Knowledge (XXG)

:Peer review/Rosewood massacre/archive1 - Knowledge (XXG)

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the stories of survivors are told and you comment that it wavers between details of individuals and overall encyclopedic effect. I understand how some of this is sensational, but yet it is not. I left out details that I considered were so over-the-top gruesome that they bordered on the gratuitous (people in Cedar Key keeping body parts in jars for many years later, for example, or a string of bad luck befalling white perpetrators that, while may have something to do with the culture of silence, started to sound more like ghost stories - and not good ones).
917:: (in addition to earlier discussion on his talk page): Payments appear out of balance as stated in "However, the bill eventually provided $ 1.5 million to pay $ 150,000 to each person who could prove he or she lived in Rosewood during 1923, and $ 500,000 for people who could apply for the funds after demonstrating that they had an ancestor who owned property in Rosewood during the same time", an earlier version says "and a $ 500,000 261:
The portion regarding the coverage in newspapers throughout the US can be expanded. Journalism was still entrenched in a yellow phase where editorial and objective story were mixed. All newspapers that reported on Rosewood, regardless of Southern, Northern, or African American, played very loose with
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Are you suggesting that the chronology in Fannie Taylor's story section be changed? Part of the difficulty of sources is that two opposing sides are telling two very different stories. I am approaching it now trying to tell one, then telling the other. Is this more confusing than telling part of one,
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I am having some difficulty with the disparate information in the best sources. I'm trying to reconcile that, but I'm not able to in some cases. Some of your questions are very good, and I do not think I am able to answer them. I don't know why the Levy County sheriff would ask reporters to relay his
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I understand where you are going with the French women story, but I think this could be made a little clearer. Going straight from a note that white women in France were happy to see the black men to a quote about attacks on women seems to skip a step. For those not familiar with racial tensions in
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Much of the testimony about the survivors' claims in 1993 and 1994 centered on the fact that they had to start over; their lives were destroyed. Many of them became manual laborers making minimum wage: domestics, shoe shiners, etc. Almost all of them had a low education level. I am wondering how much
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I know Lizzie Jenkins. I met her three or four years ago. The IT guy who updates my work computer was married to a descendant who received settlement money. I only found that out yesterday. I was friends with a woman who used the services of the same pro bono lawyer from Holland and Knight back when
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There may be problems with the two photos of the historical marker - I know that such Pennsylvania markers have been removed from Commons for being copyvios if they were erected after a certain date (and 2004 seems too late). Might want to ask someone who is more knowledgable on images and copyright
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The Reaction section has been expanded (not sure if it was before or after your review), but I am unsure about your issues with the anecdotes. Are you saying you would leave out the information about what happened to certain key players? In a related issue, in the Culture of silence section, some of
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Maybe it is my short attention span, but I keep getting distracted by the frequent interruptions to discuss details of so-and-so. This hit me again in the first paragraph of culture of silence, where you generalize very well, and then end with a specific note about one person. I'm not sure if that
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I think that this is an extremely compelling story, but I'm a bit concerned at the tone that it takes. The article tells its story in a series of vignettes, so we know more details about what this child did, or that family, etc. Then we wrap up the response section with details about what happened
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Confusion again - the text first implies that James Taylor beat his wife, hen says it must be the white lover? Why would the white lover go to Rosewood? ... I see this is explained a little better. I think that the chronology might need to be tweaked so that we have more of this information nearer
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Thanks for your comments. I made some fixes. In the Settlement section, I added a bit about the two largest families, hoping to prepare the reader for who is black and who is not, and introducing them to the names. I addressed most of your comments, but I need to figure out how to state some of the
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It is difficult to ascertain what happened to children other than the 9 survivors who were extensively interviewed. Many of the families were not traditional families. Grandparents took care of children while parents were away; aunts and uncles were called Mama and Papa. One of the hardest parts of
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As to your questions above, I think that there could definitely be more of an "aftermath" section discussing in slightly more detail how the survivors had to rebuild, especially if that was a large influence on the legislature's vote. I feel like the article might have said everything it needs to
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Thank you, Moni, for bringing such an important article to my attention. I had never heard of this before, and I'm glad I read about it. Overall, I guess I feel like there is an appropriate amount of background information, but I got bogged down in the descriptions of the actual events, and then
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Fannie Taylor, according to Philomena Goins, caused a fuss bringing her neighbors. Sarah Carrier spoke up about who left the house and was silenced either by the sheriff or Taylor herself. Taylor then promptly fainted and was taken to a neighbor's house and sedated. This is taken piecemeal by at
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The "her" is unclear; presumably it refers to Taylor? Shouldn't this be sourced? Maybe it should be worked into the first sentence of the next paragraph: "The neighbor also reported the absence that day of Taylor's laundress, Sarah Carrier, whom the white women in Sumner called "Aunt
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Thanks, Karanacs. Somehow I missed this until just 45 minutes ago. I'm not sure why. I've made some edits since your initial review (the green quote box is gone, for example and a map is in its place), but the overall structure is the same. I just wanted to clarify some stuff.
