Opinion: Commentary: Stop To Remember Benjamin Thomas
The teenager was lynched across from Market Square on Aug. 8, 1899.
By Audrey Davis Monday, August 9, 2021
On Sunday, Aug. 8 at Market Square, Alexandria citizens will stop and remember Benjamin Thomas who was lynched across the street from the plaza on that date in 1899. He was a Black teenager who was accused of a crime but denied his right to a fair trial. Just two years earlier, on April 23, 1897, Joseph McCoy, another young Black man, was lynched a few blocks away. Both lynching sites were close to the location of todays City Hall.
Market Square, in the heart of Old Town Alexandria, stands for everything that we are proud of in our city. Market Square is where we welcome new citizens and honor the victims of the Holocaust and Sept. 11. It is where we welcome political leaders, enjoy festivals, art shows, and our famous farmers market. Every day at Market Square you can see the diversity that makes Alexandria a vibrant place to live and work.
Now imagine being African American living in Alexandria before the turn of the century ... You would recognize the u-shaped building known as City Hall built in 1872 after a fire gutted the original building in 1871. It was still the hub of the city. You might have lived in one of the historic Black enclaves like Hayti, the Bottoms, the Berg, or Uptown. You and your family probably worshipped at one of Alexandrias historic Black churches, which functioned as spiritual and social refuges, places where you could speak freely.
As an African American, your life was spent navigating a system with laws that always changed for people of color. As a hub of the domestic slave trade that sentenced thousands of African American men, women, and children to a lifetime of bondage and cruelty, this city was complicit in the treatment of Black people as property whose humanity was never considered. This did not change with the end of the Civil War. As an African American, you had little recourse if you had to challenge the white establishment. The threat of violence to you or your family was always there. While Alexandrias documented lynchings were in 1897 and 1899, incidents of racially based hate crimes occurred throughout Virginia from shortly after the arrival of the first Africans to the present day. Today, we fight to end that legacy.
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