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The Leo Frank Case
Murder in Georgia - 1913
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Leo Frank was a
bisexual pedophile,
and a
suspected drug addict,
who managed a pencil factory in Atlanta
via 1913. One day he demanded sex
from a
12 yr. old
employee named
Mary Phagan, she refused, so then he brutally raped and murdered her.
Frank, and a handyman,
drag the body to the basement where they were going
to burn it in the factory furnace the next day. That night, a watchman
finds the body - calls the police - Franks is arrested - found guilty
and sentenced to hang. The governor commutes the sentence, and
Marietta finest families broke into jail and
lynched him
This incident lead to the creation
of ADL in 1913. Today the Jewish community hails Leo Franks as a
innocent martyr, a victim of anti-Semitism.
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The Victim
Mary Phagan, a 12 yr. old
girl who was an employee of the National Pencil Factory, in
Atlanta..
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Murderer
Leo Frank was a New York,
Cornell-educated Jew, who was living in Atlanta. Leo was President
of his local B'nai B'rith, active in civic affairs, a local socialite, and
Phagan's supervisor at the National Pencil Factory.
Frank was
sexual pervert, who was
homosexual,and preyed on
young girls. He
forced employees to have sex with him.
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The
Witness
James Conley
worked at the pencil factory as a sweeper and
handyman, and walked in on the murder.
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The
Watchman
Newt Lee was the
night watchman who found the body
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The Factory
It was a three story building, Frank
was on the second floor, where Mary was murdered.
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The murder
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12
years old

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April 26th, 1913 - Leo Frank
had Conley "watch out" for him while he "chatted" with Mary Phagan.
Frank demanded sex, and Phagan refused.
Next, Frank in cocaine induced rage, beat
her mercilessly. He then
pulled her underwear off,
tied it around her throat,
and
raped her. After Frank finished
he strangled her to death with the cord.
Frank summons
Conley into the office, where he finds
Leo crouching over the unconscious girl. Leo tells
him that Mary had resisted his advances, and when he grabbed her had
fallen, and struck her head. When he had finished with her, he decided
to kill her with a garrote.
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Frank Drags Body To The
Factory Basement
Frank and Conley took the body
to the basement, where Conley was to burn her in the factory's
furnace.
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Leo Frank Has Conley Write
A Death Note
Frank then had Conley
write the
notes found near the body, apparently
in an attempt to incriminate Newt Lee.
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Conley dragged Mary across the
coal cindered basement floor, face down, causing punctures and holes
in her face.
Worried that smoke on a
holiday would attract attention, Frank decided to
burn the body the next day . They went back to Frank's office
where Frank indicated there would be money waiting for Conley if he
"kept his mouth shut".
Here Frank uttered the ominous
phrase "Why should I hang?"
In the early morning, Newt Lee
discovers the body, and calls the police. The police find the little
girl's body in a cinder pile. One eye had been blackened by a blow,
and over both eyes was a slight abrasion.
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Franks paid a negro $ 200 to burn
little Mary |
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The left side of the head bore a
two-inch wound, and there was a cut below the left knee. Drawn tightly
about her neck was a cord buried in the flesh. There were teeth marks on
her breasts.
The girl had been beaten, strangled,
and then raped.
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Newt Lee |
The Body Is Discovered
The night watchman who discovered Mary
Phagan's body and telephoned police.
He testified for over two hours, telling the same
story he had told police, that he noticed the body when he went into the
basement to the restroom. He also told of Leo Frank being nervous. Leo
Frank told him
not to come in to
work.
That night, Frank called Lee to
ask if everything was alright, an unusual practice for him.
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Evidence Is
Gathered
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ADL formed
Leo Frank was president of the Atlanta
B'nai B'rith, and he was lynched. New York Jews quickly set out to form
the ADL to protect themselves
Banai Brith
employs senator
June 24, 1913 - Georgia Senator Hoke
Smith was considering aiding in Leo Frank's defense. The rumors
spread after defense attorney Luther Rosser, and National Pencil Company
president Ike Haas, stopped in Washington, D.C. en route to New York.
One
Jew put
$ 100,000 up for Frank's defense.
