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{{Infobox Person| name = Medgar Evers| image =| image_size =| caption =| birth_date = | birth_place = Decatur, Mississippi, Mississippi, United States| death_date = | death_place = Jackson, Mississippi,
Mississippi, United States| occupation = activism| spouse =
Myrlie Evers-Williams, [1925 – June 12,
1963) was an
African American African-American Civil Rights Movement (1955-1968) activism from Mississippi. He was murdered on June 12, 1963 by Byron De La Beckwith, a member of the Ku Klux Klan.
Early life
Medgar Evers was a native of
Decatur, Mississippi, attending school there until being inducted into the U.S. Army in 1943. Despite fighting for his country as part of the
Battle of Normandy, Evers soon found that his skin color gave him no freedom when he and five friends were forced away at gunpoint from voting in a
local election.Despite his resentment over such treatment, Evers enrolled at
Alcorn State University, majoring in business administration. While at the school, Evers stayed busy by competing on the school's football and track teams, also competing on the debate team, performing in the school choir and serving as president of the junior class.
He married classmate
Myrlie Evers-Williams on
December 24,
1951, and completed work on his degree the following year. The couple moved to Mound Bayou, MS, where
T.R.M. Howard had hired him to sell insurance for his Magnolia Mutual Life Insurance Company. Howard was also the president of the Regional Council of Negro Leadership (RCNL), a civil rights and pro self-help organization. Involvement in the RCNL gave Evers crucial training in
activism. He helped to organize the RCNL's boycott of gas station#Service stations that denied blacks use of their restrooms. The boycotters distributed
bumper stickers with the slogan "Don't Buy Gas Where You Can't Use the Restroom." Along with his brother, Charles Evers, he also attended the RCNL's annual conferences in Mound Bayou between 1952 and 1954 which drew crowds of ten thousand or more.
Evers applied to the then-segregated University of Mississippi Law School in February 1954. When his application was rejected, Evers became the focus of an NAACP campaign to
desegregation the school, a case aided by the
U.S. Supreme Court ruling in the case of
Brown v. Board of Education 347 U.S. 483 that segregation was unconstitutional. In December of that year, Evers became the NAACP's first field officer in Mississippi.
NAACP Field Secretary
He was involved in a boycott campaign against white merchants and was instrumental in eventually desegregating the University of Mississippi when that institution was finally forced to enroll James Meredith in
1962.
In the weeks leading up to his death, Evers found himself the target of a number of threats. His public investigations into the murder of Emmett Till and his vocal support of
Clyde Kennard left him vulnerable to attack. On May 28, 1963, a
molotov cocktail was thrown into the carport of his home, and five days before his death, he was nearly run down by a car after he emerged from the Jackson
NAACP office. Civil rights demonstrations accelerated in Jackson during the first week of June 1963. A local television station granted Evers time for a short speech, his first in Mississippi, where he outlined the goals of the Jackson movement. Following the speech, threats on Evers' life increased.
Assassination
On
June 12, 1963, Evers pulled into his driveway after returning from an integration meeting where he had conferred with NAACP lawyers. Emerging from his car and carrying NAACP T-shirts that stated, "Jim Crow laws Must Go", Evers was struck in the back with a bullet that ricocheted into his home. He staggered 30 feet before collapsing, dying at the local hospital 50 minutes later. Evers was murdered just hours after President
John F. Kennedy's speech on national television in support of
civil rights.Birnbaum, p. 490
Mourned nationally, Evers was buried on June 19 in Arlington National Cemetery and received full military honors in front of a crowd of more than 3,000 people, the largest funeral at Arlington since the interment of
John Foster Dulles, former U.S. Secretary of State in 1959. The past chairman of the American Veterans' Committee, Mickey Levine, said at the services, "No soldier in this field has fought more courageously, more heroically than Medgar Evers."
On
June 23,
1964,
Byron De La Beckwith, a fertilizer salesman and member of the
White Citizens' Council and
Ku Klux Klan, was arrested for Evers' murder. During the course of his first 1964 trial, De La Beckwith was visited by former Mississippi governor
Ross Barnett and one time United States Army
Major General Edwin A. Walker.
All-white juries twice that year deadlocked on De La Beckwith's guilt, thus allowing him to escape justice.
The murder and subsequent miscarriage of justice caused a social uproar, and musician
Bob Dylan wrote the song "
Only a Pawn in Their Game" about Evers and his assassin. The song's lyrics read: "The day that Medgar Evers was buried from the bullet that he caught, they lowered him down as a king." Nina Simone took on the topic in her song "
Mississippi Goddam".Eudora Welty's short story
Where is the Voice Coming From in which the speaker is the imagined assassin of Medgar Evers was printed in "The New Yorker." Phil Ochs wrote the songs "Too Many Martyrs" and "Another Country" in response to the killing. Matthew Jones and the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee Freedom Singers paid tribute to Evers in the haunting "Ballad of Medgar Evers." Malvina Reynolds mentioned "the shot in Evers' back" in her song "It isn't nice". More recently, rapper
Immortal Technique asks if a diamond is "worth the blood of Malcolm X and Medgar Evers?" in the song "Crossing the Boundary" and "Bury The Living", a left-leaning
hardcore punk band from Memphis, Tennessee mentioned Evers along with Emmett Till in the song "In the State of Mississippi" on their 2003 album, "Burn This Fucking Nightmare." The Rza sang on "I Can't Go to Sleep" by Wu-Tang Clan, "Medgar took one to the skull for integrating college."
