"One August night in 1931, on a secluded mountain ridge overlooking Birmingham, Alabama, three young white women were brutally attacked. The sole survivor, Nell Williams, age eighteen, said a black man had held the women captive for four hours before shooting them and disappearing into the woods. That same night, a reign of terror was unleashed on Birmingham's black community: black businesses were set ablaze, posses of armed white men roamed the streets, and dozens of black men were arrested in the largest manhunt in Jefferson County history. Weeks later, Nell identified Willie Peterson as the attacker who killed her sister Augusta and their friend Jenny Wood. With the exception of being black, Peterson bore little resemblance to the descr...
On the evening of December 9, 1875, around forty masked men broke into the boardinghouse of the elde...
According to records maintained by the NAACP, between 1882 and 1968 there were 4,743 documented case...
Few racially motivated crimes have left a more lasting imprint on American memory than the death of ...
Jason Morgan Ward reviews Melanie S. Morrison's Murder on Shades Mountain: The Legal Lynching of Wil...
What remained of the badly decomposed body of twelve-year-old Tina Marie Andrews was discovered un...
During the summer of 1936, Helen Clevenger, an honor student at New York University, accompanied her...
Perhaps no other crime in American history has shocked the conscience of America like the 1963 bombi...
This dissertation documents the tangled and contested history of a 1962 rape case involving Thomas W...
The automobile and manufacturing boom that began in Detroit about 1915 made the city a magnet for bl...
On August 28, 1955, fourteen-year-old Chicago native Emmett Till was brutally beaten to death for al...
The problem of law enforcement in the South, or in a current and not inaccurate phrase, Jim Crow ju...
On 14 June 1895, an aging white farmer, Edward Pollard, returned from his fields to find the body hi...
In the early part of the twentieth century, there were two court trials that deserve to be compared....
By Adam Nossiter Da Capo Press (Paperback, $17.50, ISBN: 0306811626, 6/2002) First published: 1994 I...
Elbert Parr Tuttle joined the federal bench in 1954, shortly after the Supreme Court decided Brown v...
On the evening of December 9, 1875, around forty masked men broke into the boardinghouse of the elde...
According to records maintained by the NAACP, between 1882 and 1968 there were 4,743 documented case...
Few racially motivated crimes have left a more lasting imprint on American memory than the death of ...
Jason Morgan Ward reviews Melanie S. Morrison's Murder on Shades Mountain: The Legal Lynching of Wil...
What remained of the badly decomposed body of twelve-year-old Tina Marie Andrews was discovered un...
During the summer of 1936, Helen Clevenger, an honor student at New York University, accompanied her...
Perhaps no other crime in American history has shocked the conscience of America like the 1963 bombi...
This dissertation documents the tangled and contested history of a 1962 rape case involving Thomas W...
The automobile and manufacturing boom that began in Detroit about 1915 made the city a magnet for bl...
On August 28, 1955, fourteen-year-old Chicago native Emmett Till was brutally beaten to death for al...
The problem of law enforcement in the South, or in a current and not inaccurate phrase, Jim Crow ju...
On 14 June 1895, an aging white farmer, Edward Pollard, returned from his fields to find the body hi...
In the early part of the twentieth century, there were two court trials that deserve to be compared....
By Adam Nossiter Da Capo Press (Paperback, $17.50, ISBN: 0306811626, 6/2002) First published: 1994 I...
Elbert Parr Tuttle joined the federal bench in 1954, shortly after the Supreme Court decided Brown v...
On the evening of December 9, 1875, around forty masked men broke into the boardinghouse of the elde...
According to records maintained by the NAACP, between 1882 and 1968 there were 4,743 documented case...
Few racially motivated crimes have left a more lasting imprint on American memory than the death of ...