177:
Betters' cell that night. Thus, around midnight, a fifteen-person mob, made up of both Black and White
Ohioans, began marching to the jail with "hats pulled over their faces and coats turned the wrong side out" as a means of disguise, and broke into Betters' cell. After forcing their way inside, mob members gave Betters to a group waiting outside who dragged him down the street toward the county fairgrounds. Onlookers were ordered to return home, but those who were able to witness the event reported that Betters repeatedly screamed out "Murder! Save me!" while the mob chanted "Hang him!" and "Shoot him!" Upon completing the half-mile walk to the fairgrounds, the mob hanged Betters from a broken oak tree. Historians David Meyers and Elise Meyers Walker write that newspaper coverage quoted organizers as saying the recently fallen tree was "forming an admirable gallows."
211:
respected member of
Jamestown despite her race and was known to socialize with white and Black folks alike. What is more though, and what sets this lynching apart, is that her death was avenged by a mob of both white and Black individuals who worked together to lynch Peter Betters. Segregation played no recorded role in this case. In fact, a Black man reportedly led the mob, thus acting as a superior to the white men involved. This willingness to forgo traditional racial hierarchies and societal norms about intermixing is indicative of the importance of carrying out this lynching to Jamestown residents. In that sense, this case is empirical evidence of the prevalent notion among scholars that vastly different groups can be united under the act of a riot to abandon usual societal rules and carry out a shared vision of activism or, in this scenario, justice.
164:. In her older age, she needed increased help around her property. In early 1887, she offered fellow Jamestown resident and petty criminal Peter Betters the opportunity to work on her and her husband's land in exchange for housing. When Thomas' husband died a few months later, however, she asked Betters to move out and find other work. Betters continued to work a job with the Stinson Brothers Livery stable, despite his poor reputation in Jamestown following several recent criminal charges. Betters had recently served two sentences in Jamestown jail, one for sexual assault charges and the other for stealing a horse. Because he was known as a common thief, according to Claire Rounkles who collected newspaper coverage from 1887 in her master's thesis on Ohio's lynching history, "it was no surprise when Betters was accused ."
25:
168:
from the house, Ms. Thomas was not as lucky. When Thomas was found, she was unconscious and had suffered several broken ribs and a partially crushed skull. Despite the severity of her injuries, though, Thomas survived and was able to identify
Betters as her attacker; perhaps because he was said to have attacked her with a coal oil lamp in hand.
210:
While Better's death was of little significance to
Jamestown residents, his lynching was historically notable, specifically because of its multiracial nature. In the 1890s, racial segregation was the law of the land and racial mixing was largely taboo. Nevertheless, Martha Thomas became a universally
189:
Early the next morning, June 12, Jamestown resident Horace D. Buckles was on his way to catch a train when he passed the fairgrounds and noticed Better's body. Buckles reported, "His toes were only a couple feet from the ground." After
Buckles contacted the authorities, a coroner confirmed Betters'
167:
In the middle of the night on
Saturday, June 11, 1887, Martha Thomas was asleep in her home when she heard a loud sound. A drunken Peter Betters had slid underneath her home and broken in by destroying the bricks of Thomas' hearth. While Martha Thomas' two visiting grandchildren were able to escape
151:
following the brutal assault of Martha Thomas. Because Thomas was a well-respected member of the
Jamestown community among both White and Black circles, and because the murder had been so gruesome, a mixed crowd of Black and White citizens was spurred to seek revenge for her injuries by lynching
176:
When the
Jamestown marshal found Peter Betters in the early morning of June 12, 1887, he arrested him and put him in Jamestown's lock-up. Although the small town had quickly become aware of Betters' arrest and collective anger was growing, the Jamestown marshal did not post a personal guard at
180:
After hanging
Betters, the mob's apparent leader ordered the group to go home. Reports quoted him as addressing the group: "We have done good work; we have nothing to be sorry for. Now keep quiet and all will be well. Colored people are as true to virtue and justice as steel." The mob quickly
194:
was held shortly after
Betters' death, but no one reported to have any information on the lynching. In fact, according to Meyers|Meyers Walker, some residents suggested Betters' death had been a suicide, although the general population did not actually believe this theory. There was no town
195:
mourning following the death of Peter Betters. Rather, Jamestown citizens were largely happy to see Thomas' assault avenged. The event passed by relatively quietly overall. A local newspaper, the
412:
392:
417:
397:
364:
407:
345:
181:
dispersed and returned to their homes. Betters was left hanging in the fairgrounds for the rest of the early morning.
