Lynching of Nevlin Porter and Johnson Spencer
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Nevlin Porter and Johnson Spencer were African-American men who were lynched in
Starkville, Mississippi Starkville is a city in, and the county seat of, Oktibbeha County, Mississippi, United States. Mississippi State University is a land-grant institution and is located partially in Starkville but primarily in an adjacent unincorporated area desig ...
May 5, 1879 for the alleged burning of a barn.


History

On April 23, 1879, Jordan Moore, a farmer who lived near Starkville, reported being shot at by an unknown stranger. On April 24 a barn containing corn on Moore's property was burned, and a black man, Johnson Spencer was arrested. The following day, while Spencer was incarcerated, another barn containing farm implements and other machinery was burned, and Moore reported finding another black man, Nevlin Porter, in his bedroom. Porter confessed to burning the barn in order to divert attention from Spencer's guilt. Reports in the press stated that Porter had been lynched on the way to the jail proved false as of April 30, but was scheduled for a hearing in circuit court on May 1. However, on May 5, 1879, a mixed-race mob of 121 men were given keys to the jail by the sheriff. The mob locked jailer Henry Isaacs up, and left with Porter and Spencer to the trestle of the
Mobile and Ohio Railroad The Mobile and Ohio Railroad was a railroad in the Southern U.S. The M&O was chartered in January and February 1848 by the states of Alabama, Kentucky, Mississippi, and Tennessee. It was planned to span the distance between the seaport of Mobile ...
one mile east of the town, where both men were hung with cotton ropes and killed. After an inquest the bodies were turned over to their friends.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Porter, Nevlin 1879 in Mississippi 1879 murders in the United States May 1879 events African-American history of Mississippi Crimes in Mississippi Deaths by person in Mississippi Lynching deaths in Mississippi Starkville, Mississippi Racially motivated violence against African Americans Racially motivated violence in the United States