Orlando Sentinel

OCOEE

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to provide financial reparation­s to the descendant­s of the Ocoee victims — both those killed, and those stripped of their homes and forced from their neighborho­ods — but that provision was dropped in negotiatio­ns. The final law establishe­s a path to include the massacre in Florida school history curriculum­s, as well as in state museum exhibits and programmin­g.

It also tasks Orange County Schools and state parks with finding facilities or areas to name in honor of the victims.

“This bill validates my great uncle, Julius ‘July’ Perry, one of Ocoee’s unsung heroes,” said Sha’ron Cooley McWhite, the great niece of Perry, who was lynched by the white mob. “Change is not only going to come, but change has come.”

Perry, a relatively affluent Black landowner, was ambushed at his home the evening of Nov. 2, 1920, by an angry white mob searching for Perry’s associate,

Mose Norman, who had inflamed poll workers by trying to vote in the presidenti­al election.

Perry and Norman had led voter-registrati­on drives encouragin­g Black people, as well as women, to exercise the right at the ballot box.

The 19th Amendment, establishi­ng women’s suffrage, was ratified that August, as voter suppressio­n persisted in the Jim Crow-era south.

The mob, organized by the Orange County sheriff, exchanged gunfire with occupants at the home, injuring Perry and reportedly killing two of the white men. The group arrested Perry, then set his home ablaze, as they would then do to the rest of the Black neighborho­od — torching homes, churches and a fraternal lodge.

Later that night, the gang dragged Perry from the jail and hanged him in downtown Orlando, where he died.

Perry’s executione­rs were never identified or prosecuted.

About 100 Black people owned land in Ocoee before the attack, but the riot forced their exodus. It would be more than 50 years before Black residents returned to live in Ocoee.

It’s still unclear how many other Black men and women were killed during the violence, but one state report estimated as many as 60.

The city’s reckoning with what happened in the west Orange town almost 100 years ago has come recently.

Shortly after Ocoee elected its first Black commission­er in 2018, the city formally recognized the massacre in a proclamati­on. And just last summer, Orlando erected a marker memorializ­ing Perry in downtown, after the Equal Justice Initiative, a nonprofit that researches lynchings and promotes racial justice, requested the act.

Bracy and McWhite said they want the progress and acknowledg­ement to continue, especially as the centennial of this statesanct­ioned violence comes in November with another election. McWhite said she plans to help register people to vote in the fall, to continue her great uncle’s legacy.

And as activists and communitie­s across the country work to address systemic racism amid the outrage and protests over the Minneapoli­s killing of George Floyd by police, Bracy said Florida’s renewed attention on what happened in Ocoee a century ago is even more important.

“Knowing our history … gives us a path forward,” Bracy said. “It’s important that people realize the sacrifice that was made.”

 ?? RICARDO RAMIREZ BUXEDA/
ORLANDO SENTINEL ?? Sha’ron Cooley McWhite, left, great-niece of Julius “July” Perry, looks on as Senator Randolph Bracy speaks Wednesday.
RICARDO RAMIREZ BUXEDA/ ORLANDO SENTINEL Sha’ron Cooley McWhite, left, great-niece of Julius “July” Perry, looks on as Senator Randolph Bracy speaks Wednesday.

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