Raymond Gunn
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Raymond Gunn (1904-January 12, 1931) was a black man killed by a mob in Maryville, Missouri after he confessed to killing a white school teacher there.
The case received massive national publicity because it occurred outside the southern lynch belt and because of its brazen and planned nature in which the sheriff did not activate National Guard troops which had been specifically deployed to prevent the lynching.
The case was frequently invoked in the unsuccessful attempt to pass a law called the Wagner-Costigan Act during the Presidency of Franklin Roosevelt. This would have made it a federal crime for law enforcement officials to refuse to take steps to prevent a lynching.
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[edit] Murder of Velma Colter
Gunn was convicted of attempted rape in September 1925 after he accosted a woman on a rural lane outside of Maryville. Gunn never confessed to the crime, although he was allegedly beaten while in custody. He was released on January 28, 1928.
On December 16, 1930, 20-year-old teacher Velma Colter was killed in the one room Garrett School House about a mile southwest of Maryville. When she didn't return home as scheduled her body was found in a pool of blood in the middle of the school and there was a bloody footprint.
Gunn was immediately suspected. A farmer said that he saw somebody matching Gunn's description near the school. Authorities arrested several black men matching the description before finding Gunn on December 18.
Gunn had blood on his shirt (which he said was rabbit blood) and his footprint matched the one at the scene. Further, Gunn had a severe bite mark on his thumb (the woman who first accused him of rape in 1925 said he stuck his thumbs in her mouth).
Gunn confessed saying he had gone to the school with a hedge club after seeing Colter outside with a coal bucket. He said he hit her once after she bit him and then again after she hit him with coal bucket.
[edit] Lynch mob atmosphere
Talk of lynching began immediately after Gunn was taken into custody on December 18, and crowds began to assemble in Maryville. Gunn was transferred to the Buchanan County, Missouri jail 45 miles south in St. Joseph, Missouri. Crowds gathered there as well, which prompted the sheriff to order a truck with a mounted machine gun to be backed to the door. The operator of the gun appeared to aim the weapon at the crowd (although he later said he was just oiling it) causing the crowd to disperse.
Gunn was transferred again, this time 100 miles south of Maryville to Kansas City, Missouri. At 3:30 a.m. on December 26, Gunn returned to Maryville for arraignment and then was taken back to Kansas City.
Colter's mother was quoted as saying she could not bear a trial and would not testify. Her son had been killed in France during World War I.
[edit] The lynching
Gunn's court date was set for January 12. The Nodaway County prosecuting attorney said Gunn would get a fair trial and appealed (along with many Maryville business leaders) to Missouri Governor Henry S. Caulfield to deploy the National Guard to prevent an anticipated lynching attempt. Caulfield complied and 60 troops were ordered at 7:30 a.m. to stand by at the National Guard a block north of the courthouse.
By law the National Guard could only be deployed at the written request of the sheriff, which was a request that was never made. The Sheriff Havre English was to tell the press that he did not call up the guard because he did not want them to get hurt.
A large crowd occupied the Maryville square between the jail block to the northeast and the Nodaway County, Missouri Court House. The sheriff was transporting Gunn by car, and drove directly into the mob. When he opened the door, a man pulled the Sheriff aside and another took Gunn out of the car.
Gunn was chained and marched south down Main Street through the Maryville streets (thus avoiding the National Guard a block to the north) and after an hour and a half Gunn and the crowd arrived at the Garrett school house. His ears and nose were bleeding.
The contents of the school house had been removed and placed on the lawn. A crowd estimated at between 2,000 and 4,000 had gathered. He was taken by 12 men inside the school house where he is reported to have confessed again, as well as claiming he had an accomplice named "Shike" Smith.
Gunn was taken to the roof of the building where he was tied to a ridge pole. Gunn and building were doused with gasoline. The leader of the group who now is only identified as a "man in a red coat" threw a lighted piece of paper into the building. Gunn screamed once and appeared lifeless in 11 minutes. The building's roof collapsed within 16 minutes.
Remnants of the school were taken away by the crowd as souvenirs.
[edit] Aftermath
No charges were ever filed in the case. Attempts to identify the man in the red coat have always been rebuffed with a claim that he was an outsider.
At the time Maryville had a big enough black population that they had a Methodist church on West First Street about a block west of the white church at First and Main (although the official 1930 census showed 90 blacks living in town). Residents were concerned that blacks from Kansas City were going to attack the city. Reportedly townspeople set up machine gun nests on Main Street.
35 blacks were enrolled in the Maryville school in 1930. In 1931, the number had dropped to six and eventually almost all blacks left the town.
Franklin Roosevelt in 1932 campaigned saying he was going to take steps to stop lynching. However he was not to back the Wagner-Costigan Act. Although he did create the Civil Rights Section of the Justice Department.
[edit] External links
- Northwest Missouri State University resources on the case
- The Tragedy of Lynching by Arthur F. Raper ISBN 0-486-43098-7
- Time Magazine 1931 article
- Maps and aerial photos
- Street map from Google Maps, or Yahoo! Maps, or Windows Live Local
- Satellite image from Google Maps, Windows Live Local, WikiMapia
- Topographic map from TopoZone
- Aerial image or topographic map from TerraServer-USA