Tim Good

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That surrogacy extended as well to lynching, as women were sometimes substituted for black men who happened to escape white mob violence. “A significant number of female lynchings were not suspected of any crime,” writes historian Patrick J. Huber. “These ‘collateral victims’ died in place of an intended male target, such as a father, son, or brother, who had eluded the grasp of a frustrated mob.”[7]
The Cross and the Lynching Tree
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