Kansas
Related: About this forumWhat The History Of 'Noose Road' Tells Us About Kansas, Race And The Lynchings Of Black Men
HAYS, Kansas On the night of Jan. 6, 1869, Luke Barnes, Lee Watkins and James Ponder sat in jail accused of shooting a white railroad worker in this northwest Kansas town.
By sunrise, the three Black men had been dragged from their cell by a mob of white townspeople and hanged from a railroad trestle over the creek that separates the town from Fort Hays, where the men were stationed in the U.S. Army. A Leavenworth newspaper reported that the town indulged them in a dance in mid-air.
The Leavenworth Daily Commercial reports on the 1869 lynching of three Black soldiers in Hays.
One hundred and twenty years later in 1989 the county commission gave a five-mile stretch of road near that bridge a new name drawn from that ugly history: Noose Road.
The lynching at the bridge was just one episode in a long story of bad blood, said historian Jim Leiker, who grew up in Hays and now teaches at Johnson County Community College. It kind of left a mark on Hays early history of race relations that never quite went away.
The two events the 1869 lynching and the 1989 naming of Noose Road represent a small glimpse into an uncomfortable history of racism that lingers today.
Read more: https://www.hppr.org/post/what-history-noose-road-tells-us-about-kansas-race-and-lynchings-black-men
llashram
(6,269 posts)light shed into dark places always provides a cleansing of sorts.
5X
(3,988 posts)Probably the leader of it.
johnthewoodworker
(694 posts)secondwind
(16,903 posts)Doesnt make sense... unless theres more to this than we know.
sanatanadharma
(4,074 posts)From a Google search:
"Buffalo soldiers were African American soldiers who mainly served on the Western frontier following the American Civil War. In 1866, six all-Black cavalry and infantry regiments were created after Congress passed the Army Organization Act."