MARYLAND, MY MARYLAND
MARYLAND, MY MARYLAND
Although the end of Prohibition has brought about one civil liberty, many individual rights were still being trampled — namely, those of the American Negro. Throughout the 1930s, the Ku Klux Klan regrouped and public lynching increased, but the atrocities remained unchecked by the Roosevelt Administration. In 1931 and 1932, two horrific lynchings on Maryland's Eastern Shore prompted Mencken to write some of his strongest columns against the subject, resulting in the Baltimore Sun being censored and Mencken himself receiving death threats. Not to be deterred, Mencken joined the NAACP to campaign for the Costigan-Wagner Bill to put an end to lynching.
Keywords: lynching, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Ku Klux Klan, Eastern Shore, Edmund Duffy, NAACP, Costigan-Wagner Bill
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