Linchañ : diforc'h etre ar stummoù

Endalc’h diverket Danvez ouzhpennet
D ortho, replaced: <ref → <ref, .<ref>[http://legal-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/Lige+Daniels Pennad diwar-benn al linchañ er Stadoù Unanet] (pennad e saozneg)</ref>. → <ref>[http://legal-dictionary.thefreedictionar using AWB
D ortho, replaced: .<ref>"Lawrence Beitler, a studio photographer, took this photo. For ten days and nights he printed thousands of copies, which sold for fifty cents apiece." from ''A Time of Terror'', quoted in ''Legend using AWB
Linenn 1:
[[Skeudenn:Duluth-lynching-postcard.jpg| thumb|300px|Tri morian linchet e [[Duluth]], [[Minnesota]], [[SUA]], e 1920. ]]
[[Skeudenn:Lynching2.jpg|right|thumb|250px|Ur [[morian-amerikan]] linchet ha krouget e 1925.]]
[[Skeudenn:Philip Dawe (attributed), The Bostonians Paying the Excise-man, or Tarring and Feathering (1774) - 02.jpg|thumb|Linchadenn en 1774]]
[[Skeudenn:Lynching_of_Laura_Nelson,_May_1911.jpg|right|thumb|Linchadenn [[Laura Nelson]] en [[Okemah]], [[Oklahoma]] en 1911; klasket he devoa gwareziñ he mab a voe linchet war un dro ganti.]]
Linenn 25:
 
Daou vorian, [[Thomas Shipp hag Abram Smith]], a voe linchet d'ar 7 a viz Eost 1930 e [[Marion, Indiana]]. Harzet e oant bet en noz kent ha tamallet dezho laerezh halazhañ ur micherour gwenn ha gwallañ e zanvez-pried. Un engroez tud a zeredas d'an toull-bac'h, a zrailhas an norejoù gant horzhioù, avazhataas ar wazed, haga grougas anezho. Ofiserien bolis a gemeras perzh.
<!-- A third person, 16-year-old [[James Cameron (activist)|James Cameron]], escaped lynching due to the intervention of an unidentified member of the crowd who announced that he had nothing to do with the rape or murder<ref>The primary source for these events is ''A Time of Terror'', which is an eyewitness account. Relevant passages are quoted in several of the external links, including [http://withoutsanctuary.org/pics_27_text.html photo notes from ''Without Sanctuary''] and [http://www.legendsofamerica.com/LA-Lynching9.html ''Legends of America'']. Other accounts are in ''Lynching in the Heartland'', listed in the Further reading section, above.</ref> A studio photographer, [[Lawrence Beitler]], took a photograph of the dead bodies hanging from a tree surrounded by a large crowd; thousands of copies of the photograph were sold. The event is notable as the last confirmed lynching of blacks in the [[Northern United States]].<ref>"[[Lawrence Beitler]], a studio photographer, took this photo. For ten days and nights he printed thousands of copies, which sold for fifty cents apiece." from ''A Time of Terror'', quoted in ''Legends of America'', see previous note. See also ''Lynching in the Heartland'', chapter 6 which discusses the photograph in detail.</ref>{{,}}<ref>According to the account in ''A Time of Terror''. This is disputed by Madison, in ''Lynching in the Heartland'' (on pp 41-42), but supported by the notes to photo 32 in ''Without Sanctuary''. Madison's position is also disputed by the Monroe H. Little review of the Madison book. Cynthia Carr, author of [http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0517705060/ Our Town: A Heartland Lynching, a Haunted Town, and the Hidden History of White America] discovered advertisements for local klan gatherings in Marion newspapers from 1930 during her research for the book, and interviewed subjects that believed the klan was still active at the time of the lynching.</ref>.
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== Strange Fruit ==