HISTORY · HISTORICAL MARKER
The Lynching of Ell Persons
Memphis, Tennessee
History
8
Near this spot, on May 22, 1917, a mob tied Ell Persons to a log, doused him with gasoline, and burned him alive as several thousand people watched in what newspapers described as a holiday atmosphere. Authorities had arrested Persons, a local African American woodcutter, for the murder of Antoinette Rappel, a fifteen-year-old white girl riding her bicycle to school across this bridge. The local press reported that authorities had used physical and psychological force to obtain a confession from Persons, and also reported that law enforcement disagreed about the identity of the culprit, with city police reportedly believing the true culprit was white while the county sheriff directed the investigation toward African American woodcutters. Before Persons could be tried, a mob took him from authorities, and a local newspaper announced the time and place of the lynching. Some onlookers took pieces of the body for souvenirs, and others dismembered what was left of Persons and drove to Beale Street, where they threw his head and a foot at African American pedestrians. No one was ever tried for either violent crime. NAACP Field Secretary James Weldon Johnson came to Memphis to investigate the lynching and concluded that there was "no positive evidence" pointing to Persons' guilt. As a result of Johnsons' report, Robert R. Church, Jr. and other community leaders formed the local branch of the NAACP in June 1917, and by 1919 the Memphis branch was one of the largest in the South.
PHOTOS
Photo: Andrea Morales
Photo: Steve Masler
Photo: Steve Masler
Photo: Memphis Press Scimitar 1917
Photo: Steve Masler
Photo: Steve Masler
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Memphis, Tennessee · USA
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