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The Trials of Will Johnson: Race-blind Justice in the First Year of Oklahoma Statehood (open access)

The Trials of Will Johnson: Race-blind Justice in the First Year of Oklahoma Statehood

Article describes the state of race relations in Oklahoma during the early 1900s through the examination of the trials, appeals, and execution of Will Johnson, a black man charged with the murder of an elderly white woman. Though African Americans held nearly equal status in the territorial period, the case's proceedings indicate the trial as a "benchmark" that indicated the switch to the rigidity of the Jim Crow era.
Date: Autumn 2003
Creator: Hedglen, Thomas
System: The Gateway to Oklahoma History