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            <title>The Crisis</title>
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       <ab> (Supplement to the Crisis, July, 1916)</ab>
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        <div type="articles">

<ab>The Waco Horror

AN account of the recent burning of a human being at Waco, Tex., as reported by a special 
agent of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, 70 Fifth Avenue, 
New York City.

1. The City.

THE city of Waco, Tex., is the county seat of McLennan county. It is situated on the 
Brazos river, about half way between Dallas and Austin. It is the junction point of seven 
railways. The city is in a fertile agricultural region with grain and cotton as the chief 
products, and with nearly two hundred manufacturing establishments, representing some 
seventy different industries.

It had a population of 14,445 in 1890 which increased to 20,686 in 1900, and to 26,425 in 
1910. The white population in these twenty years has almost exactly doubled. The colored 
population has increased from 4,069 to 6,067, forming thus 23% of the population. The bulk 
of the population is native white of native parentage, there being only about 1,000 
foreigners in the city.

The whole of McLennan county contained in 1910 a population of 73,250 of whom 17,234 were 
Negroes. This total population has nearly doubled in the last twenty years.

Waco is well laid out. The streets are broad, over sixty miles of them being paved.

The sewer system of one hundred miles is excellent. There is a fine city-owned water system, 
and parks on the surrounding prairies.

There are thirty-nine white and twenty-four colored churches in Waco. By denominations 
the white churches are: Baptist, 14; Methodist, 9; Christian, 4; Presbyterian, 3; Jewish, 
2; Episcopal, 2; Evangelistic, 1; Lutheran, 1; Catholic, 1; Christian Science, 1; 
Salvation Army, 1.

The colleges are: Baylor University, Baylor Academy, the Catholic College, the Independent Biblical and Industrial' School, all white; and the Central Texas College and Paul 
Quinn, colored colleges. There are also the A. &amp; M. College, the Gurley School, the Waco 
Business College, Toby's Practical Business College, the Provident Sanitarium, and the 
Training School.

Baylor University was founded in 1854 and has between 1,200 and 1,300 students. It is 
co-educational. The president is running for the United States Senate.

Two high schools serve white and colored population, and there are seven banks, including 
four national banks.

BAYLOR UNIVERSITY, WACO.

1

 2

THE CRISIS SUPPLEMENT

In other words, Waco is a typical southern town, alert, pushing and rich.

2. The Crime.

NEAR the country town of Robinson, some six miles from Waco, lived a white family of four, 
named Fryar, who owned a small farm. This they cultivated themselves with the help of one 
hired man, a colored boy of seventeen, named Jesse Washington.

Jesse was a big, well-developed fellow, but ignorant, being unable either to read or write. 
He seemed to have been sullen, and perhaps mentally deficient, with a strong, and even 
daring temper. It is said that on the Saturday night before the crime he had had a fight 
with a neighboring white

man, and the man had threatened to kill him.

On Monday, May 8, while Mr. Fryar, his son of fourteen, and his daughter of twenty-three, 
were hoeing cotton in one part of their farm, the boy, Jesse, was plowing with his mules and 
sowing cotton seed near the house where Mrs. Fryar was alone. He went to the house for more 
cotton seed. As Mrs. Fryar was scooping it up for him into the bag which he held, she 
scolded him for beating the mules. He knocked her down with a blacksmith's hammer, and, as 
he confessed, criminally assaulted her; finally he killed her with the hammer. The boy 
then returned to the field, finished his work, and went home to the cabin, where he lived 
with his father and mother and several brothers and sisters.

When the murdered woman was discovered suspicion pointed to Jesse Washington, and he was 
found sitting in his yard whittling a stick. He was arrested and immediately taken to 
jail in Waco. Tuesday a mob visited the jail. They came in with about thirty automobiles, 
each holding as many as could be crowded in. There was no noise, no tooting of horns, the 
lights were dim, and some had no lights at all. These were all Robinson people. They looked 
for the boy, but could not find him, for he had been taken to a neighboring county where the 
sheriff obtained a confession from him. Another mob went to this county seat to get the 
boy, but he was again

removed to Dallas. Finally, the Robinson people pledged themselves not to lynch the boy if 
the authorities acted promptly, and if the boy would waive his legal rights.