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Body exhumed
May 5, 1913 - Lemmie Quinn,
foreman of Mary Phagan's work area at the National Pencil Factory,
testified he saw Leo Frank the Saturday of the murder and he appeared to
be on drugs. So the decision was made to exhume Phagan's body and
search her stomach for signs of drugs.
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Alibi broken
May 9, 1913 - Fourteen year old
Monteen Stover said she had arrived at the National Pencil Factory
around 12:05 PM (roughly the same time as Mary Phagan had arrived) and
testified that Leo Frank was not in his office. This contradicted
Frank's testimony, that he had been in his office the entire time in
which it was thought Phagan had been murdered. Frank
insisted Mary to be there Saturday.
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Screaming
Another woman reported that she was
walking outside the factory around 4:30 PM when she heard three
piercing screams
come from the basement of the building.
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The Prosecutor
May 21, 1913 -
Solicitor Hugh Dorsey announced he
will seek a grand jury indictment on Leo Frank.
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Jewish Lawyers Accused Of
Bribing Detectives
May 22 a new controversy arose in the
Mary Phagan murder investigation. Phagan's step father signed an
affidavit accusing Thomas Felder, the attorney responsible for bringing
the Burns Detective Agency into the case, of approaching him about
allowing Felder to prosecute the case.
Detectives presented transcripts
of dictograph recordings in which Felder had offered them $1000 for
access to the case evidence.
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The Grand Jury
May 23 -
The grand jury took only ten
minutes to hand down a murder indictment against Leo Frank The
indictment was largely based on the testimony of Conley, and held the
Negro as an accessory. There were five Hebrews on this grand jury.
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Nina Formby - Another Witness
Bribed
She owned a whorehouse in
Atlanta, where Frank was a frequent visitor. Frank called her the night
of the murder and wanted her
help getting rid of the body.
She suddenly went to New York, where
she recanted her statement. Another witness bribed.
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Other Witnesses
Tom Watson confirmed
tales of
indescribable orgies
in Leo's office .
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George Epps,
a friend of Mary Phagan, testified that Phagan was
afraid of Frank because he had flirted and
made advances toward her
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Hugh Dorsey
then called several female ex-employees of the National Pencil
Factory to the stand. They all testified that they had a bad
opinion of Leo Frank's character and
gave concrete examples of immoral behavior on his part.
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Conley
had often sat outside Leo's office, as a sort of watchdog, while Leo
staged his
perversions
behind the locked door. When anybody
would approach, Conley would whistle or cough to warn his employer.
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C.B. Dalton ( railroad
carpenter) testified that he had seen numerous women come to the
factory to visit Frank
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May 10, 1913 - Robert House,
an ex-policeman, had said he once caught Leo Frank and a
young girl in the woods at Druid Hills park engaging in
immoral acts. According to House, Frank had pleaded with him not
to report the incident.
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Body Exhumed
Second Time |
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May 25, 1913 - A second exhumation of Mary
Phagan's body took place, this time to look for fingerprints; a
fingerprint expert had been called in to help with the case.
The undertaker who embalmed
Phagan's body said there was evidence of
sexual assault
and the county physician also agreed.
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Family Cook Testifies About
Frank's Confession And Attempted Bribery
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Minola McKnight
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June 3 - Minola McKnight, the
Frank family cook signed a statement saying Leo Frank was very nervous,
and drinking heavily, the night after the murder of Mary Phagan. She
said she
overheard Frank's wife tell her mother that
Leo made her sleep on the rug, and kept asking for his pistol so he
could shoot himself.
Frank had
told her
-- "It is mighty
bad, Minola. I might have to go to jail about this girl, and I don't
know anything about it."
Finally she said her wages had
been raised as a " tip to keep quiet."
Her actual statement
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Leo Frank's Wife
She covered for Frank, saying he never
talked about killing a child
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Lucille Frank |
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The Trial Begins
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July 28, 1913 - A jury was quickly
selected and seated. The first witness called was Mrs. J.W. Coleman,
mother of Mary Phagan. She managed to stay collected during most of
her testimony, but finally broke down in tears when asked to
identify the clothes her daughter had worn on the day she was
murdered.
