Winner of ten Spring 2017 StMU History Media Awards for
Best Descriptive Article
Most Captivating & Engaging Article
Best Use of Multiple Images
Best Featured Image
Best Article in the Category of “United States History”
Best Article in the Category of “Social History”
Best Overall Research
Best Use of Primary Sources
Article with the Best Conclusion
Award for Best Storyteller
The period from 1880 to 1930 is one of the darkest chapters in American History for its numbers of murders by lynching, and has come to be known as the Lynching Era.1 Acts of violence against blacks in the South rose dramatically in the years after the Civil War. Intimidation, beatings, and murder became normal occurrences during this period of time, where people of color were killed by hanging or other tortuous ways. The thousands who fell victim to unthinkable torture and death had done nothing to bring this fate upon themselves; it was a result of the entwined racism that was the mindset of many of the whites who lived in the South. In this time period, any small “act” could bring a person of color to this fate.2
In the case of Laura Nelson, it was May 2, 1911. Three men, under the eyes of Okfuskee County Deputy Sheriff George Loney, went to search the house of Laura Nelson. Laura and her husband Austin were suspected of having stolen a cow and butchered it. Austin Nelson admitted to the crime, as the meat was found in their possession during the search. Laura’s husband stated in regards to him steeling the cow, “he had nothing for his children to eat.”3
While Sheriff George Loney was searching the Nelson’s house, he discovered a loaded musket that hung on the wall of their cabin. Firmly, the Sheriff demanded it, and urged that it be unloaded. With this, officers stated that Laura reached for another gun from the hands of her teenage son, L. D. Nelson. This is when a struggle began between the Sheriff and L. D. in trying to gain control of the gun. Unfortunately in L. D.’s wrestle with Sheriff Loney, the gun went off. The bullet hit Sheriff Loney in the leg, and killed him. Laura’s husband Austin fully admitted to the act of stealing and killing the livestock, and stated that Laura was only “reaching” for this weapon to retrieve it from her son before an altercation would begin. This statement from Austin Nelson led him immediately to a penitentiary, which is what in actuality saved him from a lynch mob. But with Austin’s statement taking full personal blame, in the hopes of keeping his wife and son from punishment, he was indeed disappointed; unfortunately his confession did not keep them from harm. Both Laura and L. D. were arrested and put in the Okfuskee County jail to await trial for the murder of Sheriff Deputy George Loney. Even though Laura pleaded for her and her son’s innocence, they remained in jail.4
While days passed for Laura and L. D. in jail, on May 24, 1911, a mob of some forty men descended upon the jail. Fourteen year old L. D. and his mother Laura Nelson were dragged from their cells in that Oklahoma city, and put into wagons. They traveled six miles outside of the city, and then they entered a Negro settlement. Once there, the mob of men, using tow sacks, gagged both L. D. and Laura. Laura was then raped, and then the mob took her to the Canadian River Bridge where she was hanged by a noose made of hemp. Only twenty feet away on the bridge, L. D. was hanged as well, with his clothes partly torn from his body. Their bodies remained on the bridge overnight until discovered the next day by a young boy passing by.5
While lynchings were said to be a secretive activity, this one of Laura Nelson and her son seemed to prove otherwise. It was as if the perpetrators were immune from the law. This “secret” lynching is what led to the monstrous photographs that were taken of Laura and L. D. Nelson. “The Lynching of Laura Nelson and Son” that started off as a photograph taken by the local photographer of the town, George Henry Farnum, soon transitioned into becoming a popular lynch postcard.6 These were widely distributed, despite the ban on “violent mail” by the Postal Service. These lynch postcards proved to be very profitable, and some individuals even sold them as door to door salesmen. The spread of racism paralleled the spread of these postcards, as it allowed people to be “involved” with these lynching without physically having to be present. It heightened the idea that white supremacists had the power and control in society, as they sought to spread their bigotry throughout the country.7
The impact of these lynching have continued for many decades, and in one case, they have continued in an irony of history. Woody Guthrie, who is said to be one of the most influential modern folk music artist, made his mark. Through his music he portrayed his thoughts on lynching by condemning it. Guthrie was born only a year after the lynching of Laura and L. D. Nelson, but their story impacted him later on in his life when he began to develop his anti-lynching music.8
