Thomas Beloat was an American sheriff of Gibson County, Indiana at the turn of the 20th century noted for stopping a lynching in the county seat of Princeton.[1] He was the subject of a June 10, 1901 article in the New York Tribune.[2] Beloat was one of two law enforcement officials whose bravery in preventing lynchings in early 20th-century America was noted by Mark Twain in his 1901 essay The United States of Lyncherdom.[3]

A Republican, he served as sheriff from January 1, 1901, through December 31, 1904.[4] He was a charter member of the Gibson County Sons of Veterans organization.[5]

References

  1. The Century Illustrated Monthly Magazine: Volume LXII. New York: Macmillan & Co. Ldt. 1901. p. 631.
  2. Mark Twain: Collected tales, sketches, speeches & essays. Vol. 2. The Library of America. 1993. p. 1033.
  3. Twain, Mark; Justin Kaplan (2004). Great Short Works of Mark Twain. Harper Collins. pp. 193f. ISBN 0060727861.
  4. "Sheriffs of Gibson County, Indiana". Gibson County Sheriff's Department. 2008.
  5. Stormont, Gil R. (1914). History of Gibson County, Indiana: Her People, Industries and Institutions, with Biographical Sketches of Representative Citizens and Genealogical Records of Many of the Old Families. Indianapolis, Indiana: B. F. Bowden, & Co. p. 261.
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