191:: "The problem of the hour is not how to prevent lynching in the South, but the larger question: How shall we destroy the crime which always has and always will provoke lynching? The answer which the mob returns to this vital question is already known. The mob answers it with the rope, the bullet, and sometimes, God save us! with the torch. And the mob is practical; its theory is effective to a large degree. The mob is today the sternest, the strongest, and the most effective restraint that the age holds for the control of rape."
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202:, where they would form their own government. Under his scheme, whites would not be allowed to vote there, and blacks would not be able to vote in the United States. The speech prompted an opposing letter to the editor of the Brooklyn Eagle by black journalist Jack Thorne, who said Graves's claims that white women were not safe to walk the streets of
234:. A second ballot brought Hisgen to the doorstep of nomination, gathering 590 votes, compared to 189 for Graves and 109 for Howard. Only in the early morning hours of Wednesday, July 29 would Hisgen go over the top and wim the nomination. Graves was subsequently chosen as the party's nominee for vice president.
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In the general election, the
Independence Party ticket received 82,574 votes (0.55%), coming in fifth place. It performed best in Massachusetts, where it received 4.2% of the popular vote. Following the general election defeat, the Independence Party quickly faded away into obscurity although it
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Graves married Mattie E. Simpson on April 17, 1878, and Anne (Annie) E. Cothran on
December 30, 1890. He had two daughters, Mrs. Frederick Tompkins and Anne Graves; and three sons, John Temple Graves Jr., James de Graffenried Graves, and Cothran Calhoun Graves. He died in
146:, to General James Porterfield Graves (1820–1914) and Katherine Floride Townes (1827–1858). He was related to the Calhoun family, a prominent family in 18th and 19th-century American politics, and was the great-grandnephew of
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The
Illustrated American, Sept. 2, 1893 <ref The Illustrated American, Sept. 2, 1893
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365:"He Defends Lynch Law – John Temple Graves of Georgia Says the Mob is Necessary"
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University of Chicago, Graves advocated colonizing black people to the
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Graves later rejoined the
Democratic Party and spoke at the
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Candidates in the 1908 United States presidential election
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Graves was the first to suggest that a mammoth statue of
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Carved in Stone : The
History of Stone Mountain
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440:"Graves' Funeral To Be Held Here Monday Morning"
416:Dave Leip's Atlas of U.S. Presidential Elections
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187:In 1903, Graves made a statement defending
488:Editors of Georgia (U.S. state) newspapers
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412:"1908 Presidential Election Results"
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508:Georgia (U.S. state) Democrats
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132:presidential election of 1908
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493:Politicians from Atlanta
445:The Atlanta Constitution
400:July 29, 1908, pp. 1, 3.
105:Anne Cothran (1890–1925)
103:Mattie Simpson (1878–?)
90:(before 1908; 1912–1925)
332:Mercer University Press
263:Stone Mountain, Georgia
232:William Randolph Hearst
238:fielded candidates in
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154:from 1825 until 1832.
304:. Political Graveyard
196:commencement address
182:Chautauqua, New York
159:presidential elector
216:Independence Party
128:Independence Party
124:John Temple Graves
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513:Florida Democrats
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246:Later career
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93:Independence
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200:Philippines
95:(1908–1912)
467:Categories
341:0865545472
282:References
88:Democratic
53:Willington
46:1856-11-09
138:Biography
100:Spouse(s)
302:"Graves"
240:New York
189:lynching
169:and for
110:Children
204:Atlanta
171:Georgia
163:Florida
130:in the
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368:(PDF)
194:In a
454:2016
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382:2016
336:ISBN
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67:Died
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