Guthrie was struck to produce this music when inspiration hit him in an art gallery. It was the mid 1930’s, and now the lynchings caught by the photographs that were originally used to popularize them were being used in art exhibits to inspire anti-lynching actions. Artists such as Thomas Hart Benton and Jose Clemente Orozco produced paintings, drawings, and prints that were shown in two major exhibits. These exhibits were sponsored by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) and even by the Communist Party to highlight the tragedy and extreme horror that lynch mobs brought to the United States. For the organizers of these exhibits, these two galleries hoped to educate the population and criminalize these acts as the crimes they had always truly been. Woody Guthrie attended and witnessed these art pieces himself, and from this he expressed, “This painting is so real I feel like I was at a lynching, and it…takes all of the fun and good humor and good sport out of you to set here and realize that people could go so haywire as to hang a human body up by a gallus pole and shoot it full of Winchester rifle holes just for pastime.’’9
This interaction also made Guthrie remember some horrors from his own childhood. Woody Guthrie says, “It reminds me of the postcard picture they sold in my home town for several years, a showing you a negro mother, and her two young sons, a hanging by the neck from a river bridge, and the wild wind a whistling down the river bottom, and the ropes stretched tight by the weight of their bodies…stretched tight like a big fiddle string.”10
The postcard that Woody Guthrie was recalling was indeed the one of Laura and L. D. Nelson. While Guthrie was incorrect in his claims that there had been three individuals, he let this memory and his viewing of the artwork allow him to create music. Inspired by the Nelson postcards and the gruesome event of that May day in 1911, Guthrie wrote the song, “Don’t Kill My Baby and My Son,” which tells of Guthrie’s remembrance of his past, as he expresses in his lyrics that he heard the “lonesome moan” of Laura crying out, “You can stretch my neck on that old river bridge, but don’t kill my baby and my son.”11
“As I walked down that old dark town
In the town where I was born,
I heard the saddest lonesome moan
I ever heard before…
O, don’t kill my baby and my son,
O , don’t kill my baby and my son.
You can stretch my neck on that old river bridge,
But don’t kill my baby and my son…
Then I saw a picture on a postcard
It showed the Canadian River Bridge,
Three bodies hanging to swing in the wind,
A mother and two sons they’d lynched”12
What is most ironic and even more significant about Woody Guthrie producing a song in remembrance of Laura and her son L. D. Nelson, was that Woody Guthrie’s own father, Charles Guthrie, is said to have been one of the many men in the mob that claimed Laura and L. D.’s lives. No one is certain whether Charles Guthrie was a strong participation or if he was simply a witness to the crimes. While Charles Guthrie stood for lynching and proclaimed white power, his son rose up against it all. Woody Guthrie even admits that well into the 1920’s, his father was a long-standing member of the Ku Klux Klan. But maybe it is this as well that pushed Woody to keep making music that stood against everything his own father practiced. Guthrie was shocked by all of the violence against black people, especially the one of L. D. and Laura Nelson, even when this lynching had occurred over a year before Woody was born. Guthrie wanted to make his music powerful and wanted it to linger in everyone’s minds. He often even included the graphic images from the lynchings, especially the postcards of L. D. and Laura Nelson. Woody Guthrie took this anti-lynching movement into his music to contrast the culture in America that was still strongly racist. Guthrie took his scarred memories of being raised in a racist environment and used his experiences to create a message of hope for change.13
The lynching of Laura Nelson is just one of the thousands that occurred during this era. Even more despicable acts of torture came to others. Women such as Mary Turner, who committed no crime, was doused in gasoline just before her unborn baby was cut from her womb to be stomped into the ground.14 Sam Hose, who was killed by a mob after defending himself from an attacker, had his fingers, ears, and genitals cut from his body before the mob set him on fire. The lynch mob then fought over who got to keep his bones as souvenirs.15
The lives lost during this time period were lost in a way that resembles a national demonic nightmare. Many Americans celebrated these acts as moments of white pride and power. But this fifty year period of agonizing murder is the longest, compared to all other countries that have faced attacks on others for their ethnicity.16 It is horrific facts like these in our country’s history that compel us to face them and not let them be ignored or forgotten. These thousands of lives that matter were taken because of pure racist hatred, and it is crucial as a country that these acts will serve as a reminder of where we once were and where we should promise never to return.
