Exactly 60 yrs ago, on June 12, 1963, NAACP Mississippi field secretary, Medgar Evers, returned home. Carrying "Jim Crow Must Go" t-shirts, he was shot in the back. His wife found him bleeding at the door. He died later. At his funeral, brutal police tactics failed to suppress anger among 1000s of mourners. Later, Medgar received the 1963 Spingarn medal for his contributions and sacrifice.

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After an investigation, Byron De La Beckwith emerged as the prime suspect in Medgar’s murder. Despite incriminating evidence & eyewitness testimony, Beckwith denied shooting Medgar, claiming his gun was stolen. The trials were heated battles amid segregation tensions. Influential figures, like Mississippi Governor Ross Barnett, supported Beckwith, even shaking his hand in front of the jury.

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Beckwith was arrogantly confident throughout the trial—-making no effort to conceal his disdain for Black people. In 1964, he was released when two all-white juries couldn't reach a verdict.

In 1989, the question of Beckwith's guilt resurfaced with the revelation of files from the disbanded Mississippi Sovereignty Commission. This organization operated in the 1950s to bolster support for segregation and white supremacy.

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The published accounts indicated that the Mississippi Sovereignty Commission had aided Beckwith's defense team in vetting potential jurors during the initial trials. While the Hinds County Mississippi District Attorney's office found no evidence of jury tampering, it did uncover additional witnesses. Some of these individuals eventually testified that Beckwith had boasted about the murder to them.

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Beckwith later served a lengthy prison sentence in Louisiana for trying to kill
A.I. Botnick, director of the New Orleans-based B'nai B'rith Anti-Defamation League. In 1979, while in the prison infirmary, he refused treatment from a Black nurse's aide. Overheard by a guard, Beckwith stated that if he could eliminate an "uppity" Evers, dealing with the "no-account" aide would be no trouble. The guard's testimony in Beckwith's 3rd trial in 1994 was crucial.

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The trial was triggered, in part, by The Clarion-Ledger of Jackson Mississippi publishing accounts of the Mississippi Sovereignty Commission's assistance in Beckwith's earlier trials, revealing their role in jury selection. During the 1990s, a fresh wave of investigators and prosecutors meticulously reexamined existing evidence and unearthed new information.

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Consequently, Beckwith faced a 2nd indictment for the murder of Medgar Evers in December 1990. Despite several appeals, the Mississippi Supreme Court ruled in April 1993 in favor of a 3rd trial.
Beckwith, now older & only slightly less arrogant, defiantly displayed a Confederate flag on his lapel throughout the trial. Testimony began 10 months later with a racially diverse jury consisting of 8 Black & 4 white individuals.

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Finally, in February 1994, 31 years after Medgar Evers' murder, Byron De La Beckwith received a conviction and a life sentence in prison. The New York Times reported that upon hearing the guilty verdict on February 5, 1994, Beckwith appeared bewildered, seemingly unsure of his surroundings.

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In 1996, Rob Reiner released “Ghosts of Mississippi,” which details the murder of Medgar Evers and the long road to justice.

In one iconic scene, Beckwith, on trial, confidently expounds...”Did I kill Medgar Evers? No I did not [chuckles] 
But he sure is dead... he ain't never coming back.”

Beckwith tried and tried to get out of jail. He never did. He died there in January 2001 at the age 80.

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=20oxunHjfQQ&pp=ygUrZ2hvc3RzIG9mIG1pc3Npc3NpcHBpIGJ5cm9uIGRlIGxhIGJlY2t3aXRoIA%3D%3D

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Ghosts of Mississippi - "White Christians" - James Woods

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Following his murder, many tributes have been paid to Medgar Evers for his contributions and sacrifice to the civil rights movement. His wife established the Medgar and Myrlie Evers Institute in Jackson, Mississippi, as a means to uphold their shared dedication to social progress. Additionally, one of the campuses of the City University of New York was named after the martyred activist.

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Notably, in 2009, the U.S. Navy honored Medgar Evers by naming one of its vessels after him. Furthermore, in early 2017, President Obama designated the Evers' residence as a national historic landmark, underscoring the significance of recognizing and preserving crucial civil rights sites in Mississippi and across the United States of America.

https://youtu.be/Qpug4Nq6U50

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Myrlie Evers-Williams Delivers Invocation for President Obama's Inauguration

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How the assassination of Medgar Evers galvanized the civil rights movement

In 1963, the activist and WWII veteran was murdered hours after the announcement of landmark civil rights legislation. It took 30 years to convict his killer.

National Geographic

A few books on the topic

—-Dittmer, John. *Local People: The Struggle for Civil Rights in Mississippi*. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 1994.

—-Evers, Myrlie B., and William Peters. *For Us, the Living*. 1st ed. Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1967. Reprint, Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 1996.