A second confession in which the boy waived all his legal rights was obtained in the Dallas 
jail. The Grand Jury indicted him on Thursday, and the case was set for trial Monday, May 
15.

Sunday night, at midnight, Jesse Washington was brought from Dallas to Waco, and secreted 
in the office of the judge. There was not the slightest doubt but that he would be tried and 
hanged the next day, if the law took its course.

There was some, but not much doubt of

RIGGINS HOTEL, WACO

THE FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH, WACO

THE COURT HOUSE, WACO

 THE WACO HORROR

3

THE CITY HALL (The Boy Was Burned Back of This Hall)

his guilt. The confessions were obtained, of course, under duress, and were, perhaps, 
suspiciously clear, and not entirely in the boy's own words. It seems, however, probable 
that the boy was guilty of murder, and possibly of premeditated rape.

3. Waco Politics.

MEANTIME, the exigencies of Waco politics are said to have demanded a lynching. Our 
investigator says:

"They brought the boy back to Waco because a lynching was of political value to the county 
officials who are running for office. Every man I talked with said that politics was at the 
bottom of the whole business. All that element who took part in the lynching will vote for 
the Sheriff. The Judge is of value to his party because he appoints the three commissioners 
of the jury, and these commissioners pick the Grand Jury."

The District Judge of the Criminal Court is R. I. Munroe, appointed by Governor Campbell. He 
is a low order of politician, and a product of a local machine. His reputation for morality 
is bad, and his practice at the Bar has been largely on behalf of the vicious interests.

The Sheriff of the county, S. S. Fleming, is a candidate for re-election, and has made much 
political capital out of the lynching.

He says, in an advertisement in the Waco Semi-Weekly Tribune:

"Mr. Fleming is diseased with a broad philanthropy. He believes in the equality of man. He 
carries with him in the daily walk of his officialdom none of the 'boast of heraldry or the 
pomp of power.' He is just as courteous, just as obliging, just as accommodating as Sheriff 
as he was when selling buggies and cultivators for the hardware company. He presents to 
the voters for their endorsement the record made by him and his corps of splendid deputies."

Our investigator says:

"When I saw the Sheriff (Fleming) he had a beautiful story to tell. He had his story fixed 
up so that the entire responsibility was shifted on the Judge. The Judge admitted he could 
have had a change of venue, but said the mob anywhere would have done the same thing."

Meantime, the tip went out:

"The crowd began pouring into the town the day before and continued early Monday morning. 
The court room was packed full and a crowd of 2,000 was on the outside. The jurors could 
scarcely get in and out from their seats. I asked the Judge if he could not have cleared the 
court room, and he answered that I did not know the South. I said, 'If a person is big 
enough, he can get up and stop the biggest mob.' He asked, 'Do you want to spill innocent 
blood for a nigger?'

"Some one had arranged it so that it would be easy to get the boy out of the courtroom. A 
door which opened by a peculiar device had been fixed so that it would open. One of the 
jurors was a convicted murderer with a suspended sentence over him.

"Lee Jenkins is the best deputy sheriff, but he is under Fleming. Barney Goldberg, the 
other deputy sheriff, said, 'If Lee Jenkins had had it, it would never have been, but we are 
working for the man higher up and must take our orders from him.' Barney Goldberg knows 
perfectly well that if Fleming is not re-elected, and the other candidate gets in, he will 
be out of a job. The other nominee for sheriff, Buchanan, is reported to be unable to read 
and write, but is said to have three dead 'niggers' to his 'credit.'

"The boy, Jesse Washington, was asked what he thought about the mob coming after him. He 
said, 'They promised they would not if I would tell them about it.' He seemed not to care, 
but was thoroughly indifferent."

The trial was hurried through. The Waco Semi-Weekly Tribune, May 17, says: "The jury 
returned into court at 11:22 a. m., and presented a verdict: 'We, the jury, find the 
defendant guilty of murder as charged in the indictment and assess his punishment at death.' 
This was signed by W. B. Brazelton, foreman.

" 'Is that your verdict, gentlemen?' asked Judge Munroe.

"They answered 'yes.'

