Tom Joyner Seeks Pardon For Executed SC Ancestors

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SEANNA ADCOX | 10/ 8/09 11:34 AM | AP

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COLUMBIA, S.C. — Nationally syndicated radio host Tom Joyner is asking South Carolina to posthumously pardon two of his great-uncles – black landowners executed in 1915 after being convicted of murdering an elderly Confederate Army veteran.

Joyner learned the fate of farmers Thomas and Meeks Griffin during filming of the PBS documentary "African American Lives 2," which first aired in February 2008 and was based on research by Harvard scholar Henry Louis Gates Jr.

The program traces the lineage of 12 people, including Joyner. The host of "The Tom Joyner Morning Show" said he was stunned to learn of his South Carolina roots and two great-uncles he didn't know existed.

"The records will show they did not do what they were executed for, and maybe now they can rest in peace," Joyner said from his Dallas studio.

He said a pardon would bring long-overdue justice, adding "I started trying to put myself in my great-uncles' position and tried to imagine what they must've been going through."

The Griffins were forced to sell their 130 acres to finance their defense. After they died in the electric chair on Sept. 29, 1915, Joyner's grandmother moved to Florida, where the family's known history begins.

"It's very unusual for stories like this to be passed down from generation to generation among African-Americans," Joyner said. "As a people, we don't like to pass along bad news about family."

In June 2008, Joyner, Gates and legal historian Paul Finkelman wrote Gov. Mark Sanford seeking a pardon. The case is scheduled Oct. 14 before the state's parole and pardon board.

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If a pardon were granted, it would be South Carolina's first awarded posthumously in a capital murder case, said Pete O'Boyle, spokesman for the S.C. Department of Probation, Parole and Pardon Services.

Court documents show the Griffin brothers were executed with two other black men for the April 1913 shooting death of John Lewis, 73. Lewis was a wealthy veteran living in Blackstock, a Chester County town 40 miles north of Columbia.

The four were indicted July 6, 1913, and the trial began two days later. With only a day to prepare, defense attorney W.H. Newbold asked for a delay, but the request was denied. The state Supreme Court later deemed that denial insignificant.

Finkelman said such speedy trials were apparently once the norm and the quick trial wasn't necessarily racially motivated – but it was unfair.

Joyner believes his uncles were framed.

Records show police initially focused on Anna Davis, a black woman Lewis was reportedly intimate with. She and husband Bart Davis were arrested with their suitcases packed. But attention later shifted when Lewis' stolen pistol was traced to John "Monk" Stevenson, a small-time criminal who first said he got the gun from Bart Davis' brother.

He claimed he was only a lookout when Lewis was killed. In a plea deal that spared his life, Stevenson – who is also black – named the Griffin brothers and the two others and testified against them. He later received a life sentence.

According to sworn statements, Stevenson told people in jail the four men he implicated knew nothing of the crime, but he named them to save himself.

When appeals failed, Newbold asked the governor for a pardon hearing.

Some white residents in Chester County agreed.

More than 120 people signed a petition to then-Gov. Richard Manning declaring "grave doubts as to their guilt" and requesting a reduced sentence. The signatures included people identified as Blackstock's mayor, a former sheriff, two trial jurors and the grand jury foreman.

A former detective wrote that information was withheld from the defense, and that Stevenson also told him the four convicted had nothing to do with the murder.

Finkelman, an Albany Law School professor, called the petition astonishing. In his decades studying Southern history, this is the first time he's seen petitions signed by prominent white residents in support of a black man accused of murdering a white man.

"It just didn't happen," he said. "The nature of South Carolina in 1900 was, if a black man was arrested for a crime like this, you could be pretty sure they'd be convicted and executed, and nobody would care."

Still, hundreds of residents signed petitions asking the governor to dismiss appeals for clemency and urging execution.

But the signatures of support show "everybody wasn't unfair," said Joyner, who grew up in Tuskegee, Ala. "It says something about the history of racism in South Carolina that everybody wasn't like that back then."

Nearly a century later, it's impossible to determine who did commit the murder, according to Joyner, Gates and Finkelman.

While a pardon isn't an apology, it means if the men were tried today, they likely wouldn't be convicted, said Joyner's attorney, Steve Benjamin.

"It was a sad period in our state's history and probably not uncommon," he said. "It doesn't undo what happened. It does allow the state to put its best foot forward."

Joyner said learning the family secret has changed his life.