- For the literature on lynching, see Ashraf H.A. Rushdy, American Lynching (Connecticut: Yale University Press, 2012); Amy Louise Woods, Lynching and spectacle: witnessing racial violence in America, 1890-1940 (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2009). For the most important early work on American lynchings in the post-Reconstruction era, see Ida B. Wells-Barnett, On Lynchings (New York: Humanity Books, 1892, 2002). ↵
- Viola Ratcliffe, “To Be A Witness: Lynching and Postmemory in LaShawnda Crowe Storm’s ‘Her Name Was Laura Nelson'” (M.A. Thesis, Bowling Green State University, 2015), 19. ↵
- Viola Ratcliffe, “To Be A Witness: Lynching and Postmemory in LaShawnda Crowe Storm’s ‘Her Name Was Laura Nelson'” (M.A. Thesis, Bowling Green State University, 2015), 21. ↵
- Viola Ratcliffe, “To Be A Witness: Lynching and Postmemory in LaShawnda Crowe Storm’s ‘Her Name Was Laura Nelson'” (M.A. Thesis, Bowling Green State University, 2015), 21. ↵
- Viola Ratcliffe, “To Be A Witness: Lynching and Postmemory in LaShawnda Crowe Storm’s ‘Her Name Was Laura Nelson'” (M.A. Thesis, Bowling Green State University, 2015), 22. ↵
- Eric Foner, Give Me Liberty (New York: W. W. Norton & Company, 2017), 666-668. ↵
- Viola Ratcliffe, “To Be A Witness: Lynching and Postmemory in LaShawnda Crowe Storm’s ‘Her Name Was Laura Nelson'” (M.A. Thesis, Bowling Green State University, 2015), 22-23. ↵
- Salem Press Biographical Encyclopedia, January 2016, s.v. “Woody Guthrie,” by Howard Bromberg. ↵
- Mark Allen Jackson, “Dark memory: a look at lynching in America through the life, times, and songs of Woody Guthrie,” Popular Music and Society 28, no. 5 (December 2005): 663-664. ↵
- Mark Allen Jackson, “Dark memory: a look at lynching in America through the life, times, and songs of Woody Guthrie,” Popular Music and Society 28, no. 5 (December 2005): 664. ↵
- Mark Allen Jackson, “Dark memory: a look at lynching in America through the life, times, and songs of Woody Guthrie,” Popular Music and Society 28, no. 5 (December 2005): 664-665. ↵
- For the full text of the song, see Woody Guthrie, “Don’t Kill My Baby and My Son;” for a recent performance of the song, see Brooke Harvey’s rendition on Youtube. ↵
- Mark Allen Jackson, “Dark memory: a look at lynching in America through the life, times, and songs of Woody Guthrie,” Popular Music and Society 28, no. 5 (December 2005): 665. ↵
- Viola Ratcliffe, “To Be A Witness: Lynching and Postmemory in LaShawnda Crowe Storm’s ‘Her Name Was Laura Nelson'” (M.A. Thesis, Bowling Green State University, 2015), 20. ↵
- Eric Foner, Give Me Liberty (New York: W. W. Norton & Company, 2017), 666-668. ↵
- Eric Foner, Give Me Liberty (New York: W. W. Norton & Company, 2017), 666-668. ↵
132 comments
Leeza Cordova
It was very heartbreaking and disgusting to read that the pictures of the Nelsons was hung around and given in POSTCARDS and sold as gifts to people. What made my heart hurt the most was the idea that they were very profitable, as if they were not actual people, just a picture of nature. It also upsets me that people still these acts as something to glorify and that people were okay with things like this happening. Although we promise to not go back to that, there are still bits and pieces that are alive in our present world.
