![]() Marker memorializing George Ward in Fairbanks Park in Terre Haute, Indiana, United States, commissioned by the Facing Injustice Project and the Equal Justice Initiative. | |
Date | February 26, 1901 |
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Location | Terre Haute, Indiana |
Type | Lynching |
Motive | Ward was suspected of murdering a white woman |
Target | George Ward |
Participants | Certain residents of Vigo County, Indiana |
Inquiries | A grand jury was convened but no charges were returned |
Part of a series on the |
Nadir of American race relations |
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A mob of white Vigo County, Indiana, residents lynched George Ward, a black man, on February 26, 1901, in Terre Haute, Indiana, for the suspected murder of a white woman. An example of a spectacle lynching, the event was public in nature and drew a crowd of over 1,000 white participants. Ward was dragged from a jail cell in broad daylight, struck in the back of the head with a sledgehammer, hanged from a bridge, and burned. His toes and the hobnails from his boots were collected as souvenirs. A grand jury was convened but no one was ever charged with the murder of Ward. It is the only known lynching in Vigo County. The lynching was memorialized 120 years later with a historical marker and ceremony.
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