"It's been mind-opening. When I see when and how far people have gone before me, it makes me stronger." He added, "There are probably so many stories like this that will never come to light, and their cases will never be heard."

___

On the Net:

http://www.pbs.org/wnet/aalives/profiles/joyner.html

COLUMBIA, S.C. — Nationally syndicated radio host Tom Joyner is asking South Carolina to posthumously pardon two of his great-uncles – black landowners executed in 1915 after being convict...
COLUMBIA, S.C. — Nationally syndicated radio host Tom Joyner is asking South Carolina to posthumously pardon two of his great-uncles – black landowners executed in 1915 after being convict...
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South Carolina is one place where certain people stand during Dixieland and other coastal residents speak Gullah and believe in Root.

They all wave when you drive by.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:46 PM on 10/08/2009
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there is no need for pardon if they did not commit a crime

there is a movement to pardon alabama civil rights activists

the wrongly convicted deserve public recognition and a pardon is not the recognition they deserve

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:36 PM on 10/08/2009
- Klimb I'm a Fan of Klimb 21 fans permalink

Well said!

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:16 AM on 10/09/2009
- dteg I'm a Fan of dteg 25 fans permalink
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It will be tough but I hope you succeed Tom. There are plenty of racist here in SC.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:55 PM on 10/08/2009
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not as many as elsewhere

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:29 PM on 10/08/2009

Personally I don't care much for Tom. He loves to be the center of attention. However I do hope he gets both pardons.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:58 PM on 10/08/2009
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If it were any other state except South Carolina, he might have a chance. South Carolina, which threatened to secede in the 1830s, was the first state to secede in 1860, and then threatened to secede *from the confederacy* because the other slave states wouldn't re-open new slave trade to Africa. The first state to challenge the Civil Rights Act in court. The state of Mark Sanford, Joe Wilson, Strom Thurmond.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:32 PM on 10/08/2009

I'm African-American. In my study of history, I've found incidents very different from the stories that we've been told- much like this, where whites defended accused blacks, a black person stood up for their rights and won, black/white relationships- where the black woman is not raped or it was a black man and a white woman together. Even things like what my dad told me about growing up in Georgia: his uncle's job bought him a car and trusted him to take the money to the bank . And my uncle married a white woman in 1960 and took her to Georgia. Dad said many people just dismissed the woman as "white trash" and moved on. They are still married today.

History is, as Joyner discovered, empowering. Especially when it goes against the grain of the compartmentalized, one-dimensional version we've learned too often from the media. But it must be handled carefully. Apologists for Jim Crow discrimination often want to take the good stories and claim those situations were the norm. Funny... because a lot of these same people rail against "liberal, political correctnes­s." But they would rather use a few stories of benevolence and justice to overlook the rampant lynchings, inequalities and outright bigotry that controled people's lives.

I don't care for a lot of the rhetoric of Al Sharpton..­. but he is right on when he says that "Black people have a history; but many want us to see it as a hallucinat­ion."

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:28 PM on 10/08/2009
- Gasparilla I'm a Fan of Gasparilla 30 fans permalink

I am white, generally a liberal, but not overtly so. [Whatever that means] One thing that does drive me crazy is the attempt to say that the Civll War was not about slavery. If you look at the bill of secession passed by the first state to leave the Union, South Carolina, it is filled with references about how the federal government has tried to slow and outlaw slavery. It was not all about slavery, but that was the main issue.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:02 PM on 10/08/2009

I know what you're talking about. These people also want to believe that if the south had won the war, slavery would have died out on its own shortly afterwards (it showed no evidence of slowing down) and that 90,000 blacks fought for the Confederacy as willing soldiers- even though there is no proof of these numbers anywhere but much documentation from Confederates that white supremacy and black enslavement was what they seceded for, formed their "country" for and were willing to die for. I've come to accept that black Confederates and blacks who owned slaves is the only multicutural history some people can accept.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:27 AM on 10/09/2009

As someone who has a degree in history, I must say that was a pretty righteous post. The media does indeed often turn historical subjects into cartoons and often alter facts for the sake of entertainment value. As you say, history just is not as simple as it is often portrayed.

So I favorited your post.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:18 PM on 10/08/2009

Thank you very much for your compliments and your appreciation of finding the truth in our history.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:45 AM on 10/09/2009
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Wow! Chester is my hometown. Blackstock is in my backyard. Good luck, Tom!