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Mary's mother |
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Mary's Friend Testifies
Next on the stand was George Epps, a
thirteen year old boy who also worked at the National Pencil Factory. He
had ridden the streetcar with Phagan the morning of April 26th, and the
two had agreed to meet for an ice cream. and to watch the Confederate
Memorial Day Parade at 1:00 that afternoon.
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Leo Frank's
Various Alibi's
A Jewess lies
Lucille Frank
June 2, 1913 - At first she
corroborated Frank's story concerning the times he arrived home for
lunch and then returned to the factory the day of the murder. She was
agitated, believing her estranged husband had been telling lies to the
police to get her in trouble. She said, both she and Frank were innocent.
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Jewish Assistant
Herbert Schiff
August 9, 1913 - the twelfth day
in the Leo Frank trial. Herbert Schiff, Jewish assistant to Leo
Frank, said he worked most Saturdays and had never seen any women in
Frank's office except his wife. He added that he had never seen C.B.
Dalton either.
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Witnesses Tampering
Revealed
May 7, 1913 - The wife of one
of the mechanics who had testified on April 30 said she visited her
husband at the factory that day and saw a "strange Negro" boarding the
elevator as she left around 1:00 PM. Detectives on the case said someone
was planting false evidence and trying to block the investigation.
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Murderer hires the
investigators
Leo Frank of the National Pencil
Factory expressed his unhappiness with the investigation's
progress, so he personally brought in a Pinkerton's detective to aid
in the investigation.
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Devastating
witness
This was the seventh, and pivotal, day
in the trial of Leo Frank. Jim Conley, a sweeper at the factory,
was called to testify and presented a gruesome, graphic, and sometimes
revolting tale.
In fact his testimony was so lurid
that Judge Roan ordered all women and children cleared from the
courtroom.
Conley testified he had "watched out"
for Frank on several occasions, while he entertained young women in his
office.
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On the witness stand, Jim Conley was
devastating. According to Conley, Frank had confessed the murder to him
and had tried to get him, (Conley), to burn the body in the factory's
basement furnace. Frank's lawyers were unable to shake Conley's story.
Frank May Have Molested Young
Male Employees
Some of his descriptions of
what he saw intimated that Frank was a
sexual deviant. Conley tells of
walking in as the Jew was molesting the girl, and
boys.. How
him and Frank dragged the body to the basement furnace room. They
returned to the office where Frank had Conley write notes indicating
Newt Lee the watchman.
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John Starnes |
The Lead Detective
Detective Starnes
testified he had found the body in the basement, face down, with a cord
tied tightly around the neck, and a pair of
women's underpants tied loosely around the
neck. Mary was a
virgin.
The back of the head was covered
in blood. He had called Leo Frank to inform him of the murder, and said
Frank appeared extremely nervous when he arrived at the factory. Frank
cancels his Saturday afternoon
baseball outing.
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Pinkerton detective
in charge of their investigation of the case.
Scott then angered defense
attorneys when he asserted one of them had asked him to forward all
police evidence to the defense. Also testifying was former factory
employee Monteen Stover, who said she had arrived at the factory at
12:05 PM to receive her pay, had waited in Frank's office for him for
five minutes, then left. This contradicted Frank's statement that he had
been in his office the entire time in which the murder took place.
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Harry Scott |
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Frank molested the corpse?
Dr. J.W. Hurt, county physician who
had also examined Mary Phagan's body, said there was some evidence
suggesting she may have been
"outraged" (sexually assaulted).
The prosecutor pointed out, she was
killed for resisting, so Leo may have
assaulted her as she laid dying, or dead.
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Doctor Harris Testified
Dr Harris stated - "Besides a
ruptured hymen, Mary Phagan's vagina showed
evidence of violence
before death due to internal bleeding. The epithelium was pulled
loose from the inner walls and detached in some places"
Mary Phagan was bitten on her
breast, left shoulder, and neck
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Conley |
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Negro
acts as a ' Lookout '
Conley's story was to the effect
that he had often sat outside Leo's office as a sort of watchdog
while Leo staged his perversions behind the locked door. When
anybody would approach, Conley would whistle or cough to warn his
employer.
