Error loading page.
Try refreshing the page. If that doesn't work, there may be a network issue, and you can use our self test page to see what's preventing the page from loading.
Learn more about possible network issues or contact support for more help.

The Child in the Electric Chair

The Execution of George Junius Stinney Jr. and the Making of a Tragedy in the American South

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

"An unsettling yet important historical excavation and true-crime narrative."—Kirkus Reviews [starred review]

The tragic story of the killing of 14-year-old George Junius Stinney Jr., the youngest person executed in the United States during the twentieth century

At 7:30 a.m. on June 16, 1944, George Junius Stinney Jr. was escorted by four guards to the death chamber. Wearing socks but no shoes, the 14-year-old Black boy walked with his Bible tucked under his arm. The guards strapped his slight, five-foot-one-inch frame into the electric chair. His small size made it difficult to affix the electrode to his right leg and the face mask, which was clearly too large, fell to the floor when the executioner flipped the switch. That day, George Stinney became, and today remains, the youngest person executed in the United States during the twentieth century.

How was it possible, even in Jim Crow South Carolina, for a child to be convicted, sentenced to death, and executed based on circumstantial evidence in a trial that lasted only a few hours? Through extensive archival research and interviews with Stinney's contemporaries—men and women alive today who still carry distinctive memories of the events that rocked the small town of Alcolu and the entire state—Eli Faber pieces together the chain of events that led to this tragic injustice.

The first book to fully explore the events leading to Stinney's death, The Child in the Electric Chair offers a compelling narrative with a meticulously researched analysis of the world in which Stinney lived—the era of lynching, segregation, and racist assumptions about Black Americans. Faber explains how a systemically racist system, paired with the personal ambitions of powerful individuals, turned a blind eye to human decency and one of the basic tenets of the American legal system that individuals are innocent until proven guilty.

As society continues to grapple with the legacies of racial injustice, the story of George Stinney remains one that can teach us lessons about our collective past and present. By ably placing the Stinney case into a larger context, Faber reveals how this case is not just a travesty of justice locked in the era of the Jim Crow South but rather one that continues to resonate in our own time.

A foreword is provided by Carol Berkin, Presidential Professor of History Emerita at Baruch College at the City University of New York and author of several books including Civil War Wives: The Lives and Times of Angelina Grimke Weld, Varina Howell Davis, and Julia Dent Grant.

  • Creators

  • Publisher

  • Release date

  • Formats

    Kindle restrictions
  • Languages

  • Reviews

    • Booklist

      May 1, 2021
      This account has heartbreak written all over it, from the 1944 bludgeoning murder of two young white girls in the tiny South Carolina town of Alcolu to the arrest, conviction (after 10 minutes' deliberation by an all-white jury), and death by electric chair of 14-year-old African American George Stinney Jr., the youngest person executed in the U.S. in the twentieth century. In between, potentially exonerating evidence was ignored by Stinney's defense team; the NAACP responded only feebly to the notorious case; and ambitious governor Olin D. Johnston, who was eyeing a U.S. Senate seat that he would hold for 20 years, proved deaf to a massive nationwide effort to commute the boy's sentence. In 2014, ruling that the boy had not received a fair trial, a circuit court judge vacated the conviction. Faber, a professor of history at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, died in 2020 before finishing this manuscript--Carol Berkin contributes the final chapter--but he leaves a gripping, tirelessly researched account of this significant case, and a cautionary tale that still resonates today.

      COPYRIGHT(2021) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Kirkus

      Starred review from May 1, 2021
      A compact, jolting, account of the shameful execution of a 14-year-old Black boy in the Jim Crow South. Beyond the riveting narrative, this book has a poignant backstory: Faber pursued it as both academic study and passion project, ultimately racing a cancer diagnosis to complete it. Before his death in 2020, he tasked colleague and friend Carol Berkin with shepherding it to publication. "I knew Eli had been right," writes Berkin in the foreword. "I had in my keeping an important story that needed to be shared." The story of George Junius Stinney Jr., convicted of murdering two young girls in a South Carolina mill town, is puzzling and tragic. "Bitter memories of this double murder and the execution that followed...endured for decades," not least because a desultory investigation and arguably coerced confession leave open the question of culpability. Faber develops the story meticulously, with rewarding detours into the odd "company town" of Alcolu, where a sternly benevolent founding family dominated life, encouraging relatively benign treatment of Black citizens prior to the murder; and the horrific role of lynching as social control in the South. Recalling a memory from Stinney's brother, the author writes that "until things unraveled after the murder of two White girls, overt tension between the races did not exist." When the girls were found murdered, a state constable received a tip from an unnamed "colored man" that George Stinney was "the meanest" boy in the town. Although he'd been in sight of family members the whole day, Stinney's guilt was quickly presumed. As people heard about his purported confession, "rumors of rape quickly destroyed the relative civility between the races that had long defined Alcolu." A lynching was narrowly averted. Faber ably documents Stinney's perfunctory trial and quick march toward execution, giving a rich sense of the daily, pervasive brutality of the Jim Crow South. An unsettling yet important historical excavation and true-crime narrative.

      COPYRIGHT(2021) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

Formats

  • Kindle Book
  • OverDrive Read
  • PDF ebook
Kindle restrictions

Languages

  • English

Loading