160:
For many years prior to her murder, Martha Thomas was a well-respected resident of Jamestown, a small community in
402:
376:
The Shame of the Buckeye State: Journalistic Complacency on Episodic Lynching in Ohio from 1872 to 1932
161:
35:
54:
360:
341:
190:
death, and he was taken down from the tree to be quietly buried in a local cemetery. A town
378:(Masters of Science). Scripps College of Communication of Ohio University. pp. 78–79.
148:
84:
386:
197:
202:
concluded, "few men could have managed a hanging bee so well or so quietly."
44:
24:
123:
191:
147:
On June 12, 1887, Peter Betters was brutally lynched by a small mob in
265:
263:
303:
301:
299:
261:
259:
257:
255:
253:
251:
249:
247:
245:
243:
18:
286:
284:
282:
280:
278:
230:
228:
226:
224:
49:
39:
340:. Indiana: Indiana University Press. p. 4-11.
307:
269:
137:
129:
117:
109:
91:
80:
75:
16:1887 murder of a Black man in Jamestown, Ohio
8:
357:Lynching and Mob Violence in Ohio, 1772-1938
355:Meyers, David; Meyers Walker, Elise (2018).
141:Retaliation for the murder of Martha Thomas
72:
290:
234:
220:
413:Lynching victims in the United States
319:
7:
14:
393:1887 murders in the United States
23:
308:Meyers & Meyers Walker 2018
270:Meyers & Meyers Walker 2018
1:
418:Prisoners murdered in custody
359:. McFarland. p. 80-81.
434:
374:Rounkles, Claire (2020).
76:Lynching of Peter Betters
398:Deaths by person in Ohio
408:Lynching deaths in Ohio
97:; 137 years ago
38:, as no other articles
336:Gilje, Paul (1996).
162:Greene County, Ohio
338:Rioting in America
95:June 12, 1887
57:for suggestions.
47:to this page from
145:
144:
71:
70:
425:
403:June 1887 events
379:
370:
351:
323:
317:
311:
305:
294:
288:
273:
267:
238:
232:
152:Peter Betters.
105:
103:
98:
73:
66:
63:
52:
50:related articles
27:
19:
433:
432:
428:
427:
426:
424:
423:
422:
383:
382:
373:
367:
354:
348:
335:
332:
327:
326:
318:
314:
306:
297:
289:
276:
268:
241:
233:
222:
217:
208:
187:
174:
158:
149:Jamestown, Ohio
120:
101:
99:
96:
85:Jamestown, Ohio
67:
61:
58:
48:
45:introduce links
28:
17:
12:
11:
5:
431:
429:
421:
420:
415:
410:
405:
400:
395:
385:
384:
381:
380:
371:
365:
352:
346:
331:
328:
325:
324:
312:
295:
274:
239:
219:
218:
216:
213:
207:
204:
186:
183:
173:
170:
157:
154:
143:
142:
139:
135:
134:
131:
127:
126:
121:
118:
115:
114:
111:
107:
106:
93:
89:
88:
82:
78:
77:
69:
68:
55:Find link tool
31:
29:
22:
15:
13:
10:
9:
6:
4:
3:
2:
430:
419:
416:
414:
411:
409:
406:
404:
401:
399:
396:
394:
391:
390:
388:
377:
372:
368:
366:9781476673417
362:
358:
353:
349:
343:
339:
334:
333:
329:
321:
316:
313:
310:, p. 81.
309:
304:
302:
300:
296:
293:, p. 79.
292:
291:Rounkles 2020
287:
285:
283:
281:
279:
275:
272:, p. 80.
271:
266:
264:
262:
260:
258:
256:
254:
252:
250:
248:
246:
244:
240:
237:, p. 78.
236:
235:Rounkles 2020
231:
229:
227:
225:
221:
214:
212:
205:
203:
201:
200:Democrat News
199:
193:
184:
182:
178:
171:
169:
165:
163:
155:
153:
150:
140:
136:
133:Peter Betters
132:
128:
125:
122:
116:
113:Peter Betters
112:
108:
94:
90:
86:
83:
79:
74:
65:
62:November 2021
56:
51:
46:
42:
41:
37:
32:This article
30:
26:
21:
20:
375:
356:
337:
322:, p. 8.
315:
209:
206:Significance
196:
188:
179:
175:
166:
159:
146:
59:
33:
119:Attack type
387:Categories
347:0253212626
330:References
320:Gilje 1996
156:Background
102:1887-06-12
53:; try the
40:link to it
185:Aftermath
43:. Please
172:Lynching
124:Lynching
81:Location
192:inquest
100: (
363:
344:
138:Motive
130:Victim
110:Target
87:, U.S.
36:orphan
34:is an
215:Notes
198:Xenia
361:ISBN
342:ISBN
92:Date
389::
298:^
277:^
242:^
223:^
369:.
350:.
104:)
64:)
60:(
Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.