Newspaper articles on the Sam Hose Lynching

Sam Hose went to jail for killing a white man and attacking his wife in front of her children in 1899 when a white mob took him from his sell to a new location to torture him to death. This mob mutilated Hose’s body while he was tied up, eventually burning him alive while over 2,000 people watched, according to the Atlanta Constitution. Much of this crowd came a long way to see Hose murdered and tortured after hearing that he had attacked a white family. At this point in Georgia, lynching was at an all time high, with its toll at 458 lynchings and only beat by Mississippi’s toll of 538. In 1899, Georgia hit its peak, with 27 lynchings in a year.

Newspaper clipping about the lynching of Sam Hose
Newspaper clipping about Sam Hose published April 27, 1899. From the Digital Library of Georgia and the Calhoun-Gordon County Library Obituary Files.
Newspaper coverage of the Sam Hose lynching in the Athens Weekly Banner. 1899
Newspaper coverage of the Sam Hose lynching in the Athens Weekly Banner. From the Digital Library of Georgia.

Click here to see the PDF of the Obituary

Click here to see the obituary description on the DLG website

Click here to read the PDF of the Atlanta Banner article.