History Battle of Black Race for Liberty and Justice

History Battle of Black Race for Liberty and Justice

Khalid Elhassan - May 12, 2020

History Battle of Black Race for Liberty and Justice
Medgar Evers’ driveway, where he was murdered. UPI

1. Civil Rights Fight

Medgar Evers worked to overcome the disenfranchisement of blacks in Mississippi by organizing voter registration drives. He also organized boycotts, such as that of gas stations that denied blacks the use of their restrooms. Protesting injustice and rocking the boat has seldom been popular, and in late May, 1963, a Molotov cocktail was thrown into Evers’ garage. A week later, somebody tried to run him over as he left the NAACP office in Jackson, Mississippi. A week after, on June 12th, 1963, Evers was shot to death on his driveway by a KKK member.

As a World War II veteran, Evers was buried with military honors in Arlington National Cemetery, but he was not honored by the justice system. Despite the Klansman’s fingerprints on the murder weapon, and notwithstanding that he had publicly boasted of the murder, all-white juries twice deadlocked in 1964 and failed to reach a verdict. Evers’ killer remained free until 1994, when a third trial, this time before a racially mixed jury, finally secured a murder conviction.

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Where Did We Find This Stuff? Some Sources and Further Reading

American Revolution Org – The Revolution’s Black Soldiers

Black Past – Deacons For Defense and Justice

Cobb, Charles E. – This Nonviolent Stuff’ll Get You Killed: How Guns Made the Civil Rights Movement Possible (2015)

Egerton, Douglas R. – Death of Liberty: African Americans and Revolutionary America (2009)

Face 2 Face Africa – The Deacons; the Black Armed Christians Who Protected MLK, Civil Rights Supporters Before Black Panthers

Holway, John B. – Red Tail, Black Wings: The Men of America’s Black Air Force (1997)

Horne, Gerald – The Counter Revolution of 1776: Slave Resistance and the Origins of the United States of America (2014)

Journal of Military History, 63, July 2003 – Jim Crow and Uncle Sam: The Tuskegee Flying Units and the US Army Air Forces in Europe in World War II

NAACP History – Medgar Evers

Nation, The, June 17th, 2004 – By Any Means Necessary

Schama, Simon – Rough Crossings: Britain, the Slaves and the American Revolution (2006)

Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum – Black Wings: African American Pioneer Aviators

War History Online – Fought Japanese in China When 15, Then Franco in Spain, and in WWII Europe Killed 6 Germans and Took 2 POW

Wikipedia – Colonel Tye

Wikipedia – Edward A. Carter, Jr.

Wikipedia – Tuskegee Airmen

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