Description: Uncovering the history and examining the legacy of lynching in the state of Virginia
Although not as associated with lynching as other southern states, Virginia has a tragically extensive history with these horrific crimes. This important volume examines the more than one hundred people who were lynched in Virginia between 1866 and 1932. Its diverse set of contributors--including scholars, journalists, activists, and students--recover this wider history of lynching in Virginia, interrogate its legacy, and spotlight contemporary efforts to commemorate the victims of racial terror across the commonwealth. Together, their essays represent a small part of the growing effort to come to terms with the role Virginia played in perpetuating America's national shame.Review Quotes:
This excellent collection is successful in its goals of memorializing the victims of past violence, showing how mob violence created a pervasive system of racial terror, and highlighting the efforts of many Virginians to make meaning of these events for current and future generations--this last goal is perhaps its most valuable contribution.
--The Journal of Southern History