Definition & Betydelse | Engelska ordet LYNCHED


LYNCHED

Definition av LYNCHED

  1. böjningsform av lynch
  2. perfektparticip av lynch

Antal bokstäver

7

Är palindrom

Nej

10
CH
CHE
ED
HE
HED
LY
LYN

1

1

227
CD
CDE
CDL
CDN
CE
CED
CEL


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Exempel på hur man kan använda LYNCHED i en mening

  • Accused of treason by the Carthaginians after being defeated by the Romans at the Battle of the Great Plains, Hasdrubal Gisco commits suicide to avoid being lynched by a Carthaginian mob.
  • January 13 – Nicolas Jean Hugon de Bassville, a representative of Revolutionary France, is lynched by a mob in Rome.
  • In 1874, Juan Moya, a prominent Tejano landowner and Mexican army captain who fought in the Texas Revolution, was lynched, along with his two sons, by a mob who suspected them of murdering a neighboring family in Goliad County.
  • Among those were Curtis and Sam Young, who were both lynched for allegedly murdering the city marshall, Walter Meloan, on June 6, 1898, in Clarksville, a small town on the Mississippi River.
  • In 1889, an African-American man, Keith Bowen was lynched by a mob in the Lebanon community six miles south of Aberdeen after he was found in a white girl's bedroom at 3:00 AM.
  • Racist mobs lynched 12 African Americans in the county during the years between 1877 and 1908; most were killed around the turn of the 20th century.
  • Five men were lynched from 1883 to 1917, for alleged rape, assault, barn burning, and robbery and murder.
  • On December 16, 1900, two African-American men, Bud Rowlands and Jim Henderson, were lynched by the county courthouse in Rockport after being arrested as suspects in the brutal robbery and killing of a white barber at 2 am the night before.
  • On January 29, 1916, five African American men were lynched; they were taken from the Worth county jail and hung, their bodies riddled with bullets.
  • On January 22, 1912, a black woman and three black men were lynched in Hamilton, the county seat, for the alleged murder of young local white landowner Norman Hadley.
  • In April 1894, three African Americans accused of planning to commit arson were taken from the Tuscumbia jail by a mob of 200 men and lynched, hanged from the bridge over the Tennessee River.
  • In August 1907 a black man named Gibson was lynched in Aliceville, which caused civil disturbances in the community.
  • Among the numerous African Americans lynched in Carrollton was John Gibson, hanged on August 28, 1907.
  • Over the course of four days, a succession of white mobs terrorized black families in the area, and lynched or otherwise murdered thirteen black people.
  • In 1908, a Black man named Earnest Williams was lynched by a white mob who were "outraged" because he had used "offensive language".
  • The following African Americans were lynched in Madison: Savage and James in 1882, Charles Martin, 1 February 1899; both James Denson and his stepson, 7 January 1901; and an unidentified man, 9 February 1906.
  • On October 2, 1916, a woman named Connelly, whose son was accused of murder, was taken from the Leary jail and lynched.
  • Between 1881 and 1947 at least seven African-Americans were lynched in Blakely, including at least two veterans.
  • A suspect in the second assault, in which the victim was also raped and later died, was dragged from the Cumming county jail and lynched.
  • He was taken for his own safety to Columbus for three months but when he returned three months later a mob 200 strong lynched Dawson Jordan, Charles Pickett, and Murray Burton as well as burning down three black lodges, a church and a school.


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