Difference between revisions of "David Alexander"

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At the time of his death, Alexander was 45 years old, "slender in build", and 5'8" tall.
 
At the time of his death, Alexander was 45 years old, "slender in build", and 5'8" tall.
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==Circumstances of his death==
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Alexander was allegedly the black man that Pensacola police officer [[J. D. Carter]] was attempting to arrest in the early morning hours of [[April 4]], [[1909]].  After making the arrest, the man fatally stabbed Carter and escaped.  Later in the day on April 4, Alexander was arrested for Carter's murder.  He initially denied that he had killed Carter or that he had been the man Carter was attempting to arrest.  However, he was taken to the city jail, and later newspaper reports indicate that Carter allegedly confessed to the murder in the presence of police captain Hall and a jail guard.  A coroner's jury quickly ruled that Carter had been killed by Alexander.
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Just over 24 hours after the murder, near 4:00 AM on April 5, a white mob gained access to the jail, removed Alexander, and lynched him in [[Plaza Ferdinand VII]].  Sources dispute whether the men overpowered jail guards or the guards willingly surrendered Alexander. 
  
 
==References==
 
==References==

Revision as of 03:26, 8 December 2007

David Alexander was a black man killed by a lynch-mob on April 5, 1909, after he allegedly confessed to killing policeman J. D. Carter.[1] Unlike the lynching of Leander Shaw the previous summer, this lynching apparently had little popular support and was in fact sharply denounced by some citizens, including the Rabbi Schwartz of Temple Beth-El.[2]

At the time of his death, Alexander was 45 years old, "slender in build", and 5'8" tall.

Circumstances of his death

Alexander was allegedly the black man that Pensacola police officer J. D. Carter was attempting to arrest in the early morning hours of April 4, 1909. After making the arrest, the man fatally stabbed Carter and escaped. Later in the day on April 4, Alexander was arrested for Carter's murder. He initially denied that he had killed Carter or that he had been the man Carter was attempting to arrest. However, he was taken to the city jail, and later newspaper reports indicate that Carter allegedly confessed to the murder in the presence of police captain Hall and a jail guard. A coroner's jury quickly ruled that Carter had been killed by Alexander.

Just over 24 hours after the murder, near 4:00 AM on April 5, a white mob gained access to the jail, removed Alexander, and lynched him in Plaza Ferdinand VII. Sources dispute whether the men overpowered jail guards or the guards willingly surrendered Alexander.

References

  1. Forgotten Heroes: Police Officers Killed in Early Florida, 1840-1925. William Wilbanks (1998)
  2. Emergence of a City in the Modern South: Pensacola 1900-1945. James R. McGovern (1976).