August 5, 1913 When the day
ended Conley was still on the stand, while defense attorneys argued
that his testimony of having been a lookout for Frank on
earlier occasions should be stricken from the record as irrelevant
to the case.
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August 6, 1913 - this was the ninth
day of the trial of Leo Frank. Judge L.S. Roan ruled that testimony that
Jim Conley had acted as a lookout for Leo Frank was admissible.
Applause broke out in the courtroom;
Frank's attorneys immediately contended that any further such actions
would be cause for a mistrial; Judge roan threatened to clear the
courtroom if order was not maintained.
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Outburst In The Courtroom
August 13, 1913 - . Jim Conley
had claimed he watched while Frank entertained a woman in his office
that day. More character witnesses were called during the afternoon. In
cross-examining one of these witnesses, Hugh Dorsey asked if he had ever
heard complaints about
Frank fondling young
girls.
Mrs. Rae Frank, Leo Frank's
mother, leapt to her feet and shouted at Dorsey "No, nor you either,
you dog." One of the defense attorneys escorted Mrs. Frank out of
the courtroom. Another
time she called Dorsey a " Christian dog"
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Frank's
mother |
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Leo Frank Testifies
August 18, 1913 - Leo Frank took the
witness stand. He spoke for four hours, calmly but firmly laying out his
story. Frank said Jim Conley's tale was all lies, and that the
detectives tried to distort everything he (Frank) said in order to
incriminate him.
He said Mary came in for her pay soon
after 12:00 noon on April 26th, returned a few minutes later to ask if
the shipment of metal had arrived (Phagan's job was putting metal tips
on pencils), then left his office and he never saw her alive again.
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He never saw Jim Conley that day.
Frank concluded his statement thus: "Some newspaper man has called me 'the
silent man in the Tower.' (for his unwillingness to talk to police or
the press) Gentlemen, this is the time
and here is the place! I have told you the truth, the whole truth, and
nothing but the truth."
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Prosecutor's final argument
August 23, 1913 - the
twenty-fourth day in the trial of Leo Frank. Solicitor Hugh Dorsey
continued his eloquent, yet ferocious,
final argument, scoring Leo Frank for his
abhorrent behavior, and contending that he could not careless what
opposing attorneys or Frank's family thought of him; his duty was to
Mary Phagan and the people of Georgia.
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Defense cries ' Anti-Semitism '
August 25, 1913 - The defense
then argued that Frank was the latest in a long line of
Jews who were persecuted for their religious beliefs, and again
asserted that Jim Conley was the true murderer. Conley, and many
other prosecution witnesses, had
shady characters, while Leo Frank had been a pillar of the community
who had many well respected people, plus many of his employees,
testifying on his behalf
If the case came down to Leo
Frank's word against Jim Conley's, then it was obvious who should be
believed.
Frank's attorneys
argued that the South blamed the Jews for the civil war and the
buying up of land, and businesses, that followed.
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Georgia State
Militia Was Called Out In Case Leo Franks Was Acquitted
Monday morning the Fifth Regiment,
Georgia National Guard, was posted throughout the city, and Judge Roan
gave the jurors their instructions.
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The
verdict
Verdict delivered
At 4:55 they returned with their
decision; Leo Frank was declared guilty. Neither Frank nor his family or
lead attorneys were present in the courtroom when the verdict was
announced.
There were two ballots; one, as to
Leo's guilt, which was unanimous; and the second, as to recommendation
for mercy, which would mean a life sentence. The first vote here was 11
to 1 against leniency, and the solitary juror then joined the others.
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Leo
Frank sentenced
August 26, 1913 - Judge L.S. Roan
sentenced Leo Frank to hang for the murder of Mary Phagan.
The execution date was set for
October 10, but Frank's attorneys immediately motioned for a new
trial.
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Jewish Forces Unite
Adolph Lewisohn, Samuel
Untermyer, Louis Marshall, Rabbi Wise, and other leading Hebrews
begged for clemency.
