Lynching of Robert Lewis
Robert Lewis | |
|---|---|
Robert Lewis, illustrated in The Tri-States Union. | |
| Died | June 2, 1892 (aged 28) |
| Cause of death | Lynched |
Robert Lewis was a 28-year-old African American man who was lynched in Port Jervis, New York on June 2, 1892. His lynching was attended by what the local newspaper reported was a mob of 2,000 people, and may have inspired Stephen Crane's novella The Monster.
Lewis was accused by the mob of assaulting a white woman, Lena McMahon, in an incident by the Neversink River, after she had possibly been meeting with her estranged suitor, a white man named Peter Foley.