How White Mob Murdered 50 Blacks And Forced An Entire Black Community To Flee In 1920 [The Ocoee Massacre]

The Ocoee Massacre, which took place in the town of Ocoee, Florida on November 2-3, 1920, was the twentieth century’s greatest election-related massacre. The violence claimed the lives of around 50 Blacks and two whites, and the entire Black community of Ocoee was forced to evacuate the town.

Since the conclusion of Reconstruction, the town of Ocoee, Florida, in Orange County, about 12 miles northwest of Orlando, has been ruled by conservative Democrats. They took delight in keeping Blacks out of the polls, who were primarily Republicans at the time.

Voter registration initiatives were started by a number of Black organizations in Florida in 1920. Mose Norman, a rich Black farmer who had participated in the voter registration drive in Orange County, chose to vote in the national election on November 2 as a result of their efforts. He was turned away from the polls twice when he sought to do so.

When Norman was forced to flee for the second time, a white mob of about 100 men resolved to track him down. They rushed Perry’s home, believing he had taken sanctuary in the home of another local Black man, Julius “July” Perry, in the hopes of apprehending both men there. Perry defended his home by killing two white men, Elmer McDaniels and Leo Borgard, who tried to enter via the back door.

Norman escaped and was never discovered, while Perry defended his home by killing two white men, Elmer McDaniels and Leo Borgard, who tried to enter via the back door. The mob requested help from Orlando and the nearby Orange County area. They eventually apprehended and executed Perry, who was then hung from a telephone pole near the highway connecting Ocoee and Orlando to terrify other possible Black voters. During the attack on the Perry residence, Perry’s wife, Estelle Perry, and their daughter were both injured. Local law enforcement officers dispatched them to Tampa.

The crowd then turned on Ocoee’s African-American population. They set fire to homes and businesses and demanded that the citizens of Ocoee evacuate. Faced with the danger of violence, the town’s entire African American population fled. Some African Americans suspected that the violence was staged in order for whites to acquire the property of the town’s wealthiest Blacks.

100th Year Anniversary of the Ocoee Massacre: Their Right to Vote! |  Tellersuntold 100th Year Anniversary of the Ocoee Massacre
African American Community Fleeing From The Murderers

The NAACP sent Walter White, the organization’s executive director, to investigate the killings. When White arrived, some local whites were “still thrilled with triumph,” according to White, who pretended to be Caucasian during his stay. He also stated that villagers reported 56 Blacks slain, but in his official report, he claimed 30 deaths. The NAACP and other civil rights organizations petitioned the US House Election Committee to investigate the killing and Black voter suppression in Florida in 1921, but it did not act.

A historical marker remembering July Perry and the other victims of the murder was unveiled in Heritage Square outside the Orange County Regional History Center on June 21, 2019.

Lynching of Jury perry
Unveiling Historical Marker for July Perry

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