—-Scott, R. W. *Glory in Conflict: A Saga of Byron De La Beckwith*. Camden, AR: Camark Press, 1991.

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@Deglassco Hi, what biography would you recommend on the life and times of Medgar Evers?

I first learned about Medgar Evers from songs by Phil Oaks. I can still hear the first line from "Love Me, I'm a Liberal", "I cried when they shot Medgar Evers; Tears ran down my spine." Oaks wrote it in '66. I was introduced in a class at UCSB in the late '70's.

I've been curious about Medgar Evers since then. It's time for me to be better educated.

@rdfranke I would start with The Autobiography of Medgar Evers because it is written in his own words. It gives a good overview of the times in which Evers lived —-the resistance and challenges he faced. It provides a lot of context. It is primary source material, but written in a narrative that is quite appropriate for general leadership. Then, there is the foundation for going to other biographies.
@Deglassco Thanks, I just placed an order for "The Autobiography of Medgar Evers", Evers-Williams, Myrlie. I also added: " Remembering Medgar Evers: Writing the Long Civil Rights Movement (Mercer University Lamar Memorial Lectures Ser.)", Gwin, Minrose C.
@Deglassco
I was 16. I remember it well. I followed all the trials. JFK assassination kind of pushed the many civil rights era atrocities - this, church bombings, freedom rider killings - off the front page, but it was a horrible period. Not unlike thr mass murder wave now, or whatever may happen as trump gets whats coming to him. Bottom line is this country has mllions of Beckwiths and they are as arrogant and proud of their destruction as he was. We truly need to grasp that.
@dbc3 Agreed. It used to be that people would say it was a different kind of overt racism at flying back in Beckwith’s days. But just because someone is not hollering (in public) the N-word, doesn’t mean that the state of affairs is any less malignant..
@Deglassco As long as his surroundings are the walls of a cell for the length of his natural life as it was, I don't care how aware he was about anything. These folks are scum, dirty, lowlife scum.
@pmroman he tried to get out of prison time and again but he was never successful. He died in prison in 2001.
@Deglassco Yes, I know, he died in prison as he should. Too bad he was free for too long after his hideous crime.
@Deglassco @[email protected] I remember the news clips of that. His racist remarks throughout. Disgusting little worm.
@Catawu yes, he was quite confident that he would always be acquitted. Even in 1994, he was still arrogant and thought that he was the center of the show.
@Deglassco I was sickened by the thought of what people had to endure from him his entire ugly life. Unpleasant, hateful, mean and racist to the core. Worse, he was not alone.
@Catawu yes, well, he was a white supremacist, so there’s not a lot of empathy or human goodwill there.
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Thank you for the history lesson. Your posts are always so informative. Keep up the good work and know you are appreciated! ✌🏼❤️
@Deglassco @[email protected] @BlackMastodon It took 30 years to bring Medgar Evers' killer to justice.😔
@Barbramon1 and this is fortuitous. It was because of the efforts of his wife, Myrlie, that law-enforcement kept at it. Sadly, justice wasn’t served that often. It was more likely the case the perpetrators would get away scot free, and never serve a day in jail.
@Deglassco Very true. It saddens me. Remembering the Mississippi Three, murdered by KKK. 18 men were indicted, most got off, and a handful of others were convicted on minor charges. 4 decades later one perpetrator was convicted of manslaughter, given a 60 yr sentence. Also church bombing that killed 4 children. One man was convicted of murder 14 yrs later. 2 killers weren't convicted for over 40 years.
I was just a kid during Civil Rights Era. The injustices affected me deeply then. Still do.
@Barbramon1 And sadly, we’re still dealing with the sordid history.
Bob Dylan - Only a Pawn in Their Game (Official Audio)

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@Deglassco
The Medgar Evers case has always haunted me due to the cockiness of his murderer and how he evaded justice for 30 years.

His son, Delay de la Beckwith, is the subject of a documentary called “The Last White Knight.”

Paul Saltzman, who is Jewish, was attacked by Delay in Mississippi when trying get intel on a KKK meeting.

He travelled back to Mississippi 45-50 years later to meet up with Delay de la Beckwith, which is the premise of the documentary.

http://movingbeyondprejudice.com/the-last-white-knight/

‘The Last White Knight – Is Reconciliation Possible?’ | Moving Beyond Prejudice

@etebur indeed. I have seen that documentary, and it always struck me as overly generous for Saltzman to commend Beckwith Jr. for being a little bit open minded, just because Beckwith Jr. sort of reluctantly acknowledges that maybe he was taught wrong. Listen to any Ku Kluxxer and you will see that what they say, is riven with contradictions—-sometimes in the same sentence.
@Dennis1212 yes, along with the murder of Emmett Till and the assassination of Dr. King, Medgar Evers‘ murder was a galvanizing event.