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Overview"A vigilante group called The White Caps of Sevier County organized in Sevier County, Tennessee, in the early 1890s. Their original mission was an expression of community consensus, meant to enforce community standards of conduct and behavior when a group of prostitutes arrived in a rural, mountainous community in that county - Emert's Cove/Copeland Creek. The original White Caps were believed to have been a group of wives and a couple of men, who threatened the prostitutes with a whipping if they didn't leave. The prostitutes didn't leave, and the White Caps made good on their promise. It is believed the postmaster of Emert's Cove, John Sam Springs, organized another vigilante group, The Blue Bills, to counter the White Caps. Springs was evidently successful in eradicating the White Caps in Emert's Cove, but they soon metastasized throughout the rest of the county's civil districts. A group of rogue Justices of the Peace aligned with the wealthiest, most prominent landowners in Sevier County, and they soon organized White Cap gangs. As a result, ""crimes, feuds, and vendettas raged on unchecked in Sevier County in the name of a non-existent consensus that circumvented justice and destroyed the 'fragile social equilibrium' that insured honor within the community."" Justices of the Peace dismissed minor cases against White Caps, then because they made up Sevier County's County Court, the body responsible for empaneling Grand Juries, they placed White Caps on Grand Juries and Petit Juries when White Caps were defendants. The White Caps, organized by the Justices of the Peace and financially supported by wealthy landowners, were the tool the wealthy landowners used to maintain and exercise power in their civil districts. Eventually one of the county's wealthiest citizens, William Robert ""Bob"" Catlett, hired two men, James Catlett Tipton and Pleasant D. Wynn, to kill Bill and Laura Whaley because they testified against him at a Grand Jury. Tipton and Wynn killed the Whaleys on December 28, 1896, were eventually convicted and hanged on July 5, 1899. Catlett was tried five times and was ultimately acquitted of the charges." Full Product DetailsAuthor: Richard Way , Stanford Johnson , Mike DuvallPublisher: Richard Way Imprint: Richard Way Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.40cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.349kg ISBN: 9798218008925Pages: 258 Publication Date: 10 December 2022 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In stock We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsThe story of Whitecapping is an excellent example of good intentions gone wrong. What started out as a righting of moral wrongs turned into a vigilante gang that tortured, killed, and terrified the community. Stanford Johnson and Richard Way tell a well-researched and dramatic tale of vigilante injustice in this exciting historical examination of the White Caps of Sevier County. The authors have done exhaustive research to relate the fascinating and disturbing story of the White Caps, a group of murderous vigilantes that terrorized rural residents of Sevier County, Tennessee in the 1890s. The stories were surprising, shocking, and gripping--making it hard to keep reading and yet hard to put down. Don't miss this book! Author InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |