In 1915, as Leo Frank’s corpse dangled above their heads, the brightest stars of Georgia’s business and political class celebrated their handiwork. So did farmers and shopkeepers and cooks. The ...
A Marietta rabbi is planning to lead a gathering of lawyers and judges to mark the 100th anniversary of the lynching of Leo Frank on the ground where it happened. A Marietta rabbi is planning to lead ...
Gov. John Slaton knew his decision to commute the death sentence of Georgia's most notorious prisoner in July 1915 would be controversial. Jewish factory superintendent Leo Frank, convicted in the ...
(JTA) — Kingsley Wilson, the deputy press secretary at the Pentagon, last year tweeted a neo-Nazi talking point about Jewish lynching victim Leo Frank. The post came amid a flood of far-right social ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results