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:20 PM on 10/08/2009
- jrjones529 I'm a Fan of jrjones529 33 fans permalink
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I hope he gets it.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:55 PM on 10/08/2009
- ladydragon I'm a Fan of ladydragon 12 fans permalink

this is purely for entertainment purposes. Tom Joyner's show used to be funny and informative, now it's just down right silly, I stopped listening years ago.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:07 PM on 10/08/2009
- Poiks I'm a Fan of Poiks 74 fans permalink
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Yeah, right. Why would anyone be interesting in clearing the family name? Good thing we had you here to do the analysis for us.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:27 PM on 10/08/2009
- mervr1 I'm a Fan of mervr1 27 fans permalink

Yeah right, I'm sure you listened. Tom Joyner's show still remains one of the most informative programs for African Americans along with being humorous.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:10 PM on 10/08/2009
- KISHAGREEN I'm a Fan of KISHAGREEN 20 fans permalink
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What's entertaining about four men being wrongfully convicted and executed? Your post makes no sense!

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:29 PM on 10/08/2009

Your inability to grasp an attempt to gain some justice and closure for a historical wrong shows you as someone not to be taken seriously.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:19 PM on 10/08/2009
- hjo4 I'm a Fan of hjo4 26 fans permalink

Good for Mr. Joyner I hope he receives the pardon for his relatives. The more time passes the more of untold African American history is being revealed. This is GREAT.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:01 PM on 10/08/2009
- KIVPossum I'm a Fan of KIVPossum 51 fans permalink
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You know he really cares about them. Didn't even know about them until 2008.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:24 PM on 10/08/2009
- pgurlatl I'm a Fan of pgurlatl 11 fans permalink
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As most African-American are completely unaware of their ancestry as records were not kept by their slave masters at the time. Except if you count how many were bought and sold.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:27 PM on 10/08/2009
- jayburd I'm a Fan of jayburd 14 fans permalink
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A pardon still implies guilt. He should seek a posthumous acquittal.­..

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:57 PM on 10/08/2009
- ziploked I'm a Fan of ziploked 12 fans permalink
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You are absolutely right. Why exert the effort, if not for the acquittal?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:15 PM on 10/08/2009
- jayburd I'm a Fan of jayburd 14 fans permalink
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It would probably set a precedent, but why the hell not try? This is a classic case of racial injustice. It would be a good precedent to set...

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:29 PM on 10/08/2009
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To get an acquittal the conviction would have to be overturned. I'm not sure who would have standing to appeal a conviction when everyone involved in the case is decades dead.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:22 PM on 10/08/2009
- JazzyJim I'm a Fan of JazzyJim 74 fans permalink
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As an American and in light of this information, a pardon is in order - even if Joe Wilson - doesn't recognize.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:56 PM on 10/08/2009
- StillweRise I'm a Fan of StillweRise 121 fans permalink
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Moved from Chicago to Phoenix MANY years ago. Don't get TJMS....

"THEY" don't allow stations "like that" on the air down here.

think I'm lying???? show me the station down here with a format geared toward AA's....

it doesn't exist. Even the 2 stations that allow R&B and HipHop to be played... do it with non-AA jockeys...

please know... there's a REASON for that.....

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:33 PM on 10/08/2009
- CLSayles I'm a Fan of CLSayles 3 fans permalink

AZ is stuck in time warp. Ex. #1, their Senators. Ex. #2 no MLK holiday even after it became a federal holiday. Folks down there are crazy from the sun and it gets to be too much for the older citizens..­.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:12 AM on 10/09/2009
- punkindmb I'm a Fan of punkindmb 11 fans permalink
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From what was said, it appears his mistress and her husband did the killing. I mean, 'bags packed'? Come on! I hope he gets his pardon.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:16 PM on 10/08/2009
- banja I'm a Fan of banja 12 fans permalink
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Goodluck getting a pardon in the land of Joe"you lie" Wilson, Waterloo DeMint, Thurmond and Argentina Soulmate Sanford. What a sad story, keep up the good fight. After all these years, no change in SC.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:07 PM on 10/08/2009
- jayburd I'm a Fan of jayburd 14 fans permalink
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Nope. Still the same backward-assed state it was in 1860.

To paraphrase Phil Ochs:

Here's to the land they've torn out the heart of
South Carolina find yourself another country to be part of

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:08 PM on 10/08/2009
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