Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Lynching memorial rises near revered Confederat­e sites

- By Jeffrey Collins

ABBEVILLE, S.C. » In this small South Carolina town near the Georgia line, where some say the Confederac­y was born and died, descendant­s of a man lynched 100 years ago are erecting a downtown memorial to him and other black men killed by white mobs after the Civil War.

Abbeville City Council authorized the marker that will be unveiled Saturday, 100 years and one day after Anthony Crawford was beaten, dragged out of town with a noose around his neck and hanged from a tree where his body was riddled with bullets.

It’s the latest public acknowledg­ment of South Carolina’s racist past.

In recent years, officials have apologized to civil rights protesters who were arrested in the 1960s, and a judge ruled that a 14-yearold black boy was wrongly executed in 1944.

Most prominentl­y, following the 2015 massacre of nine blacks in a Charleston church, the Confederat­e flag was removed at the Statehouse where it had flown for more than 50 years.

“Most of life is generation­al. Thoughts, attitudes and actions change,” said interim Abbeville City Manager David Krumwiede, who serves a town of 5,200 people where about half are white and half are black.

Crawford’s marker will sit in front of Abbeville’s Opera House in the town’s brick-lined central square. A quarter-mile from there, visitors can find Secession Hill, where locals in November 1860 passed the first resolution calling for South Carolina to leave the U.S. A quarter-mile another way is the Burt-Stark Mansion, where Confederat­e President Jefferson Davis, fleeing Union troops, met for the last time with his war council in May 1865 and declared all was lost.

“You have all of this Confederat­e memorabili­a, but nothing that talked to the black experience. So we wanted to do something big and bold and outdoors,” said Doria Johnson, Crawford’s great-great-granddaugh­ter.

Crawford’s marker recounts his life and also gives an overview of racial violence in South Carolina. It names seven other men lynched in Abbeville County from 1877 to 1950 and says “lynching — or murder at the hands of a mob — became a tool for re-establishi­ng white supremacy and terrorizin­g the black community.”

That harsh assessment doesn’t sit well with some in today’s Abbeville. A recent City Council meeting drew some speakers who grumbled about grammatica­l errors in the text on the marker and how local historians weren’t consulted on its message — although they pointed out they support some kind of commemorat­ion of the events 100 years ago.

The marker and stories from the Abbeville Press and Banner recount what befell Crawford, called “a negro of wealth” in the newspaper’s headline after he was lynched on Oct. 21, 1916. The 56-year-old farmer, who owned more than 400 acres, got in an argument with a store owner as he tried to sell his cotton seed. A mob began seeking Crawford after he was accused of cursing at the white owner.

The crowd cornered Crawford in the boiler room of a nearby cotton gin. Crawford struck one of his attackers with a hammer, then was beaten severely before the sheriff could save him and take him to the Abbeville County jail for his own safety. But the mob of up to 400 people soon overwhelme­d the sheriff and his deputies and lynched Crawford.

No one was ever tried for the lynching — a frequent outcome when witnesses refused to testify about mob violence for fear of their own safety and livelihood.

Locals ordered Crawford’s wife, 13 children and other relatives to leave the county and they eventually lost all their land.

A few family members stayed behind, but many ended up in cities in Illinois or in Philadelph­ia, Johnson said.

Crawford had built a school on his land for his family and neighbors because he thought education was the surest path to success, his family said. Part of his prosperity came when he diversifie­d from raising only cotton, years before other farmers were ruined by the cotton-destroying boll weevil.

It took years, but the family finally determined where Crawford died and will scoop up soil from the site in a ceremony Friday. They still haven’t been able to determine where he was buried.

The family tries to get together every year to swap stories and remember Anthony Crawford’s courage, Johnson said.

Phillip Crawford, a greatgreat-grandson of Anthony Crawford, is descended from the handful of Crawfords who never left Abbeville County. He has acted as a go-between for Crawford’s family, which wants this to be a thoughtful affair, and town officials trying to make sure the two days of commemorat­ion about Crawford’s lynching don’t lead to violence.

“He was a peaceful, humble, good man,” Phillip Crawford said. “I don’t think there is going to be any trouble.”

 ?? JEFFREY COLLINS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A marker commemorat­ing the lynching of Anthony Crawford will be placed outside the town’s Opera House, seen on Tuesday in Abbeville, S.C. Anthony Crawford was a wealthy black farmer lynched by a white mob 100 years ago. Descendant­s of Anthony Crawford...
JEFFREY COLLINS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A marker commemorat­ing the lynching of Anthony Crawford will be placed outside the town’s Opera House, seen on Tuesday in Abbeville, S.C. Anthony Crawford was a wealthy black farmer lynched by a white mob 100 years ago. Descendant­s of Anthony Crawford...
 ?? COURTESY OF THE CRAWFORD FAMILY VIA AP ?? Anthony Crawford is seen in this undated photo provided by the Crawford Family. Crawford was a wealthy black farmer in Abbeville County, South Carolina, lynched by a white mob in 1916. Descendant­s of Anthony Crawford will honor him and unveil a...
COURTESY OF THE CRAWFORD FAMILY VIA AP Anthony Crawford is seen in this undated photo provided by the Crawford Family. Crawford was a wealthy black farmer in Abbeville County, South Carolina, lynched by a white mob in 1916. Descendant­s of Anthony Crawford will honor him and unveil a...

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