Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q446247> ?p ?o }
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- Q446247 subject Q13261520.
- Q446247 subject Q15136711.
- Q446247 subject Q15136790.
- Q446247 subject Q15286399.
- Q446247 subject Q6646955.
- Q446247 subject Q7020602.
- Q446247 subject Q7024807.
- Q446247 subject Q8141223.
- Q446247 subject Q8245535.
- Q446247 subject Q8247074.
- Q446247 subject Q8429983.
- Q446247 subject Q8429990.
- Q446247 subject Q8725364.
- Q446247 subject Q9537571.
- Q446247 abstract "Lena Baker (June 8, 1900 – March 5, 1945) was an African American maid who was falsely accused of capital murder by the state of Georgia in 1945 for killing her white employer, Ernest Knight, and executed by the state. At her trial, Baker explained how Knight approached her house and forced her to go with him on that Saturday evening of April 29. Baker had been warned by the county sheriff to stay away from Knight or that she was going to be thrown in jail; too, she was afraid of physical abuse by Knight (and once even Knight's son had given her a terrible beating with a warning to stay away from his father). Therefore, as soon as she could, Baker gave Knight the slip and spent the night sleeping in the woods near the convict camp. On her way back into Cuthbert the next morning, Knight cornered her again and this time took her to the mill house and locked her in while he went to a "singing" (a form of religious celebration in the South) with his son. Lena soon became fed up with spending the sweltering day lying on an old bed in the gristmill. When Knight returned, she informed him that she was leaving. They, in Lena's words "tussled over the pistol.". Baker was the only woman to be executed by electrocution in Georgia.The slaying and execution came at a time of official racial segregation and the suppression of civil rights of black citizens in Georgia. In 2005, sixty years after her execution, the state of Georgia granted Ms. Baker a full and unconditional pardon. The feature film The Lena Baker Story (2008) chronicles the events surrounding her early life and her execution.".
- Q446247 wikiPageWikiLink Q1311821.
- Q446247 wikiPageWikiLink Q13261520.
- Q446247 wikiPageWikiLink Q1332396.
- Q446247 wikiPageWikiLink Q1428.
- Q446247 wikiPageWikiLink Q15136711.
- Q446247 wikiPageWikiLink Q15136790.
- Q446247 wikiPageWikiLink Q15286399.
- Q446247 wikiPageWikiLink Q17306199.
- Q446247 wikiPageWikiLink Q185639.
- Q446247 wikiPageWikiLink Q2098047.
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- Q446247 wikiPageWikiLink Q537151.
- Q446247 wikiPageWikiLink Q6646955.
- Q446247 wikiPageWikiLink Q7020602.
- Q446247 wikiPageWikiLink Q7024807.
- Q446247 wikiPageWikiLink Q7746918.
- Q446247 wikiPageWikiLink Q8141223.
- Q446247 wikiPageWikiLink Q8245535.
- Q446247 wikiPageWikiLink Q8247074.
- Q446247 wikiPageWikiLink Q8429983.
- Q446247 wikiPageWikiLink Q8429990.
- Q446247 wikiPageWikiLink Q8725364.
- Q446247 wikiPageWikiLink Q9537571.
- Q446247 type Person.
- Q446247 type Agent.
- Q446247 type Criminal.
- Q446247 type Person.
- Q446247 type Agent.
- Q446247 type NaturalPerson.
- Q446247 type Thing.
- Q446247 type Q215627.
- Q446247 type Q2159907.
- Q446247 type Q5.
- Q446247 type Person.
- Q446247 comment "Lena Baker (June 8, 1900 – March 5, 1945) was an African American maid who was falsely accused of capital murder by the state of Georgia in 1945 for killing her white employer, Ernest Knight, and executed by the state. At her trial, Baker explained how Knight approached her house and forced her to go with him on that Saturday evening of April 29.".
- Q446247 label "Lena Baker".