The lynching tree is the oldest living thing on our farm. It was here when the first white men
came and it’s still here and growing. I guess the black folks around here have always called it that. Back when I was in elementary school Reverend Amos James began calling for the tree to be destroyed as “a symbol of white oppression.” That’s when everyone started calling it the lynching tree. Before that we just called it the big oak.
That’s when my dad did a smart thing. He invited some other black preachers and the county historical society officers to the farm. Mom served iced tea and little sandwiches to them on the picnic table under the old oak tree. The tree guy from the university talked about how old it was and how much longer it could live.
Then dad talked. He talked about how a farmer has a duty to the land; to preserve it for future
generations while taking a living from it. he said that he wouldn’t allow anyone to cut down the tree because that would be a dereliction of his duty. Then he said that He didn’t think grandpa ever knew about this part of the history of the land he bought in nineteen-seventy two, that he would have been as saddened and angry about it as he was, even if that probably wasn’t as saddened and angry as the descendants of the hanged men. Then he turned toward the historical society people and said that he would like a historical marker like the ones at other places in the county at the road where it passed the oak to commemorate the lynching victims.
You could tell they didn’t like the idea. They said that it would make the county look bad; that it
would just stir up old resentments. Dad offered the first one hundred dollars for the marker and those preachers fell over one another pledging support from their churches. In the end the historical society people decided that it was better to have a plain official marker rather than one dedicated by the black citizens of the county as a couple of the preachers proposed.
It took a while but eventually a granite post with a bronze plaque appeared on the edge of the road right of way. It said:
In memory of the black men lynched on this tree
in 1831 Jonas for attempted escape and striking an overseer
In 1840 brothers Servius and Publius for possessing abolitionist tracts
In 1931 James Rupert Willers for trying to organize a tenant farmers union
The historical society people didn’t want the word black included but dad and the preachers were paying and they won.
Before that we used to sit in the shade at that table for lunch when we were picking peaches and the big oak was a favorite place for us kids to play. Now that just doesn’t seem right. The table is on the other side of the orchard. The younger kids dare each other to touch the tree but no one plays there. My friend Gary, who’s mostly Cherokee, says that his Grandfather always called it the spirit tree. He thinks we’ve all just become more sensitive to what was always there.
Dad knew that not everyone would be happy about the marker so he put a trail cam in the tree looking at it. The first guy to damage the marker was caught on camera and had to pay for the repairs along with a fine. When a group calling themselves spirit of the confederacy showed up they knew about the camera. Two guys wearing ski masks climbed over the fence to take it down. They didn’t know dad had put an alarm on the fence to ring in my bedroom. Always before it had just been an animal hitting the fence. That’s why it was one of my chores in the summer to check on the alarm. I was riding out there on my dirt bike when one of them shot at my headlight. I was not really in pistol range even if he was sober, so he missed. I drove down into the gully and called dad, then realized I should have called the police and did that before leaving the bike and sneaking home through the orchard like dad said to.
Now the alarm still rings in my bedroom but the camera is a model I can monitor from my laptop. If it’s an animal I go back to sleep. If it’s people, I wake dad and my older brother Zack. They will both stand behind the corners of the house with their deer rifles while mom calls the police. That hasn’t happened in a couple of years once word got out to the radical groups that the marker was monitored.
That’s why when the alarm went off at two a.m. last Christmas Eve I expected to see a possum or maybe a deer. What I saw was Darius Gower from my advanced calculus class wearing a dress and carrying a rope as he approached the tree. Darius is one of the smartest kids in school. He’s in more advanced classes than anyone and still is supposed to have all A’s. I heard some of the other black kids teasing him about that once, saying he was an Oreo for studying so much, but he just keeps getting A’s.
As he got closer to the tree and about to get under the camera’s field of view, he adjusted his grip on the rope. That’s when I saw the hangman’s noose. I hollared for dad as I was pulling on my jeans and shoes before heading out the door. I ran as fast I could in the dark but Darius had tied the other end of his rope to a branch and dropped off with the noose around his neck just as I got there.
I was really glad I had climbed the lynching tree so many times when I was younger. Even in the dark I reached the branch the rope was tied to easily. Being a farm kid, my Leatherman is always on my belt outside of school. It was there when I put my Jeans on and I needed it now more than ever before. When the rope proved difficult to cut I changed to the saw blade and Darius dropped to the ground.
I didn’t know what to do next. The 4-H first aid class hadn’t covered hanging victims. I pried the
noose open as gently as I could in case there was a spinal injury. Darius wasn’t breathing. I decided that I would have to do chest compressions and hope there was no serious neck injury. That’s what I was doing when dad and Zack arrived in the truck. We put a blanket over him while Zack and I traded off on the compressions until the ambulance arrived.
We didn’t learn what happened after that until late Christmas day. It was after a supper of leftovers from Christmas dinner that a strange car came down the driveway and Darius and a black couple who turned out to be his parents got out. Darius was wearing a dress again, but not the same one. Once they were inside and mom had offered coffee and cookies Mr. Gower said that Denise wanted to thank us, especially me, but she wasn’t allowed to talk much. Then Darius, who we learned was now Denise, kind of croaked out “thank you. I would have died but I didn’t need to.”
