WHITE AND BLACK.
Not Permitted to Mix In South Dakota —Go to Sioux City to Evade the Law.
Sioux City, Ia., Aug. 9.—In order to escape the penalty of the South Dakota law which prohibits inter-marriage and cohabitation between whites and negroes, James T. Watson, colored, and Miss Marie Dickman, white of Yankton, S. D., came to Sioux City on August 2, secured a license here and were married by Rev. M. G. Newman, pastor of the African Methodist Episcopal church.
On their return to Yankton, however the two were arrested on the charge of illicit cohabitation and August 10 has been set as the day for the hearing. A letter has been received at the office of the clerk of the district court from Joseph Janousek, county attorney of Yankton county, asking if such parties had secured a license and whether they had been married here. Although no return has been filed on the marriage license it has been found that they were married in Sioux City.
The statute under which the arrest was made is a new one and the case has attracted considerable attention at Yankton. The county attorney in his letter requested that some one in the office of the clerk be sent to identify the parties at the trial.
Miss Dickman goes by the name of Goodwin also.
--Weekly State Spirit and Dakota Huronite, Huron, South Dakota, August 19, 1909, page 7.
Thursday, April 5, 2007
Intermarriage in 1909, Black and White Together Poses Problems
Labels:
1909,
African-American,
colored,
intermarriage,
Iowa,
laws,
marriage,
negroes,
South-Dakota,
whites
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