NUMBER OF LYNCHINGS BY YEARS IN WESTERN STATES, 1882–1903
’82’83’84’85’86’87’88’89’90’91’92’93’94’95’96’97’98’99’00’01’02’03Total
Indian Territory (Oklahoma) 1 33234 215654131 3 47
Kansas22255132 3331 13121 40
Nebraska 261344622 23 35
Colorado61313 4 22 1122 3 1 32
Montana 592 32 311 1 2 332
California 3221331214114 1 2 31
New Mexico5243 1 21 4 1 23
Dakota (North & South)1132 3 121111 2 1 20
Washington21221 1 31111 1 118
Arizona4111 22 1 2 2 117
Wyoming2 1 13 14 1 1216
Iowa 3 2 2 1 22 12
Oregon 43 1 2 1 11
Idaho1 12 1 11 1 8
Alaska 2 31 6
Minnesota2 2 1 5
Utah 32 5
Nevada 1 1 2 15
Total25274029161628221216182217187118441058363
NUMBER OF LYNCHINGS BY YEARS IN EASTERN STATES, 1882–1903
’82’83’84’85’86’87’88’89’90’91’92’93’94’95’96’97’98’99’00’01’02’03Total
Indiana433 55 243 22 111 211 40
Ohio211321 14 22 1 20
Illinois 1 21 2 11211111 2320
Michigan 2 11 1 1 1 7
Pennsylvania1 1 1 2 1 1 7
Wisconsin 1 11 2 1 6
New York 1 1 2
Connecticut 1 1
Delaware 11
New Jersey 1 1
Total776510654410657333212144105
TOTAL NUMBER OF LYNCHINGS BY YEARS, 1882–1903
’82’83’84’85’86’87’88’89’90’91’92’93’94’95’96’97’98’99’00’01’02’03Total
Southern States5061689076667810098120146125123111931138570839373751997
Western States25274029161628221216182217187118441058363
Eastern States776510654410657333212144105
Total82951141241028810112611414617015214713210312795758910482872465

If much that has been said and written in recent years on the subject of lynching is true; if the presence of the colored race, because of the character of the crimes which negroes commit, is largely responsible for the practice of lynching; if the immigration into this country of “the scum of Europe” is also responsible for the practice; if lynching is, in addition, a relic of barbarism and a sign of degeneracy in American civilization,—then there ought to be some correlation between the distribution of lynchings and the proportion of the white element to the colored and the foreign elements in the population, and also between the distribution of lynchings and the degree of illiteracy in the population. With this idea in mind an attempt has been made to find out whether any such correlations exist with reference to the lynchings that have occurred during the last twenty-two years in the Southern Group of States and in the three States of the Eastern Group in which lynchings have been most numerous. In the following table the percentage which the total number of lynchings bears to the total population of these several States has been placed alongside the percentage of the negroes in the population, the percentage of foreign born in the population, and the percentage of illiterates in the population. In the same table also there have been given the percentage of the persons lynched in these several States who were whites, and the percentage of the persons lynched who were negroes.

From this table there appears to be no distinct correlation between the distribution of lynchings and the percentage of negroes in the population. In a general way the percentage of lynchings to the population is highest in the States where the negro element is largest, but Virginia, North Carolina, and notably South Carolina, are exceptions. So far as any correlation at all can be traced between the percentage of lynchings and the percentage of foreign born, the latter varies inversely to the former. The percentage of illiterates varies from State to State in about the same way that the percentage of negroes does; and hence there is the same general conclusion to be drawn with reference to the correlation of lynchings to illiteracy as with reference to the correlation of lynchings to the percentage of negroes, namely, that there is no distinct correlation. When the percentage of the persons lynched who were negroes is compared with the percentage of negroes in the population, however, it is at once apparent that there is a correlation between them. If plotted graphically the lines representing the two percentages would rise and fall in almost perfect uniformity, only Georgia and Tennessee presenting slight exceptions to the general tendency.

PER CENT OF LYNCHINGS TO POPULATION 1900PER CENT OF WHITES IN POPULATIONPER CENT OF NEGROES IN POPULATIONPER CENT OF LYNCHED WHO WERE WHITESPER CENT OF LYNCHED WHO WERE NEGROESPER CENT OF FOREIGN BORN IN POPULATIONPER CENT OF ILLITERATES IN POPULATION
18901900189019001890190018001900[[220]]
Mississippi.016942.241.357.658.511.6788.020.60.540.032.0
Georgia.010453.253.346.746.710.4089.590.70.639.830.5
Texas.007378.179.621.820.435.1861.416.85.919.714.5
Louisiana.014749.952.850.047.111.9281.404.43.845.838.5
Alabama.009955.154.744.845.218.8581.141.00.841.034.0
Tennessee.008175.676.224.423.824.6275.371.10.926.620.7
Arkansas.011772.672.027.428.030.069.51.31.126.620.4
Kentucky.006585.686.714.413.338.3261.673.22.321.616.5
Florida.017957.556.342.543.714.1785.825.94.527.821.9
South Carolina.006340.141.659.858.46.8393.160.50.445.035.9
Missouri.002494.494.85.65.253.8446.158.87.09.16.4
Virginia.003961.664.338.435.623.0776.921.11.030.222.9
North Carolina.002765.266.734.733.023.4375.00.20.235.728.7
West Virginia.003595.795.54.34.541.3058.692.52.311.42.5
Maryland.001679.380.220.719.810.090.09.07.915.711.1
Indiana.001597.997.72.12.378.821.16.75.66.34.6
Ohio.000497.697.72.42.347.652.312.511.05.24.0
Illinois.000498.598.21.51.852.347.622.020.15.24.2

For the purpose of further investigating the subject of the distribution of lynchings in relation to particular characteristics of the population, the lynchings which have occurred during the last twenty-two years in the Southern Group of States and in the three States of the Eastern Group in which lynchings have been most numerous were classified according to the counties in which they occurred in these several States. On the basis of this classification a careful study was made of the same characteristics of the population by counties as were considered above with reference to the population by States. The percentage of lynchings to the population in the several counties where lynchings have taken place was compared with the percentage of negroes, the percentage of foreign born, and the percentage of illiterates in those several counties.[[221]] To facilitate comparison, trial charts were drawn on which the percentages were plotted in graphic form, and the results were carefully noted.

In the comparison of the percentage of lynchings with the percentage of negroes in the population by counties no correlation can be clearly distinguished. In many counties where the negroes constitute between sixty per cent and eighty per cent of the population the percentage of lynchings is high, but there are also numerous exceptions.

In the comparison of the percentage of lynchings with the percentage of foreign born in the population by counties there appears to be no distinguishable correlation. It is shown pretty conclusively, however, that there is no tendency for the percentage of lynchings to increase where the percentage of foreign born in the population is large.

In the comparison of the percentage of lynchings with the percentage of illiterates in the population by counties there appears to be not the slightest correlation.