Emmett and his mother Mamie Christmas , 1955. Good times. |
It
may have been pure coincidence. Probably was.
And I don’t remember his name being mentioned through the long program
that afternoon that I watched with rapt attention on my folk’s black and white TV. But when the Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. mounted that stage in front of the Lincoln Memorial cast his eye on the
hundreds of thousands stretching as far as the eye could see down the National Mall and strode to the microphone to address the March on Washington for Jobs and Justice on
August 28, 1964, the spirit of a 14 year old boy must have been there.
Young
Emmett Till, a Chicago boy spending
the summer with his Mississippi
relatives, was just 14 years old when on the same date in 1955 he was
dragged from their home under the cover of night and brutally murdered by a
mob. After his mother bravely insisted that his horribly abused body lying in a Chicago casket be publicly displayed and photographed, Emmett’s death sparked an
outraged national movement that helped end decades of consequence free lynching of Black
people across the South.
And
nearly sixty years later, after mob
lynching has virtually disappeared, his spirit reminds us that the extra-judicial executions of unarmed Black boys, young men by police
which is epidemic across the
country, is just the new face of lynching.
Emmett Till, Trayvon Martin, Michael
Brown, hundreds of other—two a week
killed by police—all victims of a pervasive national racism that continues to fester.
Young Emmett’s family history mirrored that of many others who came North from the Deep South as part of the decades long Great Migration of impoverished Blacks to the economic promise of
the big cities of the Midwest.
Mamie Carthan was born in 1921, the daughter of a sharecropper in Webb, Mississippi, a
tiny town in the Mississippi Delta
Cotton Belt. While she was still a
small child the family moved to Alton in
Southern Illinois which was
attracting so many Southern refugees it was sometimes called Little Mississippi.
Coming of age in the Depression,
Mamie married young to another former southerner, Louis Till in 1940 after moving to Argo, now part of the Village
of Summit, in Chicago’s west Suburbs
with her mother Alma. The couple lived with Alma. Louis drank and became increasingly
abusive. Shortly after Emmett was born
on July 25, 1941 the couple split up.
After the divorce Louis returned to their former home and tried to kill
Mamie. A judge gave him a choice between
the Army and prison. Louis entered the
service in 1942 and died in 1945, somewhat mysteriously executed by the military for willful
misconduct. Emmett was raised by his
single mother with assistance from his maternal
grandmother and a network of other relatives who had come north.
During the war Mamie had gotten a good job as a typist. Along
with a monthly stipend sent home by
the Army from Louis and occasional transmissions of money he had allegedly won
in poker games and by sharing a home
with her mother and step father, Mamie
was finally able to get ahead, at least monetarily and even save several
hundred dollars.
Emmett, nicknamed Bobo at
birth, despite being named for a favorite uncle, survived and healed from
injuries sustained in his delivery when doctors at Cook County Hospital misused forceps
in his breach delivery. He was doted on by both his mother and
grandmother.
By 1946 Emmett was a lively kindergartener
in an Argo school. During that school year an aunt and uncle from Mississippi arrived in town and moved nearby. Their son and Emmett’s cousin Wheeler Parker, Jr. became the boys
best friend and inseparable companion despite a two year age gap. Because he was so poorly educated in the
Delta young Wheeler was set back to Emmett’s class in school.
In the summer of ’47 Emmett was stricken by dreaded polio.
His mother and grandmother feared for his life or that he would be
confined to an iron lung. Despite being held in quarantine at the Cook
County Contagious Disease Center and
then again at home for more than 30 days, Emmett eventually recovered. The disease did leave him with a bad speech impediment and he stuttered the rest of his life. He also suffered from swollen and weakened ankles.
Grandma Alma re-married and moved to Chicago leaving Mamie alone in
Argo to raise her growing son. She continued
to work hard as a typist for various government agencies—the Army Signal Corps, Veteran’s Administration, and Social
Security Administration all the while putting money away for Emmett’s college education.
In 1950 Alma moved to Detroit where
her father lived to re-establish a relationship with him and give Emmett a
father figure. She also frankly hoped to
find a new husband with a good steady job in the auto industry or one of the Motor
City’s other then booming industries.
