t"New Wrinkle in Mobbery," 1925 /$rNorfolk Journal and Guide -- $g10.$tFederal Law against Mob Law -- $g127.$tMoses Love & Co. to President William McKinley, December 4, 1899 -- $g128.$tJames B. Moseley to President William McKinley, February 23, 1900 -- $g129.$tAbial Lathrop to Attorney General, March 5, 1898 -- $g130.$tIda B. Wells's Petition on Behalf of Frazier Baker's Widow and Children, 1898 -- $g131.$tAbial Lathrop to Attorney General, April 18, 1898 -- $g132.$tState Sovereignty and Lynching, 1898 /$rColumbia Record -- $g133.$tFederal Jurisdiction, 1898 /$rCharleston News and Courier -- $g134.$tGrand Jury Indictment in Frazier Baker Case, 1898 -- $g135.$tLavinia Baker's Testimony, 1899 -- $g136.$tGeorge Legare, Argument for the Defense in the Frazier Baker Case, 1899 -- $g137.$t"A Brief Inquiry into a Federal Remedy for Lynching," 1902 /$rAlbert E. Pillsbury -- $g138.$tThomas Goode Jones, Charge to the Grand Jury, October 11, 1904 -- $g139.$tJudge Thomas Goode Jones, Opinion in Ex parte Riggins, 1904 -- $g140.$t"A Statement to the American People," July 26, 1918 /$rWoodrow Wilson -- $g141.$tJ. E. Boyd to President Woodrow Wilson, November 19, 1920 -- $g142.$tAra Lee Settle of Armstrong Technical High School, Washington, D.C., to President Warren G. Harding, June 18, 1922 -- $g11.$tThe New Deal -- $g143.$t"The Marianna, Florida, Lynching," November 20, 1934 /$rHoward Kester -- $g144.$tWalter White to Attorney General Homer Cummings, December 29, 1936 -- $g145.$tWalter White to Attorney General Homer Cummings, January 5, 1937 -- $g146.$tEleanor Roosevelt to Steven Early, August 8, 1935 -- $g147.$t"Lynching by Blow Torch," April 13, 1937 /$rHoward Kester -- $g148.$t"The Federal Civil Right 'Not to Be Lynched,'" February 1943 /$rVictor W. Rotnem -- $g149.$tJustice William O. Douglas, Opinion of the U.S. Supreme Court, in Screws v. United States, 1945 -- $g150.$tAlbert Harris Jr., Affidavit, August 29, 1946 -- $g151.$tTheron L. Caudle to Malcolm Lefargue, March 5, 1947 -- $g152.$tMalcolm Lefargue to Theron L. Caudle, March 11, 1947 -- $g153.$tTurner L. Smith Memorandum to Theron L. Caudle, March 17, 1947 -- $g12.$tHigh-Tech Lynchings -- $g154.$tJessie Lee Sammons Statement, Greenville, S.C., February 19, 1947 -- $g155.$t"Opera in Greenville," 1947 /$rRebecca West -- $g156.$t"The Shocking Story of Approved Killing in Mississippi," January 24, 1956 /$rWilliam Bradford Huie -- $g157.$tSt. John Barrett to Brooks and Kehoe, December 21, 1959 -- $g158.$t"The Ideology of Vigilantism," 1969 /$rRichard Maxwell Brown -- $g159.$t"Legal and Behavioral Perspectives on American Vigilantism," 1971 /$rRichard Maxwell Brown -- $g160.$tSupreme Court of Alabama, Opinion in Henry F. Hays v. State of Alabama, 1985 -- $g161.$t"Further Testimony of Hon. Clarence Thomas, of Georgia, to Be Associate Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court," 1991 /$rClarence Thomas.
520 1 $a"Ranging from personal correspondence to courtroom transcripts to journalistic accounts, historian Christopher Waldrep has extensively mined an enormous quantity of documents about lynching, which he arranges chronologically with concise introductions. From the South to the West, the American Revolution to the "high tech" lynching of today, Lynching in America presents the most comprehensive portrait of extra-legal mob violence to date, demonstrating that while lynching has always been present in American society, it has been anything but one-dimensional. Book jacket."--BOOK JACKET.
650 0 $aLynching$zUnited States$xHistory.
700 1 $aWaldrep, Christopher,$d1951-$0http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n93020969
856 41 $3Table of contents$uhttp://www.loc.gov/catdir/toc/ecip0514/2005015600.html
852 00 $bbar$hHV6457$i.L95 2005