Remembering the History of Rosewood Massacre a Black town in Florida
In 1923, Rosewood was a
primarily Black town in Florida. One day a White woman living in a nearby town
had been beaten and robbed. Afraid they would find the real attacker who was her husband, she told police and her town
residents that it was a Black man. Immediately a mob of White men and women
took to the streets to find the so called attacker. The first Black Man they
ran into was Sam Carter. He was tortured relentlessly until he admitted to
participating in the White woman’s attack. After being forced to admit
something he did not do, they shot him in the head in front of his wife. This
was not enough and they continued their reign of terror. The mob traveled
across town killing and burning down any and everything they saw in their
sight. They burned houses, stores, and almost all the BLACK CHURCHES.
Eventually the Black town residents had enough and they began to fight back but
this did not amount to much because the Mob had grown too big. The most
disturbing event of the entire standoff was the murder of a 4 year old Black
girl. As the little girl lay over her mother’s dead body crying, two members of
the white mob grabbed her by her ankles and threw her into a nearby burning
building. Days later after the town was deserted and things calmed down, the
mob returned to check for survivors and burn anything else they had missed. The
Rosewood Massacre is something that is rarely spoken of these days. Over 150 Black
Residents were killed; many of their bodies found hanging from trees. Very few
of the Black Residents managed to escape and others would never return to the
land they had spent their whole lives developing. White people have committed
the most atrocious acts the world could ever imagine against Black people.
Don’t ever let them convince you to forget.
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