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These 7 Black Men Were Executed For An Alleged Rape. Now, They Have Been Pardoned

Actual newspaper clipping from the infamous Martinsville 7 rape case, in which 7 black males convicted of raping a white woman were sentenced to death in 1949. They were executed in 1951 after exhausting their appeals.
Dan H.
/
Flickr
Actual newspaper clipping from the infamous Martinsville 7 rape case, in which 7 black males convicted of raping a white woman were sentenced to death in 1949. They were executed in 1951 after exhausting their appeals.

Nearly 70 years after their unjust executions, Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam granted posthumous pardons Tuesday to seven Black men known as the "Martinsville Seven," who were executed for the alleged rape of a white woman in 1951 in Martinsville, Va.

Northam granted the pardons after a meeting with the descendants of the Martinsville Seven. He said the pardons do not address whether the men were guilty, but rather serve "as recognition from the Commonwealth" that they were tried without adequate due process.

"This is about righting wrongs," Northam said in a news release. "We all deserve a criminal justice system that is fair, equal, and gets it right—no matter who you are or what you look like. While we can't change the past, I hope today's action brings them some small measure of peace."

The history behind the Martinsville Seven

Seven Black men were executed in February 1951 over the alleged rape of a white woman, Ruby Stroud Floyd, in 1949. They were Frank Hairston Jr., 18, Booker T. Millner, 19, Francis DeSales Grayson, 37, Howard Lee Hairston, 18, James Luther Hairston, 20, Joe Henry Hampton, 19, and John Claybon Taylor, 21.

Floyd said 13 Black men raped her on the evening of Jan. 8, 1949, as she passed through a predominately Black neighborhood.

Floyd identified both Grayson and Hampton as her rapists, but she had trouble identifying the others, according to BlackPast.org, an online reference center for Black history.

As temperatures drop below freezing, demonstrators march in front of the White House in Washington in 1951, in what they said was an effort to persuade President Harry Truman to halt execution of seven Black men sentenced to death in Virginia on charges of raping a white woman.
Henry Burroughs / AP
/
AP
As temperatures drop below freezing, demonstrators march in front of the White House in Washington in 1951, in an effort to persuade President Harry Truman to halt execution of seven Black men sentenced to death in Virginia on charges of raping a white woman.

After they were interrogated by local police officers, the Martinsville Seven initially confessed to committing or witnessing the crime. All seven men were charged with rape.

Their trials and electrocutions became a controversial issue shortly after the men were arrested.

The seven men were convicted and swiftly sentenced to death by juries made up of only white men, Northam's office said.

Not all of the defendants were able to read the confessions they signed, and none of them had a lawyer with them as they were questioned.

Nearly two decades after their executions, the Supreme Court ruled that capital punishment for rape was cruel and unusual punishment.

The death penalty in Virginia

Studies have shown that a defendant is more than three times as likely to be sentenced to death if the victim of a crime is white, compared with when the victim is Black.

Prior to abolishing the death penalty earlier this year, the commonwealth had executed nearly 1,400 people since 1608. All 45 of the prisoners executed for rape from 1908 to 1951 in Virginia were Black men, according to the governor's office.

A bed is seen through the bars in one of the holding cells near the death chamber at Greensville Correctional Center in Jarratt, Va., earlier this year.
Steve Helber / AP
/
AP
A bed is seen through the bars in one of the holding cells near the death chamber at Greensville Correctional Center in Jarratt, Va., earlier this year. The state no longer allows the death penalty.

Northam has granted 604 pardons during his time in office. His office said that's more pardons than the past nine governors combined.

"Pardons should not have to be a part of the process to ensure a fair and equitable justice system, but unfortunately that's been the case for far too long," Virginia Secretary of the Commonwealth Kelly Thomasson said in a release.

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Jonathan Franklin
Jonathan Franklin is a digital reporter on the News desk covering general assignment and breaking national news.
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