I'm rereading Black Like Me, and one of the points in the book is the "Parker lynch case"
At the shoe stand, Sterling did not give his usual cordial greeting. His eyes looked yellower than usual.“You heard?” he asked.“No . . . I haven’t heard anything . . .”He told me the Mississippi jury refused to indict in the Parker lynch case. The news had spread over the quarter like a wave of acid. Everyone talked of it. Not since I was in Europe, when the Russo-German Pact of 1939 was signed, had I seen news spread such bitterness and despair.
(This is from p.48-49, but the case also gets discussed a few more times later in the book.)
Sounds like this case was a really big deal back in its day, but I never even heard of it.
It's strange. You think that you learned all the major events in the Civil Rights Movement. After all, I learned about Emmet Till, The Murders of Chaney, Goodman, and Schwerner, The Scottsboro Boys, Medgar Evers, etc. And I thought I knew it all. But this is a reminder that there was a whole lot more stuff happening that never makes it into the history classroom--probably just because there's just way too much to talk about, so the teachers have to just choose a couple of cases to talk about, rather than try to include everything.
Anyway, if you (like me) had never heard of the Parker lynch case, you can read all about it on Wikipedia. It's not pleasant reading, but it is American history.
Mack Charles Parker (May 20, 1936 – April 24, 1959) was a Black American victim of lynching in the United States. He had been accused of raping a pregnant white woman in northern Pearl River County, Mississippi. Three days before he was to stand trial, Parker was kidnapped from his jail cell in the Pearl River County Courthouse by a mob, beaten and shot. His body was found in the Pearl River, 20 miles west of Poplarville, 10 days later. Following an investigation by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the men who killed him were released. Despite confessions, no one was ever indicted for the killing.[1][2][3][4] Historian Howard Smead called the killing the "last classic lynching in America."[5]
...etc. Read the whole article for all the details.
No comments:
Post a Comment