Title:
1Strange Fruit
- Lyrics by Lewis Allan aka Abel Meeropol (Jewish
teacher from New York) - Sung by Billie Holiday in 1939
2Lyrics
- Southern trees bear a strange fruit,
- Blood on the leaves and blood at the root,
- Black bodies swinging in the southern breeze,
- Strange fruit hanging from the poplar trees.
- Pastoral scene of the gallant south,
- The bulging eyes and the twisted mouth,
- Scent of magnolias, sweet and fresh,
- Then the sudden smell of burning flesh!
- Here is fruit for the crows to pluck,
- For the rain to gather, for the wind to suck,
- For the sun to rot, for the trees to drop,
- Here is a strange and bitter crop.
3Southern trees bear a strange fruit,
4Blood on the leaves and blood at the root,
5Black bodies swinging in the southern breeze,
6Strange fruit hanging from the poplar trees.
7Pastoral scene of the gallant south,
8The bulging eyes and the twisted mouth,
9Scent of magnolias, sweet and fresh,
10Then the sudden smell of burning flesh!
11Here is fruit for the crows to pluck,
12For the rain to gather, for the wind to suck,
13For the sun to rot, for the trees to drop,
14Here is a strange and bitter crop.
15What is lynching?
- Lynching is an act of mob violence which results
in the death or maiming of a person often
suspected, charged, or convicted of a serious
crime. - Lynching is a group killing under the
justification of serving justice, race or
tradition. - Lynching often occurs outside of the legal
justice system.
16Were only men lynched?
- Laura Nelson lynched with her son in Okemah,
Oklahoma on May 25, 1911. - Nelsons son was initially accused of stealing
meat, but she tried to take the blame for him so
they were both killed.
17Were the victims always hung?
- William Brown lynched in Omaha, Nebraska on
September 28, 1919. - Brown was accused of molesting a white girl. The
Mayor pleaded with the mob, but the mob set the
courthouse on fire, seized him, hung him from a
lamppost, mutilated him, rattled his body with
bullets and then burned him.
18Why did people take pictures of lynching?
- Thomas Shipp Abram Smith lynched in Marion,
Indiana on August 7, 1930. - These teenagers allegedly shot a white couple
during an attempted robbery. - James Cameron escaped this lynching.
19Why were blacks lynched publicly from the 1880s
to the 1960s?
- To maintain the racial order in the south and
elsewhere across the country after the end of
slavery - To protect white women
- To teach children racism
- To stop blacks from taking full advantage of
their legal freedoms new economic opportunities
given during Reconstruction
20Why were blacks lynched publicly from the 1880s
to the 1960s?
Waud, Alfred R. The First Vote. Harpers
Weekly, November 1867.
21Why were blacks lynched publicly from the 1880s
to the 1960s?
Blacks were elected to office in the South during
Reconstruction. These are Black congressmen from
the late 1800s, including the first black person
to serve in the United States Senate, Hiram
Revels (1869-1871).
22What crimes were non-black lynching victims
accused of?
23What crimes were black lynching victims accused
of?
24Where did lynching occur?Lynching by State
Race 1882-1968(States with the highest lynching
ratesIL)
- State Whites Blacks Total
- Alabama 48 299 347
- Arkansas 58 226 284
- Florida 25 257 282
- Georgia 39 491 530
- Kentucky 63 142 205
- Louisiana 56 335 391
- Mississippi 40 538 758
- Missouri 53 69 122
- North Carolina 15 85 100
- Oklahoma 82 40 122
- South Carolina 4 156 160
- Tennessee 47 204 251
- Texas 141 352 493
- Virginia 17 83 100
- (Illinois 15 19 34)
- TOTAL 1,297 3,446 4,743
25Why were non-blacks lynched?
Leo Frank, 1913 Jewish, northern-born factory
owner in Atlanta accused of raping murdering a
13-year-old girl
26How did people respond to lynching?
- Our countrys national crime is lynching. It is
not the creature of an hour, the sudden outburst
of uncontrolled fury, or the unspeakable
brutality of an insane mob. It represents the
cool, calculating deliberation of the intelligent
people who openly avow that there is an
unwritten law that justifies them in putting
human beings to death without complaint under
oath, without trial by jury, without opportunity
to make defense, and without right of appeal - - Ida B. Wells, former slave black journalist
27Ida B. Wells (1862-1931)
28Who else fought to end lynching?
NAACP Advertisement. The Shame of America. New
York Times, 23 November 1922.
29Who else fought to end lynching?
- James Weldon Johnson, Walter White (NAACP)
- Jessie Ames Daniel (ASWPL)
- Many senators and congressmen wrote bills to pass
a federal anti-lynching law, but out of more than
200 bills, none could get past the southern
Democratic voting bloc in the Senate. - Organizations of northern blacks, white black
journalists, and middle-class white women strove
to end lynching. We will read about them more in
class