She got a job with the Armed
Forces Ft. Wayne Induction Center, which was so busy providing draftees for
the Korean War that she worked long
hours, often seven days a week. Nine
year old Emmett willingly stepped up to take on household responsibilities to
help his hard working mother out.
Mamie began dating auto worker Pink
Bradley who also got along well with Emmett. But the boy grew increasingly home sick for
Argo and particularly for his best friend cousin. Reluctantly Mamie let him return there to live
with his aunt and uncle in the house next to the one he grew up in. She married Pink in 1951 in Detroit with her
son and mother in attendance. After a
short while with the coupe, Emmett returned once again to Argo.
Not long after the wedding Pink was laid off at Chrysler. Mamie had been returning
to Argo monthly to visit Emmett and was beginning to fear that he would make a
life without her. The couple decided to
return to Illinois. Grandma Alma bought
a two flat in Chicago on South St. Lawrence Street and the
family moved into the second floor. Pink
got a job at the Argo Corn Products plant
and Mamie returned to the Social Security Administration.
The family’s domestic bliss was short lived. Pink was unfaithful. Mamie threw him out, reconciled once, and
split with him for good in 1953.
Despite this set back Emmett was flourishing into a lively, spirited
young man popular with his classmates despite his speech problems. He enjoyed a close relationship with his
mother and grandmother and the company of his cousins. Due to Mamie’s hard work the family thrived
modestly, an example of the successful upward mobility of her generation of
Black migrants to the north. They were
firmly settled into a community and had established a comfortable church home, a vital part of urban
Black life.
Mamie took a new, responsible job with the U. S. Air Force in charge of confidential files and began a lasting
relationship with a new man, a barber
named Gene Mobley who would later
become her husband. Mobley developed a
strong relationship with the boy
Emmett really enjoyed dressing up for church and other occasions. He can be seen bursting with pride in family
photos in his snappy fedora, spotless
white shirt, tie, and jacket. He had grown into stocky but muscular
young teenager, weighing about 150 pounds and standing 5’ 4” in the summer of
1954 when he was 14.
He had grown up all of his life hearing stories about life in
Mississippi. To a boy who loved the
outdoors and had a sense of adventure those stories sounded irresistible—fishing
and swimming in local ponds and streams, climbing trees, roaming the fields and
scrub woods barefoot and with little adult superstition. When his cousin Wheeler announced plans to
spend the summer down south with relatives, Emmett begged for a chance to go
with him. Reluctantly, his mother
agreed. But before he left she gave him
a stern lecture about how different and dangerous the South could be and how he
would have to watch out how he acted around White folk. Emmett assured
her he understood. But he didn’t. He couldn’t have.
In August Emmett and Wheeler accompanied Wheeler’s grandfather, and
Mamie’s uncle Moses Wright, a preacher and sharecropper on a visit to
tiny Money, Mississippi.
Emmett arrived in Money on August 21.
Three days later he and another cousin, Curtis Jones skipped church where Wright was preaching to idle with
other boys around Bryant’s Grocery and Meat Market, a typical rural village
store. What happened next is shrouded in
controversy and mystery.
All agree that Emmett entered the store where 21 year old Carolyn Bryant, wife of the owner, was
tending store. Some say Emmett wolf whistled at her. Others that he whistled as he ordered bubble gum in frustration over his
stutter. Carolyn would later claim that
Emmett had “come on to her” and asked her for a dated. She claimed to be intimidated and menaced by
someone she described as nearly a full grown man.
The boys departed the store.
Carolyn ran outside and obtained a revolver from a car and all of the
boys quickly scattered. Over the next
few days she spread the tale which seemed to grow more menacing with each
retelling.
Carolyn’s husband Roy returned
from a fishing trip on August 27 and first hear Carolyn’s tale.
In the early morning hours of August 28 Roy Bryant, his 36-year-old
half-brother J. W. Milam, and a
third man after a long evening of drinking and raving about the incident, drove
to Moses Wright’s isolated sharecropper cabin.
They entered the home, occupied by eight people, rousing the house and
flashing a pistol. They demanded to
know, “the boy who did the talking.”
Unsure of what was meant, Emmett Till said it was him. Threatening to shoot him on the spot the men
ordered him to dress. Moses was ordered
to tell no one about the visit. His
distraught wife retrieved all of the family’s cash and offered to pay the men
to leave the child alone. They dragged
Emmett away. He was never seen alive
again.