 4

THE CRISIS SUPPLEMENT

THE WAITING CROWD

"Judge Munroe began writing in his docket. He had written: 'May 15, 1916: Jury verdict of 
guilty,' and as he wrote there was a hush over the entire court room. It was a moment of 
hesitation, but just a moment. Then the tall man started over the heads of the crowd. Fred 
H. Kingsbury, who was standing alongside of Judge Munroe, said, 'They are coming after 
him,' and as the Judge looked up, the wave of people surged forward." The court room 
accommodates 500 persons, but the Judge had allowed 1,500 persons to crowd in.

Our investigator continues:

"The stenographer told me that there was a pause of a full minute. He said the people 
crowded around him and he knew what was coming, so he slipped out of the door back of the 
Sheriff, with his records; and Sheriff Fleming slipped out also.

"Fleming claims that all he was called upon to do in the way of protecting the boy was to 
get him to court.

"A big fellow in the back of the court room yelled, 'Get the Nigger!' Barney Goldberg, one 
of the deputy sheriffs, told me that he did not know that Fleming had dropped orders to let 
them get the Negro, and pulled his revolver. Afterwards he got his friends to swear to an 
affidavit that he was not present. Fleming said he had sworn in fifty deputies. I asked him 
where they were. He asked, 'Would you want to protect the nigger?' The judge made no 
effort to stop the mob, although he had firearms in his desk."

4. The Burning. *"THEY dragged the boy down the stairs, A put a chain around his body and 
hitched it to an automobile. The chain broke. The big fellow took the chain off

the Negro under the cover of the crowd and wound it around his own wrist, so that the crowd 
jerking at the chain was jerking at the man's wrist and he was holding the boy. The boy 
shrieked and struggled.

"The mob ripped the boy's clothes off, cut them in bits and even cut the boy. Someone cut 
his ear off; someone else unsexed him. A little girl working for the firm of Goldstein and 
Mingle told me that she saw this done.

"I went over the route the boy had been taken and saw that they dragged him between a 
quarter and a half a mile from the Court House to the bridge and then dragged him up two 
blocks and another block over to the City Hall. After they had gotten him up to the bridge, 
someone said that a fire was already going up at City Hall, and they turned around and went 
back. Several people denied that this fire was going, but the photograph shows that it 
was. They got a little boy to light the fire.

"While a fire was being prepared of boxes, the naked boy was stabbed and the chain put over 
the tree. He tried to get away, but could not. He reached up to grab the chain and they cut 
off his fingers. The big man struck the boy on the back of the neck with a knife just as 
they were pulling him up on the tree. Mr. Lester thought that was practically the death 
blow. He was lowered into the fire several times by means of the chain around his neck. 
Someone said they would estimate the boy had about twenty-five stab wounds, none of them 
death-dealing.

"About a quarter past one a fiend got the torso, lassoed it, hung a rope over the pummel of 
a saddle, and dragged it around through the streets of Waco.

 THE WACO HORROR

5

"Very little drinking was done.

"The tree where the lynching occurred was right under the Mayor's window. Mayor Dollins 
was standing in the window, not concerned about what they were doing to the boy, but that 
the tree would be destroyed. The Chief of Police also witnessed the lynching. The names of 
five of the leaders of the mob are known to this Association, and can be had on 
application by responsible parties.

"Women and children saw the lynching. One man held up his little boy above the heads of the 
crowd so that he could see, and a little boy was in the top of the very tree to which the 
colored boy was hung, where

he stayed until the fire became too hot."

Another account, in the Waco Times Herald, Monday night, says:

"Great masses of humanity flew as swiftly as possible through the streets of the city in 
order to be present at the bridge when the hanging took place, but when it was learned that 
the Negro was being taken to the City Hall lawn, crowds of men, women and children turned 
and hastened to the lawn.

"On the way to the scene of the burning people on every hand took a hand in showing their 
feelings in the matter by striking the Negro with anything obtainable, some struck him with 
shovels, bricks, clubs, and others stabbed him and cut him until when he was strung up his 
body was a solid color of red, the blood of the many wounds inflicted covered him from 
head to foot.

"Dry goods boxes and all kinds of inflammable material were gathered, and it required but 
an instant to convert this into seething flames. When the Negro was first hoisted into the 
air his tongue protruded from his mouth and his face was besmeared with blood.

