The Orion Anderson Story

The Orion Anderson Story

ID: VA1889110801
Name(s) of People Lynched: Orion Anderson
Number of People Lynched: 1
Race: Black
Gender: Male
Lynching Date(s): 1889-11-08
Year Marker Erected: 2019
Erected by:
City: Leesburg
County: Loudoun
State: Virginia

Marker Text: On November 8, 1889, between 1 a.m. and 2 a.m., a 14-year-old African-American boy named Orion Anderson (1875-1889) was lynched at this site where the Leesburg freight depot was located along the Washington and Old Dominion (W&OD) Railroad.
A week earlier, Orion had been arrested and taken to jail in Leesburg. His alleged offense was scaring 14-year-old May Leith in the Town of Hamilton by chasing her with a “guano sack” (fertilizer bag) over his head. Although the girl could not identify him as the person who scared her, Orion was arrested based on circumstantial evidence.
On November 7, 1889, the Sheriff delivered a summons to the girl and two other people to appear as witnesses before the court. Less than 24 hours later, before a judge or jury could hear Orion Anderson’s case, twenty five to forty men came into town in the early hours of November 8 to kill him. On November 9, the Richmond Dispatch reported that the men were disguised and that cloth was wrapped around their horses’ hoofs so they would not make any noise, tactics closely associated with the newly emerged Ku Klux Klan. Three men from this group who were not in disguise went to the jail and requested admittance under the pretense that they were delivering a prisoner to a cell. When the Deputy Sheriff let them in, they overpowered him and took Anderson out of the jail by force.
Orion Anderson was dragged down Church Street to the freight depot where the mob hung him by a derrick (pulley for lifting freight) and shot him in the head and chest. He was survived by his parents, Thomas and Charlotte Anderson and nine brothers and sisters; Samuel, Virginia, Thomas, Alonzo, Logan, Leota, Lizzie, John, and Martha. Orion was buried a half-mile to the east at Potter’s Field, the burial ground for the poor and unknown. Three years later, Potter’s Field became the site of the third documented lynching in Loudoun County.
Both the Deputy Sheriff and the night policeman were witness to the events. Both stated emphatically that they could not identify any member of the mob, their voices or their horses. No one was ever convicted of the murder of Orion Anderson.
During the Jim Crow era, the murder of black men by vigilante groups was an all too common tactic to terrorize and oppress the African-American community. The murder of Orion Anderson was one of three documented lynchings in Loudoun County between 1880 and 1902. Lynching is an “extrajudicial” (outside of the law) execution carried out by a mob in order to punish an alleged transgressor, or to intimidate and control a segment of a community.
This and other signs marking the sites of lynchings in Loudoun County are intended to honor the lives cut short, and the families and communities impacted by this domestic terrorism that is a part of our history. This remembrance also serves as a way to educate our community on racialized violence and challenges us to reconcile differences to become a stronger community.