Lynching of Jim and Mark Fox

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DateJune 13, 1927; 98 years ago (1927-06-13)
Attack type
Lynching
Deaths2
Lynching of Jim and Mark Fox
LocationLouisville, Mississippi, U.S.
DateJune 13, 1927; 98 years ago (1927-06-13)
Attack type
Lynching
Deaths2
VictimsJim Fox
Mark Fox
PerpetratorMob of 1,000 white men from Louisville
MotiveRetaliation for the alleged killing of a white sawmill superintendent

Jim and Mark Fox were two African-American brothers, who were murdered in Louisville, Mississippi, in 1927. On June 13, 1927, a mob of 1,000 white men from Louisville lynched two African-Americans, Jim and Mark Fox.[1] In the aftermath of the Great Mississippi Flood of 1927, the Fox brothers were working in or for a Red Cross camp, and got into an argument with a white sawmill superintendent, allegedly killing him.[2] The argument apparently concerned work hours. The two brothers were seized by a crowd and paraded through Louisville; then they were tied to a telephone pole, doused in gasoline, and burned alive.[3] An onlooker who tried to help them was pulled away by the crowd.[4]

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