"Life was not extinct within the Negro's body, although nearly so, when another chain was 
placed around his neck and thrown over the limb of a tree on the lawn, everybody trying to 
get to the Negro and have some part in his death. The infuriated mob then leaned the 
Negro, who was half alive and half dead, against the tree, he having just strength enough 
within his

limbs to support him. As rapidly as possible the Negro was then jerked into the air at 
which a shout from thousands of throats went up on the morning air and dry goods boxes, 
excelsior, wood and every other article that would burn was then in evidence, appearing as 
if by magic. A huge dry goods box was then produced and filled to the top with all of the 
material that had been secured. The Negro's body was swaying in the air, and all of the 
time a noise as of thousands was heard and the Negro's body was lowered into the box.

"No sooner had his body touched the box than people pressed forward, each eager to be the 
first to light the fire, matches were touched to the inflammable material and as smoke 
rapidly rose in the air, such a demonstration as of people gone mad was never heard 
before. Everybody pressed closer to

THE MOB

 6

THE CRISIS SUPPLEMENT

get souvenirs of the affair. When they had finished with the Negro his body was mutilated.

"Fingers, ears, pieces of clothing, toes and other parts of the Negro's body were cut off by 
members of the mob that had crowded to the scene as if by magic when the word that the 
Negro had been taken in charge by the mob was heralded over the city. As the smoke rose to 
the heavens, the mass of people, numbering in the neighborhood of 10,000, crowding the 
City Hall lawn and overflowing the square, hanging from the windows of buildings, viewing 
the scene from the tops of buildings and trees, set up a shout that was heard blocks away.

"Onlookers were hanging from the windows of the City Hall and every other building that 
commanded a sight of the burning, and as the Negro's body commenced to burn, shouts of 
delight went up from the thousands of throats and apparently everybody demonstrated in 
some way their satisfaction at the retribution that was being visited upon the 
perpetrator of such a horrible crime, the worst in the annals of McLennan county's 
history.

"The body of the Negro was burned to a crisp, and was left for some time in the smoldering 
remains of the fire. Women and children who desired to view the scene were allowed to do so, 
the crowds parting to let them look on the scene. After some time the body of the Negro was 
jerked into the air where everybody could view the remains, and a mighty shout rose on the 
air. Photographer Gildersleeve made several pictures of the body as well as the large crowd 
which surrounded the scene as spectators."

The photographer knew where the lynching was to take place, and had his camera and 
paraphernalia in the City Hall. He was called by telephone at the proper moment. He writes 
us:

"We have quit selling the mob photos, this step was taken because our 'City dads' objected 
on the grounds of 'bad publicity,' as we wanted to be boosters and not knockers, we agreed 
to stop all sale.

"P. A. Gildersleeve."

Our agent continues:

"While the torso of the boy was being dragged through the streets behind the horse, the 
limbs dropped off and the head was put on the stoop of a disreputable woman in the 
reservation district. Some little boys pulled out the teeth and sold them to some men for 
five dollars apiece. The chain was sold for twenty-five cents a link.

"From the pictures, the boy was apparently a wonderfully built boy. The torso was taken to 
Robinson, hung to a tree, and shown off for a while, then they took it down again and 
dragged it back to town and put it on the fire again at five o'clock."

5. The Aftermath. "I TRIED to talk to the Judge. I met him on the street and said, 'I want 
to talk with you about something very important.' He asked, 'What is the nature of it?' I said, 'I want to get your opinion of that 
lynching.' He said, 'No, I refuse to talk with you about that. What do you want it for?' I 
said, 'If you refuse to talk with me, there is no use of telling you what I want it for.'

"When I met him the second time, with different clothes on, he did not recognize me. I put 
on a strong English accent and said I was interested in clippings from New York papers which 
showed that Waco had made for itself an awful name, and I wanted to go back and make the 
northerners feel that Waco was not so bad as the papers had represented. Then he gave me the 
Court records."

Our investigator continues: "I went to the newspaper offices. They were all of the opinion 
that the best thing to do was to hush it up. They used it as a news item, and that finished 
it. The Dallas News did not cite anything editorially because not long ago they had done 
something quite as bad and the boy was not guilty.

