Of all the abandoned places in Mississippi, not many have a past that is quite as sordid as the Hanging Bridge in Shubuta. As the name implies, the bridge was the setting for several gruesome lynchings. Remotely located and closed for quite some time, most people have no idea about the horrifying history of this abandoned bridge in Mississippi that now leads nowhere.
The infamous Hanging Bridge in Shubuta is a railroad bridge that spans the Chickasawhay River. It was built in 1909 and added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1988.
Out of use for years now, the abandoned bridge is hiding at the end of a dirt road on private property.
According to records, six documented lynchings took place on the bridge. It was first used as an execution ground in 1918 when four African Americans - two brothers and two sisters, both of whom were pregnant, were hung from the bridge's rails.
An angry mob hanged the brothers, Major and Andrew Clark, and sisters, Maggie and Alma Howze, after their white boss turned up dead.
When the NAACP’s request for an investigation was denied, they began their own research and sent civil rights activist Walter White to Shubuta. Because White was a "fair-skinned" African American, he was able to "pass as white" and would go on to investigate lynchings all over the South.
In October of 1942, the bridge claimed the lives of two more African Americans — Ernest Green and Charlie Lang, both 14.
The two teens were charged with attempted rape and held in the Quitman jail. Not long after their arrest, a mob of "irate, unidentified men" forced their way into the jail.
Once inside, the mob gained access to the teens’ cell and abducted them. To this day, there are contradicting reports regarding whether or not the group forcefully took the keys from the guard or if he willingly handed them over.
Local authorities later found the bodies of Green and Lang hanging from the bridge. News of the boys’ hanging made national news and earned Shubuta the nickname "the nation’s new lynching capital."
A letter written by the NAACP’s Youth Secretary stated that the bodies of both boys were so mutilated, their families refused to accept the corpses. Eventually, Green and Lang were laid to rest just outside of a local "white cemetery."
A little over a decade later, civil rights workers began arriving in Mississippi as part of the Freedom Summer movement. By this time, the bridge had been dubbed a "monument to Judge Lynch," with its grim past well known.
Learn more about the dark history of the Hanging Bridge in Shubuta in the video from YouTube user Marvin Carter:
So, did you know about this abandoned bridge in Mississippi? Have you ever been near this historic and tragic place? Share your experiences in the comments section.
The abandoned bridge to nowhere in Mississippi isn't the only bridge in the state worth exploring. Did you know there's only one covered bridge in Mississippi? It's totally worth exploring!
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