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that discussed the stories floating about at the time about Rosewood, & contained a memorable phrase about how this massacre had evolved into a story that could have been written by Faulkner. It might be worth the effort to track down that article & use it here. --
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plea instead of sending word a different way. It is my impression that the sheriff wanted the unrest to end, but his stunningly negligent telegram to the governor makes me wonder what he was thinking. I don't know why Sylvester Carrier would put a child in the line of fire.
820:. It was surely taken before 1923, but can we prove that it was published in a print source (book, newspaper, etc)? If not, then my understanding is that we have to go with the author +70 years rule, which would be tough, considering we don't know who took it. Maybe 175:
Picky, I know, but I don't like the green background in the text box. I have bad eyes, and I have trouble reading text on green backgrounds. Possibly a lighter shade of green would help. (I use this as my excuse for why I get lost a lot - I can't read street
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I don't think I would begin the "racial tensions" section with a sentence about the massacre itself. For those who haven't read the lead (I usually read the lead last), this seems a bit out of place. I would keep this more general and then tie it in later if
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The final paragraph of the discussion of the movie could use a topic sentence at the start. Right now it feels at the outset that critics generally didn't like it; but then the Crouch review is very positive. Maybe something like "Critical reaction was
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Fantastic research as always, Moni. I'm learning a lot of things I probably should have known about my home state. (We had a governor named Napoleon?) I feel a little weird piling on more comments after all the reviews that have come in, but here goes.
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Since 1993, Harper's has 3 articles that mention Rosewood, but none in association with Singleton's film. Their articles address racial reparations, and Rosewood does not appear to be a substantial topic. Might it have been in another publication?
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I just have to say that I drive to Cedar Key because my art is in a gallery there, and every time I get skeeved out by Rosewood. I always feel like I'm going to get shot while taking pictures there. Thanks Scartol! Your copy edits are invaluable.
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Is there any information about whether any of the children were permanently separated from their parents? It bothered me that children were sent on the train without their fathers, and I wondered if there were issues later with families being
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says not to repeat the name of the article in headers if possible, so "Events in Rosewood" or "Razing Rosewood" may need to be changed for FAC. I think things like "Rosewood Victims v. the State of Florida" are OK as that is the name of the
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I am pretty sure this means both black people and white people intially settled Rosewood, but it could be read as persons of mixed race initially settled Rosewood - I was not sure if the original settlers were people like, for example, the
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I also felt as if it was necessary to show a cause and effect relationship between what the survivors endured and what they were asking for in compensation. I think it's worth it to keep this info for that reason, but wonder if it could be
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to some of the survivors later. While that makes for a moving story, I don't know that it is entirely encyclopedic. I'm wondering if we need to summarize (or generalize) a bit more so that it doesn't seem quite so sensational.
841:. Same sort of situation. (I personally think if we can nail the date the photo was taken to 1923 or earlier, that should be enough. But other folks — with more experience and expertise than myself — apparently disagree.) 477:
I would provide a little context for the Fannie Taylor's story section. Even one sentence like "The Rosewood massacre began with an event in nearby Sumner, when ..." As it is, it is a little jarring to read as currently
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The quote from Colburn mentions "an attack" right after the point about black soldiers being welcomed warmly by white French women. Feels incongruous. (My guess is that he was referring to the alleged attack on Fannie
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James Peters, who represented the State of Florida, argued that the statute of limitations applied because the law enforcement officials named in the lawsuit — Sheriff Walker and Governor Hardee — had died many years
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I won't claim that my memory is infallible, but I know Singleton's movie is mentioned in the article -- it may have been in production at the time. Since his movie came out in 1997, & I had let my subscription to
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the facts and employed sensational tactics when compared with our current journalism standards. There is some comment that Northern papers relished lynchings and racial unrest in the South, but for different reasons.
