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- Leo Frank - Wikipedia
Leo Max Frank (April 17, 1884 – August 17, 1915) was an American lynching victim wrongly convicted of the murder of 13-year-old Mary Phagan, an employee in a factory in Atlanta, Georgia, where he was the superintendent Frank's trial, conviction, and unsuccessful appeals attracted national attention
- The ADL and KKK, born of the same murder, 100 years ago
Thirteen-year old Mary Phagan was beaten and strangled in the basement of her former place of employment, an Atlanta pencil factory, on April 26, 1913 The factory was managed by 29-year-old Leo
- Leo Frank | American Factory Superintendent Lynching Victim - Britannica
Leo Frank was an American factory superintendent whose conviction in 1913 for the murder of Mary Phagan resulted in his lynching His trial and death shaped the nascent Anti-Defamation League (ADL) and spurred the first resurgence of the Ku Klux Klan (KKK)
- Little Mary Phagan, Leo Frank, Jim Conley, 1913 Murder
This book is the great work of my lifetime, a compelling personal journey, a tale of the shocking sex murder and abuse of my great-aunt, 13-year-old Mary Phagan — and it’s the story that the ADL and other shadowy forces don’t want you to read
- ADL – The Leo Frank Case Research Library
In this year of 2024, on the 111th anniversary of the murder of 13-year-old Mary Phagan by Jewish sex killer Leo Frank, we present this article, based on a piece from the alternative media
- Seeking Justice: The Pardon of Leo Frank - ADL
That courageous decision in June 1915, enraged many and sparked riots in the streets Two months later, a mob of armed men kidnapped Frank from his prison cell, drove him over 100 miles to Marietta (Mary Phagan’s hometown) and lynched him
- Lynching of Leo Frank - Trial, Murder Legacy | HISTORY
Thirty-one-year-old Leo Frank, a Jewish factory superintendent, was kidnapped from prison in Atlanta, Georgia and lynched by an antisemitic mob on August 17, 1915 The attack, which is the only
- The Lynching of Leo Frank - Crime Library
The Case of Leo Frank began with the murder of thirteen-year-old Mary Phagan in the basement of a pencil factory in Atlanta, Georgia on April 26, 1913, and apparently ended on August 17, 1915 with the lynching of Leo Frank But the story did not end with his death
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