The Lynching witnessed by Henry Fonda---Omaha, 1919

The Lynching witnessed by Henry Fonda

http://picasaweb.google.com/posterazzi/OmahaLynch1919?authkey=Gv1sRgCNr1256-xub09AE#

The Omaha Courthouse Lynching of 1919

This infamous incident was part of the wave of racial and labor violence that 
swept the U.S. during the “Red Summer” of 1919. As in the nation at large, it 
was a turning point in the history of Omaha’s black community. Following a 
national pattern, the local daily newspaper carried lurid, sensational accounts 
of attacks by African American males on white women, without similar coverage 
of assaults on African American women, by either black or white males. After 
one particularly provocative story in September of 1919, Will Brown, an African 
American man, was arrested and held in the Douglas County Courthouse. Largely 
due to the newspaper story, a mob gathered. Omaha Mayor Edward P. Smith was 
nearly lynched himself when he unsuccessfully attempted to disperse the crowd. 
Then the mob broke into the recently constructed building, tearing off Brown’s 
clothing as he was being dragged out. He was hanged on a nearby lamppost and 
then his body was riddled
 with bullets. Finally the body was burned. Members of the mob tied what 
remained of his charred body to an automobile, and dragged it around the 
streets of downtown Omaha. Pieces of the rope used to lynch Brown were sold as 
souvenirs for 10 cents apiece. 

Although some of the leaders of the lynching were placed on trial, most 
received suspended sentences, or were convicted of minor offenses such as 
destruction of public property. Some of the causes of the “Courthouse Lynching 
of 1919” were linked to Omaha city politics. The mayor, who was a 
recently-elected reformer, was at odds with the machine-controlled police 
department, whose members were conspicuously absent during the height of the 
riot. One of the thousands of witnesses to the lynching was a young man named 
Henry Fonda, who later remembered, “It was the most horrendous sight I’d ever 
seen…My hands were wet and there were tears in my eyes. All I could think of 
was that young black man dangling at the end of a rope.”

The authentic newspaper page from Hearst's Chicago Examiner is for sale:  $350

http://picasaweb.google.com/posterazzi/OmahaLynch1919?authkey=Gv1sRgCNr1256-xub09AE#


Clearly, the Fondas' spiritual roots are planted deep in midwestern soil—as 
were Darrow's. While in the play Darrow recounts his father's revulsion at 
witnessing a public hanging, Fonda recalls an even more shocking incident from 
his own childhood: "When I was about 10 there was a race riot in Omaha. My 
father, whose business was on the third floor of a building overlooking the 
courthouse square, took me there and lifted me up to the window. I saw a mob 
string up a young black man to a lamppost, then drag him along and riddle his 
body with bullets. The mayor rode up on his horse to calm them down, but the 
mob almost lynched him too. All the while, my father never spoke. He didn't 
have to." 

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