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This paper was presented at the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication in San Antonio, Texas August 2005. If you have questions about this paper, please contact the author directly. If you have questions about the archives, email rakyat [ at ] eparker.org. For an explanation of the subject line, send email to [log in to unmask] with just the four words, "get help info aejmc," in the body (drop the "").
(Feb 2006) Thank you. Elliott Parker ====================================================================
Covering a Mississippi Murder Trial: The Emmett Till Lynching
By Craig Flournoy Assistant Professor, Southern Methodist University
For submission to the 2005 AEJMC Convention, History Division.
Address: Dr. Craig Flournoy SMU, Division of Journalism PO Box 750113 Dallas, TX 75275 (214) 768-3395 FAX (214) 768-3307 [log in to unmask]
On August 28, 1955, two white men appeared at the home of Mose Wright, a 64-year-old black sharecropper who lived outside the small northwest Mississippi town of Money. The men, Roy Bryant and J.W. Milam, were armed with .45 Colt automatic pistols. They demanded that Wright turn over Emmett Till, his 14-year-old nephew from Chicago who was spending a few weeks in Mississippi. Bryant and Milam, who were half-brothers, were livid. Bryant's wife Carolyn claimed that four days earlier, Till had asked her for a date. As the men left with Till, Milam told Wright, "If you know any of us here tonight, then you will never live to get to be 65." On August 31, Garland Melton, a Tallahatchie County deputy sheriff, pulled the decomposed, naked body of a young black man from the shallow waters of the Tallahatchie River. Someone had administered a beating so vicious that one side of the skull had been crushed. Above the right ear was a hole the size of a bullet. A 74-pound cotton gin fan was tied around the neck with barbed wire. Mamie Till Bradley later identified the body as that of her only child, Emmett Till.[1] He was found fifteen miles from where she had been born. Till was the victim of a lynching, according to the Tuskegee Institute's definition: "There is no process for establishing the guilt of the accused; the punishment is death, often accompanied by torture and other sadistic acts, applied in many instances to persons charged with offenses which according to the ordinary standards of civilization are of a minor character."[2] That hardly made Till's murder different. Over the previous 83 years, more than 3,600 African Americans were lynched in the South.[3] But the events that followed the Till lynching were unprecedented. Bradley put her son's body in an open casket at a Chicago funeral home on Saturday, September 3. An estimated 10,000 persons paid their respects that day. Thousands more did so on Sunday and Monday. A black newspaper in Cleveland polled the nation's major black radio preachers and found that five of every six of delivered sermons about the Till case; half wanted something done immediately.[4] On Tuesday, September 6, a grand jury returned indictments against Milam and Bryant, charging them with murder and kidnapping. The murder trial began on September 19 and took five days. It was Mississippi justice. Ruby Hurley, who had opened the first NAACP office in the Deep South, attended the legal proceedings. "It was like a circus," she recalled. "The defendants were sitting up there eating ice-cream cones and playing with their children in court just like they were out at a picnic."[5] A jury of twelve white men acquitted the defendants. The verdict was a sham. In January 1956, Milam and Bryant confessed to the murder in Look magazine after a magazine writer paid them several thousand dollars. Milam—who stood six feet, two inches and weighed 235 pounds—said he told Till his murder had a message. " 'Chicago boy,' I said, 'I'm tired of 'em sending your kind down her to stir up trouble. Goddamn you, I'm going to make an example of you just so everybody can know how me and my folks stand.' "[6] Because of Look, that message was delivered to more than three million households.[7] A few months later, Reader's Digest printed an excerpted version of the murder confession for its eleven million subscribers.[8] Scholars have given little attention to the Till case. Only one has published a full-length historical account.[9] One has published a study examining media coverage of the murder trial.[10] This is puzzling given the significance of the case. Activists, officials and journalists have said the Till murder, particularly the response in the black community and in the media, marked the emergence of the civil rights revolution.[11] "Personally, I think this was the beginning of the Civil Rights Movement in Mississippi in the twentieth century," said Amzie Moore, a black World War II veteran who helped spearhead efforts by the NAACP in Mississippi.[12] Robert Patterson, a white World War II paