Tuesday, August 26

George Stinney Jr. (1929–1944) is remembered as the youngest person executed in the United States in the 20th century, and his story has become a powerful symbol of racial injustice in America.


Quick Facts

  • Full Name: George Junius Stinney Jr.
  • Born: October 21, 1929, in Alcolu, South Carolina
  • Died: June 16, 1944 (age 14), Columbia, South Carolina
  • Claim to History: Youngest American executed in modern times (by electric chair)

The Case

  • In March 1944, two young white girls, Betty June Binnicker (11) and Mary Emma Thames (7), were found dead after going missing in Alcolu, South Carolina.
  • George Stinney, a 14-year-old Black boy, was accused of their murder.
  • Police claimed he confessed after hours of questioning, though no written record of a confession was ever produced, and no parents or lawyers were present during questioning.

The Trial

  • His trial lasted just one day.
  • The jury—all white men—deliberated for only 10 minutes before finding him guilty.
  • He was sentenced to death by electrocution.

Execution

  • On June 16, 1944, George Stinney was executed in Columbia, South Carolina.
  • At only 5 feet tall and weighing around 90 pounds, he was so small that he had to sit on a Bible to fit properly in the electric chair.

Posthumous Justice

  • For decades, Stinney’s case was cited as a glaring example of racial injustice and the failures of due process in the Jim Crow South.
  • In 2014, 70 years after his death, a South Carolina judge vacated his conviction, ruling that he had not received a fair trial and that his rights had been “fundamentally violated.”

Legacy

  • George Stinney’s story is now taught in discussions of civil rights, wrongful convictions, and systemic racism.
  • It has inspired books, documentaries, and films, such as 83 Days (2018).

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