Joseph Vermilion was a 27-year-old white man[1] lynched December 3, 1889 for the crime of arson in Upper Marlboro, Maryland.[2]

Vermillion had been jailed in Upper Marlboro for a series of arsons involving barns filled with tobacco and houses in Prince George's County.[3] At 2:30am, a band of masked men broke into the jail, overpowered the jailkeeper, and left with Vermillion.[3]

Vermillion was dragged to the "iron bridge just between the town and the railroad depot"[4] and hanged.[3] His body was left hanging from the bridge until the coroner's investigation.[3]

That same bridge was used 5 years later in another lynching, of Stephen Williams, by a similar band of masked men.[4]

References

  1. ""LYNCHING OF a FIREBUG" the Evening Star, December 3, 1889". 24 April 2016.
  2. "Joe Vermilion Lynched in Upper Marlboro, December 3, 1889". Biographical Series. Maryland State Archives. 11 December 2013. pp. MSA SC 3520-13738. Retrieved 12 May 2015.
  3. 1 2 3 4 "Joe Vermillion's Fate: Lynched at Upper Marlboro by a Band of Masked Men". Baltimore Sun. 4 December 1889. Retrieved 12 May 2015.
  4. 1 2 "State of Maryland: Lynching of Stephen Williams, Colored, in Prince George's County" (PDF). Baltimore Sun. 22 October 1894. Retrieved 12 May 2015.
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