Leopold Hart and Son Department Store was an iconic San Jose store from the late 1800s to the early decades of the 20th century.
And in 1933, the heir to that successful business was 22-year-old Brooke Hart. Hart had worked in the store, which had been founded by his grandfather and was run at the time by his father, and was made a company VP after graduating college.
On the evening of November 9, Hart left his father at the department store's entrance and set off into the department store's parking lot to get his car. He intended to drive his father to a meeting, according to the book "Jury Rigging in the Court of Public Opinion."
But Hart's father became alarmed as the minutes ticked by and his son's Studebaker failed to appear. Hart was already long gone by that time. Upon entering his Studebaker, the young businessman is said to have been carjacked at gunpoint by Harold Thurmond.
The book "Murder by the Bay: Historic Homicide in and about the City of San Francisco" details how the kidnapping unfolded: Thurmond forced Hart to drive to meet his accomplice Jack Holmes. In Holmes' car, the two kidnappers and their victim drove to the San Mateo Bridge.
After forcing him out of the car, Holmes knocked the young man in the head with a concrete block; the abductors then bound him with wire, tied concrete blocks to his legs, and threw him into the San Francisco Bay.
Hart survived the fall, landing in shallow water at the base of the bridge. The kidnappers killed him when they drew their firearms and shot the victim from above. The abductors then attempted to secure a $40,000 ransom from the family. The pair's efforts to collect a payment ultimately resulted in their arrests; both Holmes and Thurmond subsequently confessed to murdering Hart.
The Mercury News reported that after Holmes and Thurmond confessed to the crime, a mob of thousands stormed the jail where they were being held and lynched the two men.
The killing of Holmes and Thurmond, who were both white, was California's last well-publicized lynching.