Jim Crow · Voting · Florida · Election Day Terror

The Ocoee Massacre: Election Day, 1920

November 2, 1920 was the first Election Day since the 19th Amendment — women could vote. July Perry, a prosperous Black farmer in Ocoee, Florida, attempted to exercise the right guaranteed him by the 15th Amendment, ratified fifty years earlier. He was turned away from the polls. When a white mob came to his home that night, he defended himself. The mob burned every Black-owned structure in Ocoee, killed an estimated 30 to 60 Black residents, lynched Perry, and expelled the entire Black community from the town.

DateNovember 2, 1920
LocationOcoee, Orange County, Florida
Death toll30–60+ Black residents killed
StatusLive
The argument

The 15th Amendment was ratified in 1870. For most Black voters in the South, it was effectively meaningless for nearly a century — not because the right wasn't there on paper, but because the cost of attempting to exercise it was death. Ocoee is one of the clearest expressions of that dynamic in American history: a man tried to vote, defended himself against a mob that came to kill him for it, and the response was the complete destruction of his community. The year 1920 is also notable: the same Election Day that the 19th Amendment extended the vote to women, Black voters in Ocoee — men and women — were being slaughtered for attempting to use a right they'd been guaranteed fifty years earlier. The 15th Amendment without enforcement was not a right. It was a target.

Era 1
Ocoee, Florida, and the 1920 Election
1

July Perry was a successful farmer and labor contractor in Ocoee, Orange County, Florida. He owned land — a significant achievement in a state where white landowners had long worked to prevent Black land ownership — and contracted other workers for citrus grove labor. He was, in other words, a Black man who had built independent economic power, which made him a particular target for white intimidation.

The 1920 presidential election was the first in which Black women could legally vote in addition to Black men. Efforts by Black community leaders — including the NAACP — to register Black voters in Ocoee and surrounding Orange County had produced a heightened awareness of Black voting rights. White Democrats in the county had responded with voter registration challenges, poll taxes, and physical intimidation at the courthouse.

On November 2, Perry attempted to vote. He was turned away by election officials who claimed irregularities with his registration. He returned home. That night, a white mob came to his house.

2

When the armed white mob arrived at Perry's home, he was armed and defended himself. Two white men were killed in the exchange. This defense — which in any neutral legal context would have been clearly justified — became the pretext for the destruction of the entire Black community of Ocoee.

Through the night and into the following day, the mob burned every Black-owned home, church, and business in Ocoee. The Ocoee Methodist Episcopal Church — the center of community life — was burned. Families fled into the orange groves and swamps. July Perry was captured by the mob, tortured, and lynched. His body was hung on the road as a warning. The exact number killed is unknown; local testimony collected decades later suggests the death toll was far higher than official accounts acknowledged, with bodies disposed of in various ways to prevent counting.

~500Black residents of Ocoee before the massacre — the entire community was expelled
25+Black homes, churches, and businesses burned or destroyed in Ocoee
40+ yrsPeriod before Black residents began returning to Ocoee — the community was absent for generations
3

The Ocoee Massacre received almost no national press coverage in 1920. The same newspapers that reported extensively on the 19th Amendment and women's voting rights that Election Day made no mention of the massacre. Local Florida newspapers reported it briefly, framed as a "race riot" instigated by Black residents. No one was prosecuted for any killing, arson, or property theft.

The land that Black residents had owned — including Perry's acreage — was acquired by white neighbors at pennies on the dollar or simply occupied without any legal transaction. The town of Ocoee remained almost entirely white for decades. The massacre was not acknowledged in any official capacity until the Florida legislature held a hearing in 1994. A formal legislative apology was passed in 2018.

"The worst instance of Election Day violence in American history."

— Designation given to the Ocoee Massacre by historians studying 20th-century voter suppression, as documented in the Florida Senate's 2018 official findings

Ocoee today is a suburb of Orlando — a majority-minority city whose Black population has returned, though without any of the property or wealth that was stolen in 1920. The 2018 apology contained no reparations provision.

The chain of causation

15th Amendment — Black men guaranteed vote (1870)
1870
July Perry — prosperous Black landowner — tries to vote in Ocoee
Nov 2, 1920
Turned away from polls — mob attacks his home that night
Nov 2, 1920
Perry defends himself — 2 white men killed — entire Black community burned out
Nov 2–3, 1920
Perry lynched — land seized — Black Ocoee expelled for 40+ years
1920–1960s
Florida apology — no reparations — land never returned
2018

He tried to vote. They burned his town.

The 15th Amendment gave July Perry the right to vote. Fifty years after its passage, he tried to use it and was killed for it. His community was expelled. His land was taken. No one was ever prosecuted. Florida's formal apology came 98 years later and contained no reparations. This is what "voting rights" looked like in the South for nearly a century after the Civil War.

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