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I lived in Tampa. Just odd coincidences that I'm learning. But oh yeah. I'm totally in it for the award. If I get it, I'll split it in half with you. Or just cremate it and send you the ashes in a vial or something.
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It's not quite clear to me in the Settlement section whether the white residents moved because of lack of jobs (and if so, why did the black residents stay?) or because they didn't want to live in an integrated
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Perhaps it should be: "...that the statute of limitations had expired"? Also, I assume Peters represented the State in court? (A distinction would be good, lest readers assume that it refers to a legislative
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What were the Goins brothers doing to attract lawsuits, and why did them moving decrease the population? I guess I'm not clear enough on what they did to help the increase in population and wh y they left.
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In the Escalation section, what happened for the 3 days bewteen the first lynching and the attack on the Carrier house? Was the attack a result of the NY Times story? Was there a siege those three days?
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I removed the phrase "and was not connected to any of the previous events" from the bit about Mingo Williams, because it felt extraneous. Feel free to replace it if you feel it necessary.
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I agree with this, but I don't know if it's worded as effectively as possible. I wonder if it's actually necessary; the earlier sentence segues just fine into the sentence about lynching.
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The language still needs work in places - just in the lead, it seems like the town was largely destroyed first, then abandoned (they could have rebuilt, but did not) but the sentence is
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I would like to bring this to FA status, and I am still consulting sources to do it. If you take the time to read the article (thanks) I am thinking about expanding the following areas:
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Did Sheriff Walker want assistance with stopping the riots or finishing the work more quickly? why didn't he send someone to the Alachua County sheriff rather than rely on reporters?
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I'm nervous about "unsupported accusations", because it feels editorial. Is there another word we could use, like "vague" or "suspicious"? Or maybe we could leave out "unsupported"?
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I removed the phrase "For an undisclosed reason," at the start of the sentence about Walker insisting he could handle the situation. Seemed superfluous; feel free to re-add it.
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the latter sections were a mix of just right and confusion. Apologies in advance, my keyboard is being quirky today. I'm sure I've missed a few keyboard-induced misspellings.
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Was it normal that the NYT would have a quote from a black man over a Florida incident like this? Was it normal for the NYT to cover this type of incident from so far away?
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It would be good to have a little background on who and/or when Florida began considering the compensation bill at the start of "Rosewood Victims v. the State of Florida".
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Despite Walker's message to the sheriff of Alachua County, he informed Hardee by telegram that he did not fear "further disorder" and urged the governor not to intervene.
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Woo! Gainesville! (Although I suppose I shouldn't "woo" for these mentions, since they usually involve the Klan and/or hideous acts of white supremacy.) Any way to work
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Black survivors recalled that Mrs. Taylor's white visitor was a man named John Bradley, who knew he was in trouble and had gone to Aaron Carrier's house for help
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Sumner is linked twice in two paragraphs in the Settlement section, I would also put its distance from Rosewood in at the first mention of Sumner, not the second.
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The phrase is usually "heart-rending". If Dye said the less-common phrase, then that's what he said and that's what the quote should be. But perhaps it's a typo?
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by unsupported accusations that a white woman had been beaten and possibly raped by a black drifter, white men from nearby towns lynched a Rosewood resident
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The subhead on one NYT article reads: "Florida Mob Deliberately Fires One House After Another in Block Section". Is this supposed to be "Black Section"?
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I'm used to seeing cities included in bibliographical entries. Is there a reason they're excluded here? (It's not a big deal to me, I'm just curious.)
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I think it also needs to be clearer that the Taylor incident anmd initial lycning were several days before the actual attack that destroyed the town
66: 422:: I had heard of this, but did not know much about it until I read the article. Generally well done, here are some suggestions for improvement. 124:
How much information should be included regarding how the survivors and their descendants viewed faith as an essential component of their lives?
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The Goins brothers owned thousands of acres in Levy County. That is apparently what they did to attract lawsuits. I can add some info there.
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At age 79, Robie Mortin recalled, "Rosewood was a town where everyone's house was painted. There were roses everywhere you walked. Lovely."
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Six blacks and two whites were killed, and the town of Rosewood was abandoned and destroyed during what was characterized as a race riot.
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Thanks, Scartol. I've addressed some of your very good points. Others I have to do some searching, and some I'm just a bit stumped.
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The fourth paragraph of the lead is one sentence and should be combined with another or expanded to improve the flow of the article
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Kudos on going out to get those photos of the Rosewood area. The city marker is especially nice with the sky and everything.
