Leander Shaw

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Leander Shaw's body after being lynched

Leander Shaw (d. July 28, 1908) was a black man accused of the robbery, rape and murder of a white woman, Lillie Shaw.

After the crime, Shaw was allegedly found rinsing his bloody shirt in Pensacola Bay, arrested and taken to the hospital where Davis, whose throat had been cut, identified him before dying. Headlines from the Pensacola Journal announced the "Brutal Assault by Burly Negro Upon White Lady."

A mob was formed shortly thereafter and breached the Pensacola Jail, where Shaw was being held. After some time, the Sheriff relented and the crowd stormed the jail. Shaw was dragged from his cell, through the street, to Plaza Ferdinand VII. He was hanged without a trial from a utility pole in the plaza, and his body was riddled with bullets from the angry crowd.

The crime and hanging are explored in the 2007 documentary Lillie & Leander: A Legacy of Violence by Davis's great-great-niece, filmmaker Alice Brewton Hurwitz.

References