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Supreme Court Heard Case
In December 1914, the United States
Supreme Court agreed to
review the case. But on April
19, 1915, the argument was rejected by a vote of 7 to 2,
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Governor Bribed
to Commute Sentence
June 20, 1915
In his last day in office,
Georgia governor John Slaton was
bribed and commuted the sentence of Leo Frank,
from death to life in prison.
Governor Slaton announced the
commutation from hanging to life imprisonment, and all hell broke loose
in Atlanta.
The militia was called out, and thrown
around the governor's mansion, seven miles from the heart of the city,
and martial law was declared. Hundreds of automobile loads of armed men
raced through the streets to the executive home, where the mob trampled
the grounds, screamed at the curtained windows, and hurled itself vainly
against the militia's bayonets
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Governor
flees for his life
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He was influenced by his
law
partners,
who represented Frank. Either way, Slaton's act was political suicide.
He was forced to leave the country in fear for his own life.
The issue was now "Georgia's traitor
governor who sold out to sheeny gold." Slaton was hanged in effigy; and
the rumor that he and Mrs. Slaton were leaving at once for New York
caused the throng to scream imprecations.
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Frank Transferred to Milledgeville
Prison
The governor arranged for Frank stayed
in a private room next to the warden. His wife was allowed to visit.
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Frank stabbed in prison
June 21, 1915 - Leo Frank, in
the middle of the night, was transferred from the
Fulton County Prison to the Georgia State
Penitentiary in Milledgeville
July 18, 1915 - Prisoner J.
William Creen slashed Leo Frank's throat at the Georgia State Prison
Farm in Milledgeville. Only the quick actions of two other prisoners,
both doctors, who stopped the flow of blood and stitched the wound,
saved Frank's life. Green accused Frank of
attempted sodomy.
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The Lynching
Lynching mob consisted of leading
citizens in the community, men prominent in business and social circles,
and even in churches."
August 16, 1915 - A caravan of
eight vehicles bearing
25 armed men from the Atlanta area arrived at
the Georgia State Prison at Milledgeville
around 10 p.m.
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Calling themselves the Knights of Mary
Phagan, they cut the telephone lines, surprised the guards and entered
the barrack of Leo Frank, who two years earlier had been convicted of
the murder of 13-year-old Mary Phagan in one of the most infamous trials
of the century. The intruders seized Frank and departed
back to Marietta.
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Leo Frank lynched
August 17, 1915 - Frank was hanged
there in Frey's grove. When word of the lynching spread, crowds
gathered to see the body hanging from a tree.
The next morning, a farmer driving his
team and wagon of produce into Marietta, 170 miles away, saw a
man
dangling from a tree near the
roadway. He recognized Leo Frank, hanging in his
monogrammed silk nightgown, a hangman's noose beside his tilted
jaw. He had been dead for several hours.
The farmer whipped up his horses and a
little later a mob of 6,000 men and boys was crowding the highway for a
look as the famous prisoner
Frank's body was
rushed to an undertaker in Atlanta,
with a line of vehicles trailing behind. Although the undertaker tried
to keep the body concealed, a large
crowd soon gathered demanding to see it. After a rock was thrown through
a window, officials agreed to let the
public view Frank's body.
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Under police supervision, thousands of
curious Atlanta-area residents filed by single file to view
Frank's body -- including the city detective who
had arrested Frank. That night Frank's body was quickly embalmed
and placed on a train for New York.
August 18, 1915 - Leo Frank's
body, accompanied by his wife, departed Atlanta on a train bound for
Brooklyn, NY.
August 20, 1915 - Leo Frank was
buried in Brooklyn, NY.
* As a footnote to the lynching,
no one was ever
prosecuted for the murder of Leo Frank.
Jewish groups were actually relieved, and
never sought to try defendants.
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Mary
Phagan's Niece Writes A
Book
The niece spent
thousands of hours researching court records, newspaper clippings and
family records. She concluded there was no Anti Semitism, but rather
cold hard facts.
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Mary
Phagan's Grave
Frank was a
cold blooded killer, and he murdered the girl. Today, Jewish groups
spread filth
on a 12 yr old child, so as to discredit her.
Various
photos and a
diagram
of murder scene.
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