Robert Lewis (lynching victim)

Robert Lewis was a 28-year-old African American man who was lynched in Port Jervis, New York on June 2, 1892. His lynching was attended by what the local newspaper reported was a mob of 2,000 people,[1] and may have inspired Stephen Crane's novella The Monster.[2]

Robert Lewis
Robert Lewis, illustrated in The Tri-States Union.
DiedJune 2, 1892 (aged 28)
Cause of deathLynched

Lewis was accused by the mob of assaulting a white woman, Lena McMahon, in an incident by the Neversink River,[1] after she had possibly been meeting with her estranged suitor, a white man named Peter Foley.[3]

References

Illustration of lynching from The Evening World.
Illustration of lynching from The Evening World.
  1. "A Lynching in New York 130 Years Ago Shows That The North Isn't Immune to Racial Hatred". Time. Retrieved 2022-12-01.
  2. Goldsby, Jacqueline Denise (2006). A spectacular secret : lynching in American life and literature. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. p. 110. ISBN 0-226-30137-0. OCLC 1151339348.
  3. Burrell, Kristopher B. (2003). "Bob Lewis' Encounter with the 'Great Death:' Port Jervis' Entrance into the 'United States of Lyncherdom". CUNY Academic Works. Hostos Community College.
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