Chelsea Alvarez
This article is very captivating and well informed. Prior to reading this, I had no idea that lynching postcards were used during the lynching era. To even think that individuals would be proud enough to show off something that gruesome is very perplexing. The details you included on how they tortured these individuals before they lynched them was really eye opening. Woodie Guthrie’s music about Laura and L.D. Nelson’s lynching shows that messages during this period were influential and could have sparked a change in ideology. It was nice to read that he opposed what his father might have supported, since it is uncommon for young men to go against the ideals of their family.
Mariah Cavanaugh
I particularly liked your chosen images. I think it is important that we not only acknowledge our gruesome history but face it head on. By putting images such as Laura Nelson hanging from the bridge or Emmitt Till’s brutalized face front and center it gives us no choice but to look and face the reality of where our hate pushes us.
John Cadena
Did not know about this. As a fan of the more provocative side of history I did appreciate though. The structure of this piece along with the photos really help keep my attention. Understandable though, this piece may not have been as keeping without the photos. In reading this piece, I read through it twice. The first time paying close attention to the photos and the second ignoring the photos. I struggled in following along without a photo to match the narrative.
Sara Ramirez
Gabriela, this was an amazing article. Very well written and deserving of the numerous awards. The concept of lynching postcards is disgusting and something that I had never heard of. The distribution of these postcards is really telling of a quiet racism that is still prevalent to this day. This story was very compelling and made me appreciate the progress we’ve made in the fight for racial equality and justice, but also an inspiration to keep fighting for more.
Edgar Velazquez Reynald
It’s important not to forget such atrocities and that there are so many dark chapters in the United States’ past. I wasn’t aware about this side of Woody Guthrie’s biography so thank you for shedding light on that. I’ll have to look it up. Whether his father was an active participant or not, I’m sure knowing of his presence during such a horrible crime left an indelible impression on him.
Scott Sleeter
Articles like these are very important. They give us glimpses into the horrors of American history that no one wants to think about. We need to remember these events so we can make sure they are not repeated. Events like these often get swept under the rug or cut out of history books, we can not let that happen. We need to follow Woody’s example and stand up against the evil of our fathers and make a better future.
Geremy Landin
I too had not heard of these lynching postcard ideas. I am a photographer by trade now and can’t imagine using a photo like that to profit or to spread these types of ideas to a widespread audience. This makes me wonder about the art of that time. I frequently notice artists show despair and tribulations through their art, but not in the enjoyment of someone else’s torment. As a creative, this makes me sad. I am glad you were able to engage the reader so well and teach something new. It would be great to talk to you about additional research you may have done on this topic. Thanks
Danielle A. Garza
Looking at all the awards this article was given I was excited to read it and I was not disappointed. The author begins with an overall definition of what the Lynching Era was. After this she narrows her scope to a single woman. These images were profound and speaking of the images is something I usually do not see in these articles. The author used the images to tell the story and placed the responsibility of telling the story onto a combination of images.
Lindsey Wieck
Gabriela,
This article is extremely well written and engages the readers attention. I had never heard of lynching postcards before, and the concept is horrifying. However, you’ve done a great job contextualizing, analyzing, and explaining the significance of these postcards. Well done!
This is now a required reading in my graduate Advanced Public History methods course.