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Joe Coe, also known as George Smith, was an African-American laborer who was lynched on October 18, 1891 in Omaha, Nebraska. Overwhelmed by a mob of one thousand at the Douglas County Courthouse, the twelve city police officers stood by without intervening. Afterward, the mayor called the lynching "the most deplorable thing that has ever happened in the history of the country."〔Ginzburg, R. (1988) ''100 Years of Lynchings.'' Black Classic Press. p 129.〕 ==Biography and death== Coe was a married man with two children who lived on North 12th Street north of downtown Omaha. On October 7, 1891 Lizzie Yates, a five-year-old white child who also lived in North Omaha, accused Coe of assaulting her. Before the verdict was passed rumors swept through Omaha about Coe getting away with the crime, about the girl dying, and about Coe receiving a small punishment. A crowd of men was already gathered at the old Douglas County Courthouse the day when Coe was brought in, to witness an unrelated, scheduled hanging, an official execution. Rumors flew around Omaha that the girl had died, the guilty party was in jail, and was only going to be punished with 20 years' incarceration.〔Peattie, E.W. (2005) ''Impertinences: Selected Writings of Elia Peattie, a Journalist in the Gilded Age''. University of Nebraska Press. p. 106.〕 The next day, a mob of several hundred to 1,000 men formed in downtown Omaha early on October 10 and overwhelmed the police at the courthouse.〔( Quintard Taylor, ''In Search Of The Racial Frontier: African Americans in the American West, 1528-1990'' ), New York: W.W. Norton & Co., 1998, p.205〕 Councilman Moriarty drove his cane through a window and led the men against the courthouse.〔Ginzburg, R. (1988), p 128, Reprint of 5 Oct 1919 article, ''Omaha Bee''.〕 Leaders drove Coe to the assumed victim's house in the Near North Side neighborhood to be identified by the parents. The mother immediately said she had seen Coe roaming around the house, although she would not swear that it was him.〔 When the mob brought Coe back to the courthouse to be lynched, James E. Boyd, the governor of Nebraska, and the county sheriff both appealed to the men to disperse. Instead, by midnight a crowd of 1,000 to 10,000 people had gathered at the courthouse.〔Ginzburg, R. (1988), Reprint of 5 Oct 1919 article, ''Omaha Bee'', p 129. Note: This account was written by the inflammatory ''Omaha Bee'' shortly after the Sept. 1919 race riot, to which the Bee likely contributed by yellow journalism before the event. Their estimate of the size of the crowd is ten times larger an academic historian's account and may be overstated.〕 The mob beat Coe and dragged him through city streets. He was probably already dead when he was hung from a streetcar wire at 17th and Harney Streets.〔Taylor, Q. (1998) ''In Search of the Racial Frontier: African Americans in the American West, 1528-1990''. W. W. Norton & Company. p. 206.〕 Omaha mayor Richard C. Cushing quickly condemned the lynching as "the most deplorable thing that has ever happened in the history of the country."〔Ginzburg, R. (1988) p 129.〕 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Joe Coe」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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