Lynching of Cellos Harrison explained

Cellos Harrison was an African American man in Marianna, Florida who was lynched on June 16, 1943 after being rearrested when his murder conviction was overturned by the Supreme Court of Florida because his confession was obtained under duress.[1] He was twice convicted by an all-white jury of murdering a white man who was working as a gas station attendant and store clerk. State and federal investigations were launched into the lynching but no one was ever indicted or convicted.[2] A decade earlier Claude Neal was lynched in Marianna.[3] The area was also wrought by a wave of violence against African Americans and Republicans during the Reconstruction Era after the American Civil War in what is known as the Jackson County War.

Harrison, a farm worker, was convicted of killing gas station attendant Johnnie Mayo in 1940.[4] His conviction was overturned when his confession was thrown out on appeal. Cellos was reindicted and then taken from the Jackson County, Florida jail by four masked men and killed by a blow or blows to the head. His body was found 5 miles outside Marianna.

NAACP lawyer Harry T. Moore, who was later assassinated in a 1951 bombing of his home, wrote a letter to Florida governor Spessard Holland calling for an investigation and one was ordered.[5]

Tameka Bradley Hobbs wrote about this and three other lynchings in her 2015 book Democracy Abroad, Lynching at Home: Racial Violence in Florida.[6] [7]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Crime of Lynching: Hearings Before a Subcommittee of the Committee on the Judiciary, United States Senate, Eightieth Congress, Second Session, on S. 42 [and Others] Bills to Assure to Persons within the Jurisdiction of Every State Due Process of Law and Equal Protection of Laws, and to Prevent the Crime of Lynching, and for Other Purposes. 1948.
  2. Book: Hobbs, Tameka Bradley. The Failure of Forbearance: The Lynching of Cellos Harrison, Jackson County, 1943. August 11, 2015. University Press of Florida. florida.universitypressscholarship.com. 10.5744/florida/9780813061047.001.0001. 9780813061047.
  3. Book: Hobbs, Tameka Bradley. A Degree of Restraint: The Trials of Cellos Harrison, 1940–1943. August 11, 2015. University Press of Florida. florida.universitypressscholarship.com. 10.5744/florida/9780813061047.001.0001. 9780813061047.
  4. News: Florida Lynching 1943. The Jackson Sun. 16 June 1943. 3.
  5. Book: Before His Time: The Untold Story of Harry T. Moore, America's First Civil Rights Martyr. Ben. Green. Stetson. Kennedy. April 4, 1999. Simon and Schuster. 9780684854533. Google Books.
  6. Web site: Florida lynchings subject of Diversity Dialogue. Nova Southeastern. University. NSU.
  7. Web site: Strange Fruit and Spanish Moss: June 16, 1943: Cellos Harrison. June 16, 2014.