They loaded the boy into the car and took him to a barn at a nearby plantation where they pistol whipped him unconscious. Then they loaded him into the back of a pick-up truck and apparently roamed the
county trying to decide what to do with him, stopping to administer more
beatings if they heard him stir. At some
point Emmett was shot. The men drove by
the Bryant store where by some accounts they showed the body to a Black man
saying, “This is what happens to smart niggers.”
It was passed dawn when the men stopped at a cotton gin and stole a 70 pound fan blade. They drove to an
isolated spot along the Tallahatchie
River where they weighted Till’s body with the blade and tossed him in the
river. He may, or may not have still
been alive at the time.
Moses Wright searched the next morning for his missing nephew but
feared notifying authorities. Another
relative called Leflore County Sheriff George Smith to report a
kidnapping. He also called Mamie in
Chicago.
It did not take Sherriff Smith long to locate and question Roy Bryant
and J. W. Milam who readily admitted that they had taken Till and beaten him to
“teach him a lesson” but claimed to have released him alive and able to walk
away at Bryant’s store. They were
confident that this was both reasonable and justifiable and that no white
officials would take action against them.
Smith, however, did charge the men with kidnapping undoubtedly knowing that no jury would convict them. Without a body, which they were sure would
never turn up, they had nothing to fear.
The Black community quietly scoured the area for Till. Medgar
Evers, Field Secretary of the
state NAACP arrived in disguise as a
cotton picker to join the search and conduct his own investigation.
On August 28 twp boys fishing along the river discovered Emmett Till’s
nude body. His face was an
unrecognizable pulp. He had been shot
behind one ear and beaten over much of his body. The fan blade had been tied around his neck
by barbed wire that bit deep into
his flesh. After three days the body was
also badly bloated. A silver ring
inscribed L. T. and May 25, 1943 he was known to be wearing
was found on his finger.
Moses Wright identified the body.
Till’s body was never turned over to the coroner for a post mortem
examination. It was packed in ice and destined for a speedy local burial.
Mamie had to intercede with all of her force to have the body
released and shipped by rail to
Chicago where it was taken to the funeral
home of A. A. Sammy Rayner, an
important community leader and rising political
star.
Till's mutilated body horrified the nation. |
Mamie insisted on viewing the body to make a positive
identification. She was nearly overcome
by the stench, which was reported detectable up to two blocks away. She was also horrified by the mutilated
corpse. She determined then and there to
have an open viewing so the world
could see what had happened to her beloved son.
A special glass topped coffin was
ordered to facilitate the public viewing.
But she made sure that gruesome photographs were clearly taken of the
body.
Down south after the first three paragraph story had appeared in the
local paper, the story quickly spread as did public outrage at the senseless
brutality against a young boy. Even some
white’s admitted horror and sympathy as details emerged. The governor of Mississippi even wrote to the
national NAACP pledging his backing for a full investigation. NAACP Executive
Secretary Roy Wilkins wasted no time in calling Till’s death a lynching and
charging that Mississippians were strove to maintain white supremacy through murder.
Up north Mayor Richard Daley and
Illinois Governor William Stratton,
a Republican both demanded an investigation. After plenty of advance publicity, including
the brutally provocative photos of the body published in the Chicago
Daily Defender and nationally in Jet Magazine,
thousands lined up to view the body at the funeral home.
Coverage in the South began to change from initial sympathy for the
victim. False accounts of riots at the
funeral were published as were rumors that armies of enraged Blacks were arming
themselves in Chicago and preparing to descend of the state. Bryant and Milam were pictured in their
military uniforms and lauded as veterans and family men. Carolyn Bryant was held up as a model of
Southern womanhood—and also noted for her beauty.
The case was now in the hands of Tallahatchie
County Sheriff Clarence Strider because the body was found in his
jurisdiction. He had originally said
that a good case could be made against Bryant and Milam, but after the
exaggerated reports from the north surfaced he claimed to take seriously local
press accounts that Till may have survived and been spirited away in secret
back to Chicago and that the body found in the river was not his but one stolen
from a funeral home by outside
agitators.
