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Lynchings 1877-1950

No one is sure how many African-Americans were lynched in North Carolina, some researchers said the number could be 100 or as many as 300+.
Researchers said in the 1940s the lynchings began to be more secretive but they did not go away.
Professor Lentz-Smith is a 20th century history scholar. She has focused much of her writing and research on the period around World War I -- a time when lynching was resurgent.

No one is sure how many African-Americans were lynched in North Carolina, some researchers said the number could be 100 or as many as 300+.
Researchers said in the 1940s the lynchings began to be more secretive but they did not go away.
Professor Lentz-Smith is a 20th century history scholar. She has focused much of her writing and research on the period around World War I -- a time when lynching was resurgent.

"A lynching during the World War I years and up really until the mid-century was a community event in which crowds gathered to see a person whose guilt or innocence wasn't really the point," she said. "The history of lynching in the United States is vicious and it's nasty and it was so deeply a part of the disenfranchisement and dis-empowerment of the people of color."

In 2014, the Equal Justice Initiative in Montgomery, AL -- the home of a museum dedicated to the legacy of enslaved black people -- published a report that counted more than 123 lynchings in North Carolina between 1877 and 1950.

Six of those happened in Chatham County, three in Johnston County and one in Wake County. New Hanover County had 21 during that time.

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