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Hey Knoxville! Remember Red Summer of 1919? How about a sequel?

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brutus
(@brutus)
Posts: 4435
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Yes folks, back in 1919 there was a significant racial riot in Knoxville, hence the name Red Summer, coined by the journalists alluding to the blood that flowed in the streets of the many riot-torn cities across the country all happening about that time. And guest what? A filthy nigger killing a White woman was the catalyst for that Knoxville riot, way back in 1919!

There was no To kill a Mocking Bird bullshit story written about that true event. Because jews were only writing stories and screen plays about that one in a million long suffering negro, and not a peep about the hundreds of thousands of filthy nigger savages that were killing, raping and robbing millions of White people. There is scant information about that riot and what I've found has been effectively sanitized and de-emphasized and almost the entire written record has been flushed down the memory hole. White Nationalists probably have a good idea of who's been censoring from the public's view that lively era of Knoxville’s history.

Over 40 years of paying extortion money to the niggers via the welfare check and to this very day, niggers are still wantonly killing our women and the jew is still trying to hide it by under reporting. It looks like nothing will change unless the jews and their nigger minions develop terminal cases of ventilated head.

This post is dedicated to Bertie Lindsay a White woman who was murdered by a savage nigger on a hot summer day in Knoxville Tennessee in 1919. RIP

brutus

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KNOXVILLE RIOT OF 1919

The Knoxville riot took place on August 30-31, 1919. Although many historians question whether it was a "race riot" in the classic sense, it bore many characteristics of that phenomenon.

The arrest of Maurice Mayes, a mulatto and sometimes deputy sheriff, touched off the riot. Mayes, a well-known political figure, was rumored to be the illegitimate son of Knoxville Mayor John E. McMillan. In the early morning hours of August 30 police charged Mayes with the murder of Mrs. Bertie Lindsay, a white woman; Mayes had been identified as the assailant by the victim's cousin, Ora Smith, who was with Lindsay at the time of the assault.

That afternoon, fearing trouble, Sheriff W. T. Cate arranged for Mayes to be removed to Chattanooga. In spite of these precautions, a crowd gathered around the Knox County jail, broke down the door, and searched the building for Mayes. In the ensuing melee, no black prisoners were disturbed, but a dozen white inmates were freed, the liquor storage room was pillaged, and the jail demolished.

As rumors of violence circulated, the crowd broke into downtown hardware stores, armed themselves, and headed for the black section of town. A detachment of the National Guard, hurriedly called to the scene, proved to be little use in controlling the crowd, as guardsmen joined the white mob and fired into black-occupied buildings while blacks returned the fire. One National Guard officer was killed accidentally by his own men, and one African American was also shot and killed. On the morning of Sunday, August 31, several hundred additional guardsmen restored order.

http://tennesseeencyclopedia.net/imagegallery.php?EntryID=K025


The ink of the learned is as precious as the blood of the martyr. For one drop of ink may make millions think.

 
Posted : 17/05/2007 11:18 pm
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