Despite this a Grand Jury actually
indicted Bryant and Milam for
murder. Although the Northern press
seemed impressed, the local prosecutor knew that getting a conviction of white
men for the murder of a Black was virtually impossible.
Reporters swarmed the tiny County
Seat at Sumner, village so
insignificant that it had only one rooming
house. Reporters had to find hotel
accommodations miles away. Mamie and Michigan Congressman Charles Diggs did
not even have that option. They had to
stay miles away at the home of Dr. T. R.
M. Howard, a prominent Black businessman, surgeon, and civil rights leader in Mound
City. His home had to be put under
24 hour guard.
The trial began speedily enough in September. The day before it began the prosecution
learned of two witnesses to Till’s beatings, Levi “Too Tight” Collins and Henry
Lee Loggins, were Black employees of
Leslie Milam, J. W.’s brother who were willing to testify. Conveniently, Sherriff Strider arranged for
them to be arrested and held in the Charleston, Mississippi jail so that they could not testify.
The trial last five days in a
broiling, segregated courtroom. Northern
reporters were stunned that the jury was allowed to drink beer while hearing testimony and that many of the white men
attending the trial casually wore pistols
strapped to their waists.
A dramatic highlight of the trial came as Moses Wright stood and
pointed to J. W. Milam and identified him as one of the men who had abducted
Till. It was the first time in
Mississippi history that a Black man had publicly accused and identified a
white in a trial. It was an electrifying
moment. Mamie Till took the stand and
gave a dramatic account of her warnings to her son to behave around white folk
down South. The defense badgered her, trying
to get her admit that she could not identify the body. She was also painted as cold and greedy for
having a $400 life insurance policy on
her son—the kind that were peddled door-to-door in the Black community to cover
burial expenses—an profiting from falsely claiming his death.
Carolyn Bryant was allowed to testify out of the hearing of the
jurors. She maintained that she feared
for her safety as well as being shocked by Till’s alleged advances on her. Some court observers believe that transcripts
or accounts of her testimony were smuggled to or shown to the jurors anyway.
Mamie was impressed by the summation of the prosecution, which she felt
was a genuine attempt to get a guilty verdict.
But it was not to be. After less
than an hour and a half of deliberation the jury returned a verdict of not guilty. Some jurors
later claimed that they knew the men were guilty but felt that the required
sentences for murder—the death penalty or
life in prison—were too harsh for
“killing a nigger.” Others would
maintain years later that they believed the defense claim that the body was not
Till’s.
A second attempt to bring the two men to trial for kidnapping, to which they had readily admitted, collapsed when the
Grand Jury refused to bring an indictment.
After the second Grand Jury Dr. Howard had to pay
for the relocation to Chicago for their safety of Moses Wright; Willie Reed, a young man who testified to seeing
Milam enter the shed from which screams and blows were heard; and a third witness
who testified against Milam and Bryant.
Debate
raged about the case for weeks, not just in the United States, but around the
world. The more condemnation rained down
on Mississippi, the more defiant local politicians and press became. Mississippi senators James Eastland and John C.
Stennis pressed the Army to release the supposedly sealed records of Louis
Till’s 1945 execution in Italy for willful misconduct—information Mamie Till
had long sought but been denied. It
turned out the elder Till was charged with two rapes. The revelations
stayed on Southern front pages for weeks, along with the assumption that Emmett
had inherited his father’s “innate depravity” and was held up as proof the boy
must have made moves against Carolyn Bryant.
The Black and Northern press erupted in predictable outrage at the new
smear.
In
1956, safe from any further prosecution because of the Constitutional protection against double jeopardy, Milam and Bryant agreed to sell their story for
$4000 each to Look Magazine. The interview
was conducted by their defense attorneys, who claim to have never heard the
story themselves, in the presence of writer William Bradford Huie. Both
men readily admitted to the killing and not only expressed no regret but seemed
boastful. The more articulate Milam
shocked readers by his casual admission:
Well, what else
could we do? He was hopeless. I’m no bully; I never hurt a nigger in my life. I
like niggers—in their place—I know how to work ‘em. But I just decided it was
time a few people got put on notice. As long as I live and can do anything
about it, niggers are gonna stay in their place. Niggers ain’t gonna vote where
I live. If they did, they’d control the government. They ain’t gonna go to
school with my kids. And when a nigger gets close to mentioning sex with a
white woman, he’s tired o’ livin’. I’m likely to kill him. Me and my folks
fought for this country, and we got some rights. I stood there in that shed and
listened to that nigger throw that poison at me, and I just made up my mind. “Chicago
boy,” I said, “I'm tired of ‘em sending your kind down here to stir up trouble.
