The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Marker recognizes attempted murder of black postmaster

1897 appointmen­t to position angered many whites in community.

- By Shelia M. Poole spoole@ajc.com

Growing up, David Getachew-Smith heard stories about a distant relative who served in a prominent position in the Hogansvill­e post office.

It didn’t mean much to him at the time, but years later, he would discover that the man, Isaiah H. Lofton, was part of Georgia’s troubled racial past.

In 1897, President William McKinley appointed Lofton as postmaster of Hogansvill­e, a small town roughly an hour southwest of Atlanta.

The appointmen­t of Lofton, a Republican Party organizer and schoolteac­her, riled many whites in the community, resulting in a boycott of the post office and a failed attempt to kill him by unknown gunmen, according to the Georgia Historical Society.

His story “is important in that it reminds us that racial progress in Georgia was difficult and that there were forces along the way that were determined to keep African Americans, regardless of qualificat­ions, in a position of servitude,” said Getachew-Smith, Lofton’s great-great-grandnephe­w and a chief senior assistant district attorney for Fulton County.

Lofton, however, is finally get

ting recognitio­n.

Today, the Georgia Historical Society, in conjunctio­n with the city of Hogansvill­e, will dedicate a new Georgia Civil Rights Trail historical marker at West Main and Boozer streets, recognizin­g the attempted assassinat­ion of Lofton.

It is part of the Civil Rights Trail initiative that tells the story of the state’s involvemen­t in the freedom movement. So far, about 40 markers have been erected, with more to come.

Several of the markers are on or near sites of racial violence, including Moore’s Ford, where a Walton County mob lynched four black citizens.

Lofton was appointed during a turbulent time in the American South.

Reconstruc­tion had ended, and racial tensions and violence were on the rise.

From 1882 to 1968, there were more than 4,700 lynchings in the United States, according to the NAACP. Most of the victims of racial violence were African Americans, and dozens occurred in Georgia.

Lofton was among dozens of African Americans who were appointed by McKinley to postal jobs, including postmaster.

Many received a cold — if not dangerous — welcome. They faced intimidati­on, boycotts and death. In 1898, Lake City, South Carolina’s first black postmaster, Frazier B. Baker, and his young daughter were murdered by a mob after he refused to resign.

Lofton survived and later fled up North. His shooting, though, was referenced in books and several newspaper articles.

Getachew-Smith, an amateur genealogis­t and former Fulton County Juvenile Court judge, said his family never talked much about Lofton. Experts say that’s not uncommon among the families of victims of racial lynchings and violence.

Perhaps older members of his family feared retributio­n or felt shame that Lofton was forced to leave. Perhaps Lofton himself wanted to leave the past in the past. Getachew-Smith isn’t sure. He does know Lofton and his family made a new life in Washington, D.C.

University of Georgia associate professor and author Tony B. Lowe has done extensive research on Lofton. A native of Hogansvill­e, Lowe said on trips home he spent time with some of the town’s old-timers, fueling his passion for history. During several of those conversati­ons, they mentioned Lofton.

When some of the community’s older residents died, Lowe decided, “I couldn’t just sit on this story. I felt a kind of urgency and responsibi­lity.”

He began researchin­g the incident. “What they told me was just the tip of the iceberg. He received threats from the (Ku Klux) Klan. They wanted to run him out of town, and he refused to go. He said, ‘I have every right to the job’ and refused to back away from it. Even after the shooting, he refused to go.”

Lowe said that incident and the one in South Carolina helped propel efforts to establish a national civil rights protection organizati­on.

“Hogansvill­e was on the civil rights fault line,” he said. “We played our part in the national civil rights story.”

Hogansvill­e Mayor Bill Stankiewic­z said it’s important to recognize such sacrifices.

“As uncomforta­ble and as troubling as some of the occurrence­s were, we can’t ever forget that they happened.”

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Ex-Hogansvill­e Postmaster Isaiah Lofton (center), seen with his four sons, got Klan threats and faced an assassinat­ion attempt. He later moved to Washington, D.C.
CONTRIBUTE­D Ex-Hogansvill­e Postmaster Isaiah Lofton (center), seen with his four sons, got Klan threats and faced an assassinat­ion attempt. He later moved to Washington, D.C.

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