Lynching of Leander Shaw

The lynching of Leander Shaw occurred near midnight on July 29, 1908, in Pensacola, Florida. Shaw was accused of the attempted murder and rape of 21-year-old Lillie Davis. Shaw, being positively identified by Davis, was arrested and taken to jail. On the night of July 29, an angry mob shot the Escambia County Sheriff and hung Leander Shaw in Plaza Ferdinand VII.[1][2]

Lynching of Leander Shaw
Leander Shaw hanging from an electric pole
in Plaza Ferdinand VII
DateJuly 29, 1908; 116 years ago (1908-07-29)
LocationPensacola, Florida

Assault of Davis and arrest of Shaw

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Earlier on July 29, 1908, 21-year-old Lillie Davis was beaten and found, a victim of assault in her Gull Point home. Davis' husband absent at the time, the assailant raped her, slit her throat, beat her in the head with a Colt revolver he’d stolen from the home, and then fled. Davis' daughter had also been struck. Davis was taken to a nearby hospital.[3][4][5]

 
Lillie Davis and her daughter

Two hours later, a sheriff’s deputy arrested Leander Shaw near the bridge over Bayou Texar, “realizing in an instant he had caught the negro brute.” The still-bloody knife and stolen revolver were reportedly found on Shaw. Shaw was taken to the hospital Davis was being treated at, where she recognized Shaw in an instant as the man responsible for the assault. Shaw was taken into custody and was held at the county jail. Lillie Davis died three days later, on August 1.[3][4]

Lynching of Shaw

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By 7:00 p.m., a crowd began to form outside of the Escambia County Jail. Sheriff of Escambia County James C. Van Pelt, after unsuccessfully trying to convince the mob to disperse, was quoted by the Pensacola News Journal:

Gentlemen, here I am. You can kill me if you want to, but if you get my prisoner, it will be over my dead body. I have sworn to do my duty, and I am going to do it if I die for it!

At 8:45, the mob stormed the jail, using a section of the streetcar rail to break down the jail yard gate. There was a volley from the second story windows of the jail building, where several deputies were stationed. Sheriff Van Pelt talked for thirty minutes before him and his deputies opened fire on the mob. A firefight began, several men on both sides being injured. Two people died, including "Bud" Nichols, a member of the mob who was shot in the head, and street car conductor Henry C. Kellum, who was shot in the heart accidentally, when the revolver of Sheriff Van Pelt was discharged while in his pocket.[4][3][5]

 
Sheriff James C. Van Pelt in 1904

At about 11:30, about a dozen members of the mob scaled the rear wall of the jail and entered the backyard. Proceeding quietly, while the officers were busily engaged with the mob in front, the dozen men leaped upon them, kept a number of them to the floor, while others kept deputies at gunpoint. Keys to the jail were taken from Deputy Cusachs. The mob took Shaws, attached a noose to his neck, and dragged him through east on Zarragossa street to Tarragona, before taking him to Plaza Ferdinand VII, where the crowd attached the rope to an electric pole, hung him, and shot his body with more than 500 bullets. In the final attack, H. C. Kellum was also killed. It is believed that Kellum received his death wound when a group of four or five men were engaged in overpowering Van Pelt.[4][3][5][6]

 
The body of Leander Shaw after the lynching

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Pensacola Area Lynching Victims Remembered. WUWF. Retrieved December 23, 2022.
  2. ^ "Plaza Ferdinand VII". Visit Pensacola. Retrieved 2022-12-23.
  3. ^ a b c d "TWO LYNCHERS KILLED.; Pensacola Sheriff Stuck to His Oath, but Couldn't Save Negro". The New York Times. 1908-07-31. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2022-12-23.
  4. ^ a b c d "A century ago, a lynching in downtown Pensacola". The Pulse. 2017-07-28. Retrieved 2022-12-23.
  5. ^ a b c July 30, 1908. Pensacola News Journal.
  6. ^ Beninate, Renee (2018-09-20). "Ceremony held to remember lynching victims in Escambia County". WEAR. Retrieved 2022-12-23.