Goddam you, I’m going to make an example of you—just so everybody can know how
me and my folks stand.”
Needless
to say the revelations created yet another sensation—and revulsion in all but
the most committed racists. William Faulkner, Mississippi’s most
revered literary icon heaped public
scorn on cowardly white men apparently so terrified by a boy that they had to
kill him.
Till
and his case quickly became the stuff of legend. He was frequently a character or referred to
in novels, short stories, poems and verse by important writers including Langston Hughes, Gwendolyn Brooks. James
Baldwin, Audre Lorde, and Toni
Morrison. The case was an unstated
inspiration for Harper Lee and her acclaimed
novel To Kill a Mocking Bird which was published the next year. He was the subject of several songs over the
decades, notably Bob Dylan’s The Death of Emmett Till in 1962 to
Emmy Lou Harris’s My Name is Emmett Till in 2011.
On
a practical level, the Till case inspired stepped up demands for justice across
the South. It is widely considered one
of the touchstone moments of the Civil
Rights Campaign era.
Mamie
did marry Gene
Mobley, adopted the name Till-Mobley,
and drew some solace from that lasting relationship. She went back to school and became an admired
teacher. But she dedicated her life to keeping
the memory of her son alive and to fighting for justice and equality. She died of heart failure in 2003, aged 81.
The Emmett Till Foundation she
began carries on her work and her son’s legacy.
Despite
being able to get away with murder, Neither Bryant or Milam fared very well. Their
farms and business were dependent on the patronage and labor of black
sharecroppers when refused to buy or work for either of them. Banks refused to extend the customary loans
for seed for their cotton
crops. They lost their business and
could not find employment locally since black laborers would not work with
them. Both relocated to Texas but found that their infamy and
troubles followed them. After several
years they returned to Mississippi and tried to live quietly. Milam worked as a heavy equipment operator until ill health caused his
retirement. He had many brushes with the
law for assault and
battery, writing bad checks, and
using a stolen credit card. He died
of spinal cancer in 1980, at the age of 61.
Bryant worked as a welder
until going nearly blind. He and Carolyn divorced and he
remarried. He opened another store in
Ruleville, Mississippi and was convicted in 1984 and 1988 of food stamp fraud. He blamed Emmett Till for ruining his
life. Bryant died of cancer in 1994, at
the age of 63.
As for Carolyn who started it all. She remarried and became Carolyn Bryant Donham . In 2003 filmmaker Keith Beauchamp charged that she was actually present for
and complicit in the murders with as many as 13 other individuals in his documentary
The Untold Story of Emmett Louis Till. Those allegations caused a new Grand
Jury investigation of the case, which included the exhumation of Tills body,
which for the first time was autopsied and positively identified by DNA.
Grand Jury found no evidence against Carolyn or anyone other than
her husband and Milam. She sought a
quiet life but never expressed any remorse about the murder. In fact she still seemed to regard Till’s
death as a personal compliment to her beauty and virtue. She is the only survivor among the principals
in the case.
One final odd note.
After Emmett Till’s body was exhumed for that 2004 autopsy, it was
re-interred at Bur Oaks Cemetery in
a new coffin. The Cemetery operator claimed
that the historic glass-topped casket viewed in 1955 was being preserved and
would be donated to museum. He even
collected money for its restoration.
After a huge scandal
involving digging
up bodies, dumping them in a remote area, and re-selling the plots was uncovered, investigators digging on the property to retrieve and
identify lost remains, unearthed a trench
filled with refuse including the original
coffin. It was damaged, but its historic
glass top was intact. Eventually the
coffin was acquired by the Smithsonian
Institution’s National Museum of African American History and Culture in Washington, D.C. where hopefully it will be preserved, restored, and put on public
display. Till’s grave and remains were undisturbed
during the hoopla.
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