Pre-Civil War Lynching at Market Square

Pre-Civil War Lynching at Market Square (Side 2)

Pre-Civil War Lynching at Market Square

Pre-Civil War Lynching at Market Square (Side 1)

ID: TN1851010101
Name(s) of People Lynched: Unidentified
Number of People Lynched: 1
Race: Black
Gender: Male
Lynching Date(s): 1851-01-01
Year Marker Erected: 2019
Erected by: The Lynching Sites Project of Memphis, the National Park Service and the Shelby County Historical Commission
City: Memphis
County: Shelby
State: Tennessee

Marker Text: Near this spot on January 1, 1851, a mob of 1,200 to 1,500 people lynched an unidentified black man for the murder of John Chester, the Memphis City Recorder. The victim was likely a passenger aboard the SS Winfield Scott. which had ported in Memphis that day. At 2 p.m. police arrested him on suspicion of being a runaway slave and escorted him to city offices on Front Street for questioning. By state law he was required to present his certificate of freedom to the city recorder, John Chester. Chester declared the certificate a forgery and ordered the man to be arrested as a runaway slave.

Upon hearing that his freedom was being revoked, the black man exclaimed, “I am as free as you are,” pulled out a pistol, and fatally shot Chester in the back of the head. A witness confiscated the pistol. The assailant was taken to the jail at Market Square. According to The Memphis Eagle, a mob soon formed, forced the jailer to surrender his keys, dragged the prisoner outside, and hanged him from a nearby tree. Before dying, the victim reportedly confessed he was a slave, having run away from D.L. Herron of Coffeeville, Mississippi. This lynching is believed to be the first in Shelby County. The name of the victim was never determined.