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Fact #59127

When:

Short story:

James H. Wilson, cornettist with Richards And Pringles Famous Georgia Minstrels, is shot and seriously injured while in the orchestra pit during a performance in New Madrid, Missouri, USA. Shortly after, fellow bandsman Louis Wright is lynched for having insulted a white man.

Full article:

When The Richards And Pringles company had come to town and that afternoon, a few well-dressed black performers were taking a stroll when a couple of local young men began pelting them with snowballs. One of the performers cussed at them.

At the sold-out performance that night, local youths heckled the performers and at the end of the show, charged the stage. One of the minstrels fired a revolver and at once there were a half-dozen guns firing in both directions. The audience panicked but when order was restored, the only serious injury was a bullet in the leg of a performer. Members of the troupe suspected of firing weapons were taken to jail, where they were beaten.

The next evening, mask-wearing men attacked the sheriff's office. The mob singled out Louis F. Wright, a 22 year-old trombone player, as the performer who began the shooting. He was dragged from his cell and hanged from a tree at the edge of town. His body was cut down the next morning and shipped C.O.D. to his mother. No one was arrested for involvement with the murder. Wright's friends and family in Chicago raised money for a lawyer to sue the county, but nothing apparently came of it.
(Source : http://comstockhousehistory.blogspot.co.uk/2012/02/where-music-died.html)