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I'm confused about chronology. Taylor's neighbor said no laundrywoman - but the next paragraph said the laundress was here?
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I added a "he said" to the phrase "One survivor interviewed by Gary Moore...". If it was in fact a she, please correct it.
168:- at this point I don't know how old Mortin would have been duing the masasacre - anywhere from 4 to 78 would be my guess. 481:
I would also make it clear(er) that Fannie (and James) were white, probably in the first sentence to mention tem by name.
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I owuld add to the lead that the alleged attack on the woman that started all of this was in Sumner, not Rosewood - see
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Can we get a short phrase description of who Lee Ruth Davis is? (The present wording makes me feel like I should know.)
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In cities such as Chicago, ethnic Irish, the most established of the newer immigrants, led the violence against blacks.
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grabbed her revolver and ran next door to find Fannie bruised and beaten; scuff marks were all over the white floor.
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why would they place a kid in a wooden bin, essentially in the line of fire? Wouldn't she have been safer upstairs?
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The NYT article is "Block" section. I don't understand why some of the 1923 headlines are worded the way they are.
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lapse by then, it is likely one of the 3 you found. (The only other periodicals I was reading at the time was the
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grabbed her revolver and ran next door to find Fannie bruised, beaten, and scuff marks all over the white floor.
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Just a single note. About the time Singleton's movie came out, I remember reading an article about Rosewood in
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I'm nervous about changing wording regarding legal issues. Is it difficult to understand the way it is stated?
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Oh, now I see why you're working so hard on this. You're aiming for one of them there foundation awards! =)
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I think it would be good to mention in the first paragraph of "Fannie Taylor's story" that they had a baby.
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I would give the distance to Perry - we know distances to Cedar Key, Sumner, Gainesville - why not Perry?
817: 432:...and the town of Rosewood was destroyed during what was characterized as a race riot, then abandoned. 227:
about faith, but I'm unfamiliar with the sources and don't know if there are other breakthroughs there.
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I'll try to find some way to connect the quote from Colburn and a brief description of Lee Ruth Davis.
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James Carrier, Sylvester's brother and Sarah's son, had suffered a stroke and was partially paralyzed.
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Rosewood was settled in 1845, nine miles (14 km) east of Cedar Key, which is on the Gulf of Mexico.
519: 182:- how many were prosecuted? Without a comparison, it's hard to know how big a jacka** the guy was. 921:
for the descendants", emphasis mine; seems that the word "pool" should be worked back in. Best,
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Taylor's laundress was named Sarah Carrier, whom the white women in Sumner called "Aunt Sarah".
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Do we need to know Aaron Carrier's death date? Was he released from jail with no charges filed?
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Lee Ruth Davis heard the bells tolling in the church as the men were inside setting it on fire.
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writing this is trying to untangle the family connections of everyone related to everyone else.
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The Real Rosewood Foundation awards people in Central Florida who preserve Rosewood's history.
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least three sources. I suppose I can use "contested allegations"...let me think on this one.
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Rosewood was settled in 1845, nine miles (14 km) east of Cedar Key, near the Gulf of Mexico.
99: 900: 543: 368: 350: 329: 282: 136: 612: 515: 400:; I doubt it was either of those.) Sorry I can't be more precise about the article. -- 938: 821: 232: 180:
Trammell was state attorney general, 29 lynchings went unprosecuted during his term;
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In a 1995 interview, 79-year-old Robie Mortin recalled, "Rosewood was a town...
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Taylor's neighbor also reported that her laundrywoman did not come that day.
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Social tensions were frequently expressed in violent suppression of blacks.
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I wonder if it would help to add dates to some of the headers, so perhaps
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Spurred by unsupported accusations that a white woman had been beaten...
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Taylor's official report stated her assailant beat her about the face...
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Good luck with this — an excellent article on a most important story.
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Sometimes it's U.S. and sometimes it's US. Should be one or the other.
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the town's residents abandoned it as the attackers destryed the houses
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It feels a bit uncertain of itself. How about "an important part"?
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Is this background, or did he have the stroke while in the swamp?
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then the other, the next part of one, the next part of the other?
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Thanks so much for the review. Sorry again I missed it...??? --
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The initial settlers of Rosewood were mixed black and white.
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This pencil mill in Cedar Key was a part of local industry.
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May need to specify in the text hat the laundress was black
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review of the article for issues relating to grammar and
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I'll do my best to find this. Thanks for the tip. --
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Who informed Hardee of this: Walker or the sheriff?
