Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Shameful part of Joplin's past featured in new book

A 1903 lynching in Joplin is among the historical racial atrocities featured in a new book, White Man's Heaven: The Lynching and Expulsion of Blacks in the Southern Ozarks, 1884-1909, written by Kimberly Harper and published by University of Arkansas Press.

From the book's website:

Drawing on court records, newspaper accounts, penitentiary records, letters, and diaries, White Man’s Heaven is a thorough investigation into the lynching and expulsion of African Americans in the Missouri and Arkansas Ozarks in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Kimberly Harper explores events in the towns of Monett, Pierce City, Joplin, and Springfield, Missouri, and Harrison, Arkansas, to show how post–Civil War vigilantism, an established tradition of extralegal violence, and the rapid political, economic, and social change of the New South era happened independently but were also part of a larger, interconnected regional experience. Even though some whites, especially in Joplin and Springfield, tried to stop the violence and bring the lynchers to justice, many African Americans fled the Ozarks, leaving only a resilient few behind and forever changing the racial composition of the region.

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