In 1994, thirty years after the two previous trials had failed to reach a verdict, Beckwith was again brought to trial based on new evidence concerning statements he made to others. During the trial, the body of Evers was exhumed from his grave for autopsy, and found to be in a surprisingly good state of preservation as a result of
embalming. Beckwith was finally convicted of murder on
February 5, 1994, after living as a free man for three decades after the killing. Beckwith appealed unsuccessfully, and died in prison in January 2001.
Before Medgar Evers' body was reburied, a new funeral was staged for Evers. This permitted his children, who were toddlers when he was assassinated and had very little memory of him, to have a chance to see him. The new funeral was covered on HBO's Autopsy series.
Legacy
Evers' legacy has been kept alive in a variety of ways. In 1970,
Medgar Evers College was established in
Brooklyn, New York as part of the City University of New York. In
1983, a television movie,
For Us the Living: The Medgar Evers Story starring Howard Rollins was aired, celebrating the life and career of Medgar Evers, and on June 28, 1992, he was immortalized in Jackson with a statue.
The 1996 in film
Ghosts of Mississippi tells the story of the 1994 trial, in which a District Attorney's office prosecutor, Robert Delaughter, successfully retried the case, and won.
Evers' wife,
Myrlie Evers-Williams, became a noted activist in her own right later in life, eventually serving as chairwoman of the NAACP. Medgar's brother Charles returned to Jackson in July 1963 and served briefly in his slain brother's place. Charles Evers remained involved in Mississippi Civil Rights for years to come. He resides in Jackson.
Bob Dylan refers to the killing of Medgar Evans on "Only a Pawn in Their Game," on his 1964album 'The Times They Are A-Changin
.
Children
On
February 18, 2001, Myrlie and Medgar's oldest son, Darrell Kenyatta Evers (b. 1963 - d. 2001), died of colon cancer, leaving a wife and son. Their two surviving children are Reena Denise Evers and James Van Dyke Evers (b. January 10, 1960).
References
- David T. Beito and Linda Royster Beito, T.R.M. Howard: Pragmatism over Strict Integrationist Ideology in the Mississippi Delta, 1942-1954 in Glenn Feldman, ed., Before Brown: Civil Rights and White Backlash in the Modern South (2004 book), 68-95.
- Jonathan Birnbaum and Clarence Taylor, eds. Civil Rights Since 1787: A Reader on the Black Struggle (New York University Press: 2000) ISBN 0-8147-8215-9 (pp. 355-59 (Myrlie Evers with William Peters reprint "Missisissippi Murders"), 522 (Fannie Lou Hamer comment).
- Brown, Jennie. Medgar Evers. Los Angeles: Melrose Square Pub. Co., 1994.
- John Dittmer, Local People: the Struggle for Civil Rights in Mississippi (1994 book).
- Evers, Myrlie B., and William Peters. For Us, the Living. 1st ed. Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday, 1967; Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 1996.
- Jackson, James E. At the funeral of Medgar Evers in Jackson, Mississippi: A Tribute in Tears and a Thrust for Freedom. New York: Publisher’s New Press, 1963.
- Massengill, Reed. Portrait of a Racist: The Man Who Killed Medgar Evers? New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1994.
- Nossiter, Adam. Of Long Memory: Mississippi and the Murder of Medgar Evers. Reading, Mass.: Addison-Wesley, 1994; Da Capo Press, 2002.
- Charles M. Payne, I've Got the Light of Freedom: The Organizing Tradition and the Mississippi Freedom Struggle (1995 book).
- Salter, John R. Jackson, Mississippi: An American Chronicle of Struggle and Schism. Foreword by R. Edwin King, Jr. Hicksville, N.Y.: Exposition Press, 1979.
- Remembering Medgar Evers—For a New Generation: A Commemoration. Developed by the Civil Rights Research and Documentation Project, Afro-American Studies Program, The University of Mississippi. Oxford, MS: distributed by Heritage Publications in cooperation with the Mississippi Network for Black History and Heritage, 1988.
- Vollers, Maryanne. Ghosts of Mississippi: The Murder of Medgar Evers, The Trials of Byron de la Beckwith, and the Haunting of the New South. Boston: Little, Brown, 1995.
Notes
External links
- Medgar Evers entry at AfricanAmericans.com
- Medgar Evers in the U.S. Federal Census American Civil Rights Pioneers
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