611:Overall well done and this is already much better, 945:Peer review pages with semiautomated peer reviews 186:20th century America, this might be confusing. 8: 501:Would it help minimize confusion if it read 494:Can you elaborate on the official report in 111:This peer review discussion has been closed. 94:A script has been used to generate a semi- 498:- was this a police report? a deposition? 467:I would add the year of the interview to 816:There might be a problem claiming PD on 562:I wonder if it would be clearer to have 223:Who set up the college scholarship fund? 438:. Not sure what is best / most accurate 835:File:Turpentine workers in Florida.jpg 598:Fannie Taylor's story: January 1, 1923 7: 831:File:Cedar Key Faber Pencil Mill.jpg 824:can offer more actual help on this. 510:More later - am calling it a night. 155:The prose is still a little clunky. 829:We might also have a problem with 24: 166:At age 79, Robie Mortin recalled, 127:Any suggestions would be welcome. 458:(of disputed heritage at least) 538:other issues. Thanks again! -- 102:style; it can be found on the 1: 578:How about this for clarity: 584:a fellow veteran and Mason. 18:Knowledge (XXG):Peer review 966: 931:02:13, 24 April 2009 (UTC) 905:20:52, 23 April 2009 (UTC) 865:15:17, 23 April 2009 (UTC) 627:02:28, 21 April 2009 (UTC) 548:20:07, 20 April 2009 (UTC) 530:02:43, 19 April 2009 (UTC) 410:17:55, 17 April 2009 (UTC) 373:16:14, 17 April 2009 (UTC) 355:12:57, 17 April 2009 (UTC) 334:22:36, 16 April 2009 (UTC) 317:18:37, 16 April 2009 (UTC) 287:22:36, 16 April 2009 (UTC) 241:21:47, 13 April 2009 (UTC) 104:automated peer review page 514:Hope this helps. Yours, 141:12:06, 9 April 2009 (UTC) 572:This needs a reference: 558:Looks better already. 394:London Review of Books 950:May 2009 peer reviews 818:File:Sara Carrier.jpg 672:into this article? =) 632:Comments from Scartol 434:would be clearer? Or 231:Good luck with this! 839:File:Cary Hardee.jpg 806:Bibliography and etc 566:read something like 196:the beginning/middle 146:comments by karanacs 787:Rosewood remembered 659:One caption reads: 121:of that to include. 696:Events in Rosewood 420:Ruhrfisch comments 861: 623: 526: 359:Oops. It was the 86:Watch peer review 28:Rosewood massacre 957: 862: 859: 854: 621: 524: 298:llywrch comments 83: 74: 55: 965: 964: 960: 959: 958: 956: 955: 954: 935: 934: 858: 852: 754:Seeking justice 620: 523: 106:for April 2009. 89: 64: 41: 35: 31: 22: 21: 20: 12: 11: 5: 963: 961: 953: 952: 947: 937: 936: 915:CliffC comment 912: 911: 910: 909: 908: 907: 892: 888: 885: 882: 879: 875: 848: 847: 843: 842: 826: 825: 813: 812: 803: 802: 795: 794: 784: 783: 779: 778: 769: 768: 764: 763: 751: 750: 746: 745: 738: 737: 733: 732: 725: 724: 717: 716: 712: 711: 703: 702: 693: 692: 687: 686: 682: 681: 674: 673: 665: 664: 651: 650: 617: 609: 608: 601: 594: 590: 587: 576: 570: 553: 552: 551: 550: 520: 512: 511: 508: 505: 499: 492: 482: 479: 475: 465: 462: 459: 448: 445: 439: 417: 416: 415: 414: 413: 412: 380: 379: 378: 377: 376: 375: 361:New York Times 339: 338: 337: 336: 300: 299: 294: 292: 291: 290: 289: 275: 271: 267: 263: 259: 255: 251: 229: 228: 224: 221: 217: 213: 209: 206: 203: 200: 197: 193: 190: 187: 183: 177: 173: 169: 163: 160: 156: 148: 147: 129: 128: 125: 122: 113: 108: 107: 91: 90: 88: 34: 30: 25: 23: 15: 14: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 