The Silent Shore Audiobook By Charles L. Chavis Jr. cover art

The Silent Shore

The Lynching of Matthew Williams and the Politics of Racism in the Free State

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The Silent Shore

By: Charles L. Chavis Jr.
Narrated by: Korey Jackson
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About this listen

On December 4, 1931, a mob of White men in Salisbury, Maryland, lynched and set ablaze a 23-year-old Black man named Matthew Williams. His gruesome murder was part of a wave of white terrorism in the wake of the stock market crash of 1929, which exposed Black laborers to white rage.

For nearly a century, the lynching of Matthew Williams has lived in the shadows of the more well-known incidents of racial terror in the Deep South, haunting both the Eastern Shore and the state of Maryland as a whole. In The Silent Shore, Charles L. Chavis Jr. draws on his discovery of previously unreleased investigative documents to meticulously reconstruct the full story of one of the last lynchings in Maryland.

Bringing the painful truth of anti-Black violence to light, Chavis breaks the silence that surrounded Williams' death. Though Maryland lacked the notoriety for racial violence of Alabama or Mississippi, he writes, it nonetheless was the site of at least 40 spectacle lynchings after the abolition of slavery in 1864. Families of lynching victims rarely obtained any form of actual justice, but Williams’ death would have a curious afterlife: Maryland's politically ambitious Governor Albert C. Ritchie, in an attempt to position himself as a viable challenger to FDR, became one of the first governors in the United States to investigate the lynching death of a Black person. Ritchie tasked Patsy Johnson, a member of the Pinkerton detective agency and a former prizefighter, with going undercover in Salisbury and infiltrating the mob that murdered Williams. Johnson eventually befriended a young local who admitted to participating in the lynching and who also named several local law enforcement officers as ringleaders. Despite this, a grand jury, after hearing 124 witness statements, declined to indict the perpetrators. But this denial of justice galvanized Governor Ritchie’s Interracial Commission, which would become one of the pioneering forces in the early civil rights movement in Maryland.

Complicating historical narratives associated with the history of lynching in the city of Salisbury, The Silent Shore explores the immediate and lingering effect of Williams' death on the politics of racism in the United States, the Black community in Salisbury, the broader Eastern Shore, the state of Maryland, and the legacy of “modern-day lynchings”.

PLEASE NOTE: When you purchase this title, the accompanying PDF will be available in your Audible Library along with the audio.

©2021 Johns Hopkins University Press (P)2022 Recorded Books
Black & African American Racism & Discrimination State & Local United States Mississippi
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Eye-opening!

I am a transplant to the Eastern Shore, this book confirms my uneasy feelings.

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This is such an important book to read

Honestly I hope this gets turned into an action/drama movie or show that drives more people to read this book. This should be mandatory learning material for investigators, genealogists, high schoolers, law makers, and law enforcers. There's a lot of responsibility just from having read the book to have these ethical discussions in the open and to implement a reconstruction of the broken justice system. At least this book shines a floodlight on the system of silence and who is protected by it all the way to government and law enforcement echelons.

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