People's Grocery lynchings

People's Grocery, Memphis Tennessee, c. 1890

The People's Grocery lynchings of 1892 occurred on March 9, 1892, in Memphis, Tennessee, when black grocery owner Thomas Moss and two of his workers, Will Stewart and Calvin McDowell, were lynched by a white mob while in police custody. The lynchings occurred in the aftermath of a fight between whites and blacks and two subsequent shooting altercations in which two white police officers were wounded.[1]

The store was located just outside Memphis in a neighborhood called the "Curve".[2] Opened in 1889, the People's Grocery was a cooperative venture run along corporate lines and owned by 11 prominent African Americans, including postman Thomas Moss, a friend of Ida B. Wells and Mary Church Terrell.[3][4][5]

  1. ^ DeCosta-Willis.
  2. ^ Giddings, Sword Among Lions, 2008.
  3. ^ Giddings, Paula (2006). When and where I enter: the impact of black woman on race and sex in America (Reprinted in Amistad ed.). New York, NY: Amistad, an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers. pp. 18–19. ISBN 978-0-688-14650-4.
  4. ^ Peavey & Smith, pp. 46–49.
  5. ^ Hale, p. 208.

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