Lynching of James Harvey and Joe Jordan
| Part of Jim Crow Era | |
| Date | July 1, 1922 |
|---|---|
| Location | Liberty County, Georgia |
| Participants | A white mob of 50 people lynched in Liberty County, Georgia |
| Deaths | 2 |
| Part of a series on |
| Nadir of American race relations |
|---|
James Harvey and Joe Jordan were two African-American men who were lynched on July 1, 1922, in Liberty County, Georgia, United States. They were seized by a mob of about 50 people and hanged while being transported by police from Wayne County to a jail in Savannah. Investigations by the NAACP showed that the police involved were complicit in their abduction by the mob. Twenty-two men were later indicted for the lynching. On February 23, 1923, five defendants, including Chief of Police I.W. Rhoden, were acquitted for the lynching.