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Shubuta in Clarke County, Mississippi — The American South (East South Central)
 

The Howze Sisters

— Mississippi Freedom Trail —

 
 
The Howze Sisters Marker image. Click for full size.
Photographed by Mark Hilton, October 23, 2025
1. The Howze Sisters Marker
Inscription.
On December 20, 1918, a White mob seized two Black sisters, Maggie and Alma Howze, and two Black brothers, Major and Andrew Clark, from the Shubuta jail and hanged them from a river bridge one mile north of town. The quadruple lynching, followed twenty-four years later by the lynching of two teenaged boys, Ernest Green and Charlie Lang, at the same "hanging bridge," accelerated a national NAACP anti-lynching campaign underscoring the threats of racial violence to Black women and children.

Howze Sisters Maggie and Alma Howze were two of six Black victims killed at the nearby "Hanging Bridge" during the first half of the twentieth century. These lynchings occurred at important moments in the Black struggle for freedom and equality. The victims, and the site of their killings, became powerful symbols in the campaign against racial violence and hatred in Mississippi and beyond. These killings and the investigations that followed connected this rural community to a national civil rights struggle.

The Howze sisters' fate reflected the enormous risks faced by Black Mississippians and particularly Black women—who were deemed a threat to white control. Just before Christmas in 1918, local authorities charged Maggie and Alma, along with Major and Andrew Clark, in the murder of their white employer. Several days
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later, a mob seized the four suspects, all in their late teens and early twenties, and hanged them from a local river bridge. Local whites alleged that the four Black laborers conspired to murder their boss over a wage dispute, but an undercover investigation launched by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) uncovered a more complicated story. Multiple sources alleged that the murdered employer had sexually exploited the Howze sisters and that both women were pregnant at the time of their deaths.

The 1918 Hanging Bridge killings figured prominently in the NAACP's landmark report, Thirty Years of Lynching, released in 1919 as the organization convened a National Conference on Lynching. In the wake of a war that President Woodrow Wilson had claimed would "make the world safe for Democracy," Black activists memorialized the Howze sisters and other mob victims to pressure government officials to make America safe for them.

Although the anti-lynching campaign struggled to compel legal and legislative action, the response to a 1942 double lynching at the Hanging Bridge revealed the impact of this pressure campaign. After white vigilantes murdered Black teenagers Ernest Green and Charlie Lang, the U.S. Department of Justice authorized the first federal lynching investigation in Mississippi history. While the federal government
The Howze Sisters Marker image. Click for full size.
Photographed by Mark Hilton, October 23, 2025
2. The Howze Sisters Marker
failed to bring the killers to justice, civil rights activists again contrasted America's lofty war rhetoric with its failures to protect its own citizens from racial abuse. The memory of lynching victims served as a source of motivation, but the Hanging Bridge stood as symbol of intimidation as the civil rights movement gained momentum in the 1960s. Despite the risks they continued to face, local Black women and youth participated in civil rights activities and antipoverty programs that challenged the local status quo. While they continued to endure harassment and intimidation, they defied their community's violent legacy in pursuit of a better future. As in previous generations, Black women played a central role in the struggle for political equality and economic opportunity in rural Mississippi and beyond.
 
Erected 2025 by the Mississippi Development Authority Tourism Division.
 
Topics. This historical marker is listed in these topic lists: African AmericansCivil Rights. A significant historical date for this entry is December 20, 1918.
 
Location. 31° 51.635′ N, 88° 41.843′ W. Marker is in Shubuta, Mississippi, in Clarke County. It is at the intersection of West Eucutta Street and Station Street, on the right when traveling east on West Eucutta Street. Located near the Red Water Artesian Well. Touch for map. Marker is in this post office area: Shubuta MS 39360, United States of America. Touch for directions.

Regionally, this marker is in East Mississippi. It is also in the American South and specifically in the Deep South. Globally, it is in North America, a Gulf of Mexico state, the Western Hemisphere, the Western World, and the Anglosphere. Historically, it finds itself in what was once the territory of the Mississippian Culture, one of the Confederate States of America, and the Antebellum South.

Other nearby markers.
Closeup of photos & captions. image. Click for full size.
Photographed by Mark Hilton, October 23, 2025
3. Closeup of photos & captions.
At least 8 other markers are within 14 miles of this marker, measured as the crow flies: Shubuta United Methodist Church (about 800 feet away, measured in a direct line); St. John Church and School (approx. 7.3 miles away); Clinch Gray (approx. 8.7 miles away); Gray Family Cemetery (approx. 8.7 miles away); Clarke County War Memorial (approx. 12½ miles away); Clarke County Confederate Soldiers Monument (approx. 12½ miles away); First Baptist Church (approx. 13.1 miles away); First Auto Bank (approx. 13.2 miles away).
 
Also see . . .  Howze Sisters Freedom Trail marker unveiling. (Submitted on October 24, 2025, by Mark Hilton of Montgomery, Alabama.)
 
The Howze Sisters Marker image. Click for full size.
Photographed by Mark Hilton, October 23, 2025
4. The Howze Sisters Marker
 
 
Credits. This page was last revised on October 27, 2025. It was originally submitted on October 24, 2025, by Mark Hilton of Montgomery, Alabama. This page has been viewed 109 times since then and 36 times this year. Last updated on October 26, 2025, by Gianluca De Fazio of Harrisonburg, Virginia. Photos:   1, 2, 3, 4. submitted on October 24, 2025, by Mark Hilton of Montgomery, Alabama. • Devry Becker Jones was the editor who published this page.
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Jun. 11, 2026