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Sunday, September 07, 2008

Sam Hose

Sam Hose was an African American worker who was lynched in Newnan, Georgia on April 23, 1899, in front of 2,000 white people, many of whom had travelled to Newnan from Atlanta for the occasion. Hose was accused of murdering his employer, Albert Cranford, over a wage dispute. Hose killed Cranford, who had pulled a revolver on Hose, with an ax. Cranford's wife accused Hose of raping her as her husband lay dying. Hose's lynching was well advertised ahead of time in newspapers, including the Atlanta Constitution-Journal, which implied Hose would be tortured prior to his lynching. Sam Hose's corpse was mutilated and dismembered (his ears, genitals, and fingers were cut off, and his face skinned). His body was then tied to a tree and set on fire, and parts of him were taken as souvenirs by onlookers.


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