
Files show investigators suspected governor in unsolved 1946 lynching
By GREG BLUESTEIN | Associated Press
MONROE, Ga. -- Newly released files from the lynching of two black couples
more than 60 years ago contain a disturbing revelation: The FBI investigated
suspicions that a three-term governor of Georgia sanctioned the murders to
sway rural white voters during a tough election campaign.
The 3,725 pages obtained by The Associated Press under the Freedom of
Information Act do not make conclusions about the still-unsolved killings at
Moore's Ford Bridge. But they raise the possibility that Eugene Talmadge's
politics may have been a factor when a white mob dragged the four from a
car, tied them to a tree and opened fire.
"I'm not surprised ... historians over the years have concluded the
violently racist tone of his 1946 campaign may have been indirectly
responsible for the violence that came at Moore's Ford," said Robert Pratt,
a University of Georgia history professor who has studied the case. "It's
fair to say he's one of the most virulently racist governors the state has
ever had."
Talmadge, who died just months after his 1946 election to a fourth term,
dominated Georgia politics in the 1930s and 1940s with a mix of racism and
pocketbook populism.He came under FBI scrutiny because of a visit he made to
the north Georgia town of Monroe two days before the Democratic
gubernatorial primary and a day after a highly charged racial incident
there, a fight in which a black sharecropper stabbed and severely wounded a
white farmer. The sharecropper was one of the four people who would later be
lynched.
In a report sent to FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover, the agent in charge of the
investigation said Talmadge met with George Hester, the brother of the
stabbed farmer. Citing an unconfirmed witness statement, the agent said
Talmadge offered immunity to anyone "taking care of negro."
While the agent dismissed the notion of Talmadge's involvement as
"unbelievable," he said it still merited investigation. Other memos raised
suspicions that state employees could even have been active participants in
the lynching.
FBI agents took note of the political stakes. Talmadge faced a tough
challenge in the Democratic primary _ which was then tantamount to the
general election _ and Walton County was still up for grabs.
Talmadge eventually won the county by roughly 200 votes, with overwhelming
support from the Blasingame District where the Hester family lived.
In the FBI memo to Hoover, the agent cited the opinion of Monroe assistant
police chief Ed Williamson, who had spotted Talmadge meeting in front of the
Walton County Courthouse with the brother of the stabbed farmer.
"The opinion on Mr. Williamson's part was that this conversation between
Talmadge and Hester probably resulted in the Blasingame District going very
definitely in the Talmadge column," read the memo.
Votes from small rural counties played a crucial role in Georgia's elections
then because primaries were decided by a "county unit system," similar to
the electoral college, which minimized the impact of urban centers.
In fact, Talmadge's challenger, James V. Carmichael, actually received the
most popular votes but lost the election because of Talmadge's strong
support in rural areas.
Today, Talmage is remembered with a statue on the grounds of the Capitol.
His name is also on the steel bridge spanning Savannah's harbor.
"I don't think my grandfather's involved in any lynching," said Herman
Talmadge Jr., who said he was 4 at the time. "If y'all are that far off, I
feel sorry for you."
The investigation of Talmadge began in the months before his death in
December 1946 and it appears he was never interviewed. The allegation of his
possible involvement was not included in the FBI's official report, but was
sent to Hoover in a letter "as it may be of some possible future interest."
The lynchings of Roger and Dorothy Malcom, and George and Mae Murray Dorsey
on July 25, 1946, came eight days after the election and followed weeks of
simmering tensions.
There were rumors that George Dorsey, an Army veteran, had secretly been
dating a white woman _ a taboo in the segregated South. And the town's white
establishment was enraged with Roger Malcom, who was imprisoned after
stabbing white farmer Barney Hester.
Malcom was waiting in jail when white farmer Loy Harrison paid $600 to bail
him out.
Harrison said he was driving Malcom, his wife and the other couple home,
when he was ambushed by a white mob that surrounded his car near the Moore's
Ford Bridge. As many as 30 people converged on the vehicle and pulled out
the two couples, dragged them down a nearby trail and tied them to trees.
Then the mob fired three volleys of bullets at the
couples, leaving their dead bodies slumped behind in the dirt. One of the
victims, Dorothy Malcom, was seven months' pregnant.
An outraged President Truman dispatched FBI agents to Monroe, about 45 miles
east of Atlanta. But the local community _ both white and black _ clammed
up.
White farmers were described by the FBI as "extremely clannish, not well
educated and highly sensitive to 'outside' criticism." Harrison, for one,
told police he couldn't identify any of the participants.
Black families, who often sharecropped on white farms, were "frightened and
even terrified" when approached by FBI agents. One farmer fled into a cotton
field and had to be chased down, eventually telling an investigator he had
been warned not to talk.
Eventually, the FBI identified 55 possible suspects, including George
Hester, but no one was ever arrested. After a federal grand jury in December
1946 could not identify any members of the mob, the FBI retreated from the
case.
The case grew colder for years, until 1991 when Clinton Adams came forward,
claiming he saw the lynching unfold when he was a 10-year-old while hiding
in the bushes near the bridge.
While expressing some hope at the time, an FBI memo pointed to a nagging
problem _ "finding anyone who is left alive to prosecute."
The FBI previously released a 500-page summary of the case file, but the
full file was only released this week after the AP appealed to the Justice
Department for more than two years.
The Moore's Ford lynching is among about a dozen other unsolved cases from
the civil rights era that the FBI has recently reopened but the bureau
refused to comment on the ongoing investigation.
Local activists weren't shocked to learn that agents investigated Talmadge
and the possibility of state employees being involved.
"It would not surprise me if state officials at all levels were implicated,
if not in the actual killings, at least in the cover-up that followed," said
Rich Rusk, secretary of the Moore's Ford Memorial Committee. "The conspiracy
of silence wasn't just the fault of the local farmers. It was the entire
culture, from the top down."
The case file says more than 10,000 interviews were conducted and among the
evidence were dozens of slugs, samples of torn shirts and pieces of rope.
Investigators never detailed any proof of state involvement. They also found
little hard evidence linking any of the suspects to the murders.
Local activists haven't given up hope. Some still search for aging
witnesses. To drum up interest in the case, a protest march is held each
April and a re-enactment is staged on the anniversary each July.
Bobby Howard, a local activist who's roamed the neighborhoods for decades in
search of possible witnesses, said the key is getting past the crippling
fear that still grips many in the community.
"They had a right to feel the way that they did," he said. "It's sad that
today, it's still the same way, with all that fear in these people."









|
|
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
|
Buy Your Copy Of ASO at The Following Locations:
Americus
Leslie
Buena Vista
Smithville |