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Each of these victims was once a living human being with feelings, hopes and dreams - but the drama of their deaths has overshadowed their lives.
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We must remember that...
Each had talents and pleasures: singing, dancing, telling stories, playing cards or sports, creating beautiful and useful things.
Each worked for a living or struggled with unemployment.
Each was part of a family and community: a father or mother, husband or wife, son or daughter, friend or neighbor – loved ones who retrieved the mutilated body and grieved over it.
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To pay your respects to a victim, click on the state where he or she died. The state link will take you to a list of names. You can also use the Search box above to find an individual.
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Unfortunately, we know little to nothing about these individuals.
Help us to honor their lives by sharing whatever you know about their time on this earth. Include family stories or photos if you can. Please forward them to us at memorial@abhmuseum.org.
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To search for information about someone in your family who was lynched, check out these genealogy websites: http://ancestry.com and http://ccharity.com/.
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Source of most names, places, and dates of death: Ralph Ginzburg, 100 Years of Lynchings, Baltimore: Black Classic Press, 1988, 253-270.
View by state
Aug 7
1930
Murdered in: Marion, Indiana
Feb 8
1890
Murdered in: Blountsville, Indiana
Feb 26
1901
Murdered in: Terre Haute, Indiana
Nov 18
1890
Murdered in: Locality Unknown (Indiana)
Nov 20
1902
Murdered in: Sullivan, Indiana
May 22
1891
Murdered in: Locality Unknown (Indiana)
Dec 16
1900
Murdered in: Rockport, Indiana
Aug 7
1930
Murdered in: Marion, Indiana
Tommy worked at the Malleable foundry in Marion, Indiana, at the time of his death at age eighteen. Only a little more is known about him.
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