Mrs. Gower mostly talked after that. His, no her, family had known Darius was Denise for a few months. They had been working on a transition plan including consulting her cousin, Rev. James. His comments were real negative but they were going ahead anyway. Until last night’s Christmas Eve Service. Rev. Jones had called out Denise by her dead name, which is what they called her old name, and screamed in his usual preaching style that she was going to hell and her family with her for supporting such an abomination. She started crying and ran out of the church with Mrs. Gower behind her. Mr. Gower stayed behind to confront the preacher but was cut off by several deacons. Denise kept crying all the way home, running to her bedroom still in tears. Mrs. Gower said that she had been real emotional since starting on estrogen so they thought it was best to let her cry it out, having said all they could think of already in the car. Later that night she snuck out of the house and took the anchor rope from her dad’s boat.
She rode her bicycle to our place because the slave Publius who was hung on the tree was one of her ancestors. It seems that being smart runs in the family since he and Servius had taught themselves to read when it was illegal to learn. She decided that if she was going to commit suicide it would be on the lynching tree. You know the rest, except maybe that Jefferson Davis High School is about to have it’s first black female valedictorian…...If Denise doesn’t get that name changed too.
Comments
Somber and well-written
I like the narrator’s “just the facts, ma’am” style, which allows the action to do the work. A life saved is, for sure and certain, a life changed.
Emma
Thank you, Emma.
The style started from the Halloween story and I decided it still worked here.
Priorities?
Much ado about a plaque while keeping the name of the school.
The narrator mustn't get much sleep what with racists, animals and suicide attempts (OK, the last one should be in the singular).
It's the same priority
Honoring Jeff Davis and denying the realities of slavery are both part of the same sickness. They mostly get away with it because no one wants to rock the boat. The fence alarm only goes off if something fairly heavy hits it so it doesn't go off every night.
Strange Fruit
In whatever generation, whoever their target is, hatred and prejudice bear a strange and bitter crop.
And Denise was a victim of hate as surely as if she'd been lynched by the good reverend and his kind.
This powerful tale doesn't seem much like a Christmas story, until you consider the teachings of the man
whose birthday we celebrate on December 25th. Teachings that the narrator and his family exemplify
far better than folks like that nasty old preacher. And the wonderful ending, with Denise not only
surviving but triumphing fits in with what Christmas and Hanukkah are both also about: Hope.
The backstory about the tree + how its ugly history was finally acknowledged + remembered
were vital to the story and well done. All in all this was an excellent, moving, well written
piece of Southern Gothic that's extremely relevant to these dark times we're living in,
with the sudden surge of suicides committed by transgender youth; which I think
it's no coincidence correspond with the overt transphobic vitriol + the message
"There will be no place for your kind in OUR country!" being spewed
by the (soon to be...) holder of the highest office in the land.
~Merry Christmas & God Help Us, Every One- Veronica
What borders on stupidity?
Canada and Mexico.
.
My sentiments exactly
I'm listening to Billie Holliday sing that song and it is all too frightening to envision such a possibility for our community. I read an article where a small town drove a gay couple to move because the town council decided they didn't want that couple's "kind" in their village. More and more unbridled hate speech is being posted and broadcast. Accompanied by the misguided denials that this hatred exists here and now.
Love, Andrea Lena
The love of money
Veronica, Andrea The most dangerous thing I see In our current climate of fear/ignorance/hate is the way that it is being reinforced every day out of greed. Commentators draw bigger audiences, preachers and politicians more donations by pouring fuel on the flames. I believe that if there was no money in it most of the expressions of intolerance would dry up. Counteracting that is a generation of young people who mostly seem willing to accept People as they are. The audience for Fox news is heavily slanted to seniors. Maybe when my generation has passed America will be ready to truly embrace the idea of liberty and justice for all.
:Preachers
The worst kind: loud-mouthed, know-nothing blowhards.
-- Daphne Xu (a page of contents)
preachers
the best kind: standing up for justice no matter the risk.
Definitely
Definitely.
-- Daphne Xu (a page of contents)
There are such markers
There are in fact historical markers like the one in the story. And I am sure they were not erected without controversy similar to that in the story.
https://www.hmdb.org/results.asp?Search=Series&SeriesID=645
I have personally seen one of the markers listed on this page, but now I know there are many others.
The barn where Emmet Till was murdered
One of the things that went into this story was seeing a blurb about how the marker on that remote building is regularly defaced.
Billie Holiday
Sang the song "Strange Fruit" in the 1930s. It never took hold in the USA. I wonder why not. I doubt there's any feeling of shame in the perpetrators of those crimes.
Timely story, Greybeard.
Thank you Joanne
Strange Fruit was actually Billy Holiday's best selling recording. Of course it couldn't get radio play. Even as late as the nineteen-eighties a jazz DJ only agreed to play it for me because it was late at night. Actually, I agreed with him that the images were to gruesome for young children.
a better ending than I expected
having been on the edge of suicide myself, I am so grateful I am still alive, and I bet Denise is too!
a lot of people
are glad you didn't.