News

Martinsville 7’ Granted Posthumous Pardons 70 Years After Their Executions

By Death Penalty Information Center

Posted on Sep 03, 2021 | Updated on Sep 25, 2024

Virginia Governor Ralph Northam has posthu­mous­ly par­doned sev­en young Black men who were sen­tenced to death by all-white juries and exe­cut­ed in Virginia sev­en decades ago on charges of rap­ing a white woman. Following years of advo­ca­cy from fam­i­ly mem­bers and oth­er advo­cates who pushed for guber­na­to­r­i­al action, Northam announced the posthu­mous par­dons on August 31, 2021, sur­pris­ing the fam­i­ly mem­bers and advo­cates who had come to the capi­tol expect­ing to per­son­al­ly meet with the gov­er­nor to plead their case.

Northam issued sep­a­rate par­dons for each of the sev­en men (pic­tured) — Francis DeSales Grayson, Frank Hairston Jr., Howard Hairston, James Luther Hairston, Joe Henry Hampton, Booker T. Millner, and John Clabon Taylor. It was one of the best days of my life,” said Pam Hairston, who is relat­ed to sev­er­al of the men and has spent decades advo­cat­ing on their behalf.

Acknowledging that the exe­cu­tions of the men, who came to be known as the Martinsville 7,” was a prod­uct of sys­temic racism, Northam said, This is about righting wrongs.”

Rudy McCollum, a for­mer may­or of Richmond who is relat­ed to two of the men, said that “[t]his action has been long over­due for a wound for the fam­i­lies which can final­ly heal with the clo­sure of this mat­ter through the recog­ni­tion by the com­mon­wealth that these men were denied their due process under law sole­ly because of the col­or of their skin.”

The Martinsville 7 were accused of rap­ing a white woman in 1949 and inter­ro­gat­ed by police with­out the appoint­ment of legal coun­sel. Under threats that they would be released to a lynch mob, each con­fessed to involve­ment in the rape. After a suc­ces­sion of per­func­to­ry tri­als before all-white, all-male juries, each was con­vict­ed and sen­tenced to death. They were exe­cut­ed in 1951 in the largest mass exe­cu­tion for rape in U.S. history.

In a January 2021 Discussions With DPIC pod­cast, McCollum (pic­tured) told DPIC Managing Director Anne Holsinger: The pur­pose of lynch­ings, and I believe the pur­pose of even state action such as this, were to send a mes­sage to the Black com­mu­ni­ty. … This was just one more action to send a mes­sage that if you cross the line, we are going to ensure that … the entire com­mu­ni­ty rec­og­nizes that … there will be consequences.”

I’ve heard some peo­ple say, Why are we dig­ging this up?’” said Faye Holland, the exec­u­tive direc­tor of the Martinsville 7 Initiative, which has been advo­cat­ing for the par­dons. We’re not dig­ging it up. It’s been up [for] 70 years, nobody’s ever did any­thing with it.”

While these par­dons do not address the guilt of the sev­en, they serve as recog­ni­tion from the Commonwealth that these men were tried with­out ade­quate due process and received a racial­ly biased death sen­tence not sim­i­lar­ly applied to white defen­dants,” Northam’s state­ment read. We all deserve a crim­i­nal jus­tice sys­tem that is fair, equal, and gets it right — no mat­ter who you are or what you look like. I’m grate­ful to the advo­cates and fam­i­lies of the Martinsville Seven for their ded­i­ca­tion and perseverance.”

In response to the par­dons, the Virginia NAACP issued a state­ment say­ing that “[d]ecades after the Commonwealth tried and exe­cut­ed these young men with­out due process, today’s long-over­due announce­ment is a step in the right direc­tion towards justice.”

From 1900 until the U.S. Supreme Court pro­hib­it­ed the death penal­ty in 1977 for crimes in which no one was killed, Virginia exe­cut­ed 73 Black men or boys on charges of rape, attempt­ed rape, or rob­bery. In that same time peri­od, no white per­son was exe­cut­ed for any of those crimes. And in its entire his­to­ry, Virginia has nev­er exe­cut­ed any white man for rap­ing a Black woman or girl.

McCollum told DPIC, If we tru­ly want to move for­ward as a soci­ety, we need to rec­og­nize that when wrongs are com­mit­ted that they need to be cor­rect­ed. But they can’t be cor­rect­ed, unless there’s an admission.” 

DPIC exec­u­tive direc­tor Robert Dunham called the exe­cu­tions of the Martinsville 7 a man­i­fes­ta­tion of racial ter­ror lynch­ing through the legal sys­tem.” The sham tri­als of the Martinsville Seven in front of all-White, all-male juries epit­o­mized the use of the death penal­ty as a White suprema­cist instru­ment of racial oppres­sion and embod­ied the link between lynch­ing, seg­re­ga­tion, and the death penal­ty,” Dunham told UPI.

Virginia’s abo­li­tion of the death penal­ty was an his­toric event in end­ing the lega­cy of these racial injus­tices going for­ward,” Dunham said. But the case of the Martinsville 7 is impor­tant in anoth­er way — the par­don is a for­mal apol­o­gy and an acknowl­edg­ment that the lives of the peo­ple who were vic­tims of the ulti­mate racial oppres­sion, their fam­i­ly mem­bers’ lives, and the lives of every­one in the Black com­mu­ni­ty have val­ue. Their lives mat­ter. And the act of acknowl­edg­ing this mat­ters, too.”

Citation Guide
Sources

Ben Paviour, Advocates for Martinsville 7’ Celebrate Surprise Pardon From Governor, Virginia Public Media, August 31, 2021; Kristina Sgueglia, 7 Black men were exe­cut­ed for an alleged rape in 1951. Decades lat­er, they’ve been par­doned, CNN, August 31, 2021; NBC12 WWBT, This is about right­ing wrongs’: Va. gov­er­nor grants posthu­mous par­don to the Martinsville 7, Jasmine Turner, August 31, 2021; Gregory S. Schneider, Northam grants posthu­mous par­dons to the Martinsville Seven, Black men exe­cut­ed in 1951 for rape, Washington Post, August 31, 2021; Bill Atkinson, Virginia Governor par­dons Martinsville Seven’ Black men exe­cut­ed for rape 70 years ago, The Progress-Index, August 31, 2021; Danielle Haynes, Virginia Gov. Northam par­dons Martinsville Seven, UPI, August 312021.

Read the exec­u­tive order par­don­ing Francis DeSales Grayson and Governor Ralph Northam’s state­ment accom­pa­ny­ing the par­dons of the Martinsville 7.