962: 951: 948: 946: 943: 942: 940: 933: 932: 928: 924: 920: 916: 906: 902: 898: 893: 889: 886: 883: 880: 876: 873: 872: 871: 870: 869: 868: 867: 866: 863: 855: 845: 844: 840: 836: 832: 828: 827: 823: 819: 815: 814: 810: 809: 808: 807: 800: 797: 796: 791: 790: 789: 788: 781: 780: 775: 771: 770: 766: 765: 761: 758: 757: 756: 755: 748: 747: 743: 740: 739: 735: 734: 730: 727: 726: 722: 719: 718: 714: 713: 708: 705: 704: 700: 699: 698: 697: 689: 688: 684: 683: 679: 676: 675: 671: 667: 666: 662: 658: 657: 656: 655: 648: 645: 644: 643: 642: 638: 634: 633: 629: 628: 625: 624: 614: 605: 602: 599: 595: 591: 588: 585: 583: 577: 575: 571: 569: 565: 561: 560: 559: 557: 549: 545: 541: 536: 535: 534: 533: 532: 531: 528: 527: 517: 509: 506: 504: 500: 497: 493: 491: 487: 483: 480: 476: 474: 470: 466: 463: 460: 457: 452: 449: 446: 444: 440: 437: 433: 429: 425: 424: 423: 421: 411: 407: 403: 399: 395: 391: 386: 385: 384: 383: 382: 381: 374: 370: 366: 362: 358: 357: 356: 352: 348: 343: 342: 341: 340: 335: 331: 327: 323: 322: 321: 320: 319: 318: 314: 310: 305: 297: 296: 295: 288: 284: 280: 276: 272: 268: 264: 260: 256: 252: 249: 248: 245: 244: 243: 242: 238: 234: 225: 222: 218: 216:is necessary. 214: 210: 207: 204: 201: 198: 194: 191: 188: 184: 181: 178: 174: 170: 167: 164: 161: 157: 154: 153: 152: 145: 144: 143: 142: 138: 134: 126: 123: 119: 118: 117: 114: 112: 105: 101: 97: 93: 92: 87: 82: 81: 77: 72: 68: 63: 62: 58: 53: 49: 45: 40: 39: 33: 32: 29: 26: 19: 918: 914: 913: 849: 805: 804: 798: 786: 785: 772: 759: 753: 752: 741: 728: 720: 706: 695: 694: 677: 660: 653: 652: 646: 640: 639: 635: 631: 630: 615: 610: 597: 581: 579: 573: 567: 563: 556:Finishing up 555: 554: 518: 513: 502: 495: 489: 485: 472: 468: 450: 442: 435: 431: 427: 419: 418: 398:Paris Review 397: 393: 389: 303: 301: 293: 230: 179: 165: 149: 130: 115: 110: 109: 79: 75: 61:Article talk 60: 56: 37: 27: 471:so perhaps 270:rearranged. 48:visual edit 939:Categories 654:Background 488:how about 172:necessary. 159:community. 710:Sarah"."? 670:La Fiesta 619:<: --> 613:Ruhrfisch 522:<: --> 516:Ruhrfisch 220:reunited. 96:automated 822:Awadewit 691:Taylor?) 484:Awkward 478:written. 430:perhaps 396:, & 390:Harper's 304:Harper's 233:Karanacs 131:Thanks, 853:Scartol 793:mixed"? 774:before. 604:WP:HEAD 593:than I. 402:llywrch 309:llywrch 176:signs!) 71:history 52:history 38:Article 923:CliffC 777:body.) 456:Lumbee 897:Moni3 618:: --> 607:case. 540:Moni3 521:: --> 365:Moni3 347:Moni3 326:Moni3 279:Moni3 133:Moni3 100:house 80:Watch 16:< 927:talk 919:pool 901:talk 837:and 833:and 641:Lead 544:talk 406:talk 369:talk 363:. -- 351:talk 330:talk 313:talk 283:talk 237:talk 137:talk 67:edit 44:edit 860:Tok 941:: 929:) 903:) 895:-- 856:• 582:as 546:) 408:) 371:) 353:) 345:-- 332:) 315:) 285:) 239:) 139:) 84:• 69:| 50:| 46:| 925:( 899:( 622:° 600:? 586:? 542:( 525:° 404:( 367:( 349:( 328:( 311:( 281:( 235:( 135:( 76:· 73:) 65:( 57:· 54:) 42:(

Index

Knowledge (XXG):Peer review
Rosewood massacre
Article
edit
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edit
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Moni3
talk
12:06, 9 April 2009 (UTC)
Karanacs
talk
21:47, 13 April 2009 (UTC)
Moni3
talk
22:36, 16 April 2009 (UTC)
llywrch
talk
18:37, 16 April 2009 (UTC)
Moni3
talk
22:36, 16 April 2009 (UTC)
Moni3

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