"With the exception of the Tribune, all the papers had simply used it as a news item and let 
it drop. The Tribune is owned by Judge McCullum, who says anything he pleases. He is nearly 
blind. When I read the article to him I said, 'I would like to ask you, if that had been a 
colored woman and a white boy, would you have protected

THE VICTIM

 THE WACO HORROR

7

THE TORTURE (Note the "Frenzied" Mob)

that woman?' He answered, 'No.' 'If it had been a colored boy and a colored woman? No.' 'We 
would not have stopped the niggers doing anything they wanted to.' 'Do you think they 
would?' 'No.' 'Then, they prove their superior civilization.' Then he began to tell me how 
he knew all about the niggers and we northerners do not. He

said that as an old southerner he knew perfectly well how to handle the colored 
population. He told me how he was raised with them, had a colored mammy, nursed at her 
breast, etc.

"There is a bunch of people in Waco who are dying to see someone go forward and make a 
protest, but no one in Waco would do it. Ex-Mayor Mackaye and Colonel Hamilton both said, 
'We do not know what to do. We are not organized to do it. It is a case of race and 
politics.'

"I put out a lot of wires for a lawyer to take up the case, but no human

being in Waco would take it up. I wrote to a friend in Austin and one in Houston, and the 
Austin friend telegraphed me that he would send me word as soon as he had found someone. I 
had a letter from the Houston friend who gave me the names of three lawyers, but am not sure 
whether they would take up a case of this kind. All

have their doubts of ever getting the case into court.

"I did not dare ask much about lawyers.

"As a result of the lynching a Sunday School Convention which was to have met there, 
with 15,000 delegates, has been stopped.

"W. A. Brazelton, the foreman of the Jury, was very outspoken against the whole affair and 
blames the officials for it. He felt that as foreman of the Jury he could not lead in a 
protest but thought some protest ought to be made.

"Mr. Ainsworth, one of the newspaper men, seemed the

 8

THE CRISIS SUPPLEMENT

only one who wanted to start a protest.

"Colonel Hamilton, a man of high standing, a northerner, and at one time a big railroad 
man, was outspoken against the whole affair, but said that if he led in a protest they would 
do the same thing to him. He said he would never register in any hotel that he came from 
Waco. Two Waco men who did not register from Waco.

"Allan Stanford, ex-Mayor of Waco, saw the Sheriff and the Judge before the trial and 
received assurances that the lynching would not take place. They shut the mouths of the 
better element of Waco by telling them that the Robinson people had promised not to do it. 
They had gotten the promise of the Robinson people that they would not touch the boy during 
the trial, but they did not get the pledge of the disreputable bunch of Waco that they 
would not start the affair.

"Judge Spell said the affair was deplorable, but the best thing was to forget it.

"When representing myself as a news reporter, I asked, 'What shall I tell the people up 
North?' Ex-Mayor Mackaye said, 'Fix it up as well as you can for Waco, and make them 
understand that the better thinking men and women of Waco were not in it.' I said. 'But some 
of your better men were down there.' The whole thing savors so rotten because the better men 
have not tried to protest against it. Your churches have not said a word. Dr. Caldwell was 
the only man who made any protest at all."

6. The Lynching Industry.

THIS is an account of one lynching. It is horrible, but it is matched in horror by

scores of others in the last thirty years, and in its illegal, law-defying, race-hating as
pect, it is matched by 2842 other lynchings which have taken place between January 1, 1885, 
and June 1, 1916. These lynchings are as follows:

COLORED MEN LYNCHED BY YEARS, 1885-1916.

1885.......... 78

1886.......... 71

1887.......... 80

1888.......... 95

1889.......... 95

1890.......... 90

1891.......... 121

1892.......... 155

1893.......... 154

1894.......... 134

1895.......... 112

1896.......... 80

1897.......... 122

1898.......... 102

1899.......... 84

1900.......... 107

1901.......... 107

1902.......... 86

1903.......... 86

1904.......... 83

1905.......... 61

1906.......... 64

1907.......... 60

1908.......... 93

1909.......... 73

1910.......... 65

1911.......... 63

1912.......... 63

1913.......... 79

1914.......... 69

1915.......... 80

1916 (5 mos.) 31

Total.........2843

What are we going to do about this record? The civilization of America is at stake. The 
sincerity of Christianity is challenged. The National Association for the Advancemnt of 
Colored People proposes immediately to raise a fund of at least $10,000 to start a crusade 
against this modern barbarism. Already $2,000 is promised, conditional on our raising 
the whole amount.

Interested persons may write to Roy Nash, secretary, 70 Fifth Avenue, New York City.

FINIS 
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