Lynching of Zachariah Walker

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Lynching of Zachariah Walker
Zachariah Walker death certificate
DateAugust 13, 1911 (1911-08-13)
LocationCoatesville, Pennsylvania
MotiveRacism, vigilantism
ParticipantsWhite mob
Deaths1

The lynching of Zachariah Walker occurred on August 13, 1911, in Coatesville, Pennsylvania. A white mob attacked and burned African American steelworker Zachariah Walker alive in retaliation for reportedly killing Edgar Rice, a white Worth Brothers Steel company police officer.[1]

Coatesville demographics

Between 1900 and 1910, the town of Coatesville became home to increasing numbers of African Americans and foreign-born whites.[2] The European immigrants who settled in Coatesville were unable to live in residential areas inhabited by US-born whites, and begrudgingly resorted to living near the town's African American populations.[3] This institutionalized ethnic hierarchy turned the town into a highly suspicious and segregated community.[3]

The death of Edgar Rice and Zachariah Walker's arrest

On August 12, 1911, Zachariah Walker, an African American resident of Coatesville, fired his handgun near a small group of immigrant workers, with the intention to scare them. Walker was under the influence of alcohol at the time.[4] Edgar Rice, a Worth Brothers Steel police officer, confronted Walker and threatened to club him.[5] Walker responded by saying he would retaliate and kill him.[6] Both Walker and Rice drew guns; Walker was first to the trigger and shot Rice twice. The officer died quickly afterwards.[6][7]

Death certificate of Edgar Rice, Pennsylvania 1911

After witnesses reported Rice's murder, locals searched the nearby area for Walker.[1] A young farm boy discovered him hiding in a barn, and informed two search-party members.[8] Walker scared the men away with his gun before they could apprehend him.[8]

The next day, a group of firefighters spotted Walker concealed in a tree.[1] As the firefighters tried to apprehend Walker, he attempted suicide by shooting himself in the head. Walker ended up in custody, where a district attorney and two police officers claimed that he confessed to the crime, saying, "I killed him easy."[1]

Walker's lynching

On August 13, 1911, an angry mob of about two thousand Coatesville residents camped outside the Coatesville Hospital, where Walker was recovering.

funeral pyre.[9]

After Walker's brutal murder, most of his remains were scavenged by souvenir hunters. Several members of the mob gathered some of his charred remains in a small box and dropped them off at the local hospital. On the box, there was a note that read: "Return to his friends."[10]

Media response

Not long after the lynching, the Coatesville Record newspaper reported that a large crowd of townsfolk had eagerly watched Walker's burning; some even collected his charred bones after the fire died down.[9] The Record interviewed Edgar Rice's widow, who was very upset because she had not personally lit Walker's pyre.[9]

Outside Coatesville, nearly every newspaper condemned Walker's lynching as an act of inhumanity.[9] Former President Theodore Roosevelt publicly condemned lynching in general.[11] The New York Evening Post proclaimed shock that such a brutal lynching could take place in a Northern state.[12] The Atlanta Journal noted the practice of lynching could no longer be seen as an exclusively Southern crime.[12] The Richmond Planet suggested that African Americans might arm themselves to prevent further lynchings.[13]

Historical marker erected in 2006

Legal response

Pennsylvania authorities vigorously investigated the lynching, but were constantly impeded by white Coatesville residents who refused to cooperate with authorities and journalists.[11] According to reporter William Ellis, Coatesville residents seemed to condemn journalists rather than Walker's lynch mob.[12]

Nevertheless, a month after Walker's death, the state of Pennsylvania indicted six men for murder. All of them were subsequently acquitted.[11] Several other defendants who were later indicted were also cleared of crimes.[14] The leading defense attorney was Wilmer W. MacElree, "the legal sage of Chester County."[15]

Not long after all of Walker's suspected killers were acquitted, Governor John K. Tener called the residents of Coatesville a disgrace to the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania for either carrying out or aiding murder.[16]

Legacy

According to historian William Ziglar, the murder of Zachariah Walker became one of the best-known lynchings of its time because of its unusually brutal nature and because it took place in a state which was seen as historically tolerant of African Americans.[17]

Walker's lynching led many northern African Americans to worry about America's lack of racial justice. After a meeting in Denver, Colorado, the National Negro Educational Association came to the conclusion that white people and African Americans lived under different rules in the same country.[18]

Zachariah Walker was the last of eight known people to be lynched in Pennsylvania.[16]

References

  1. ^ a b c d Hyser 1987, p. 86.
  2. ^ Hyser 1987, pp. 89–90.
  3. ^ a b Hyser 1987, p. 90.
  4. ^ Hyser 1987, p. 85.
  5. ^ Hyser 1987, p. 85-86.
  6. ^ a b Ziglar 1982, p. 246.
  7. ^ Hyser 1987, p. 2006.
  8. ^ a b Ziglar 1982, p. 247.
  9. ^ a b c d e f Hyser 1987, p. 87.
  10. ^ Ziglar 1982, p. 250.
  11. ^ a b c Hyser 1987, p. 88.
  12. ^ a b c Ziglar 1982, p. 254.
  13. ^ Ziglar 1982, p. 266.
  14. ^ Hyser 1987, p. 89.
  15. .
  16. ^ a b Hyser 1987, p. 97.
  17. ^ Ziglar 1982, p. 251.
  18. ^ Ziglar 1982, p. 255.

Bibliography