Remembering the Lives of Elias, Elmer, and Isaac
June 15th, 2020 marks the 100-year commemoration of Minnesota’s own egregious Duluth lynchings and the loss of three innocent lives.
On the evening of June 14th, Elias Clayton, Elmer Jackson, and Isaac McGhie were among several in Duluth as circus employees. Two young adults named Irene Tusken and James Sullivan were at the circus and reported being held at gunpoint by six Black men. Irene and James claimed Irene was also raped during this time. The next morning James Sullivan’s father issued a rape charge on behalf of Irene. Six Black men were jailed by 7:00am and by 5:00pm a crowd had gathered outside the jail. With rumors circulating that Irene had died from the assault, the crowd reached upwards of 10,000 members by 9:00pm. By 11:30pm the mob broke into the jail and removed all six men. Against the protests of some community members, the mob beat and hung Elias, Elmer, and Isaac off a light pole. The well known photograph of the lynchers surrounding the three murdered men was sold as postcards.
While thirty-seven indictments were issued to those from the lynch mob, no one was ever convicted for murder.
Though various testimonies of the rape have since offered conflicting details and the physician’s examination on the 15th showed zero signs of assault, Irene never withdrew the accusation or even made mention of the event throughout the rest of her life. Mike Tusken, current Duluth Police deputy chief, and great-nephew to Irene, was unaware of his family connection to the lynchings until his thirties. Mason’s case may be looked at once more this year and many hope for a posthumous pardon.
In 2003, the Clayton Jackson McGhie Memorial was completed. Twelve years later the Equal Justice Initiative presented Lynching in America: Confronting the Legacy of Racial Terror. In 2018 EJI completed the National Memorial for Peace and Justice in Montgomery. Clayton, Jackson, and McGhie are represented on a marker for Minnesota, that will ultimately be returned to Duluth (see below).
Transform Minnesota believes there is significant value in the work organizations like CJMM and EJI are engaged in to remember and dignify each life lost to lynching. We also believe that in acknowledging and grieving the historical and present sin of racism in our nation, the Church can begin to serve as a place of racial harmony and justice.
Click here for more information on and/or to purchase the CJM curriculum.
Click here for more information about the Duluth Lynchings.
Click here for more information about the Equal Justice Initiative’s National Memorial for Peace and Justice, or join us on a Sankofa Journey and visit the memorial.
“Duluth Lynchings.” Minnesota Historical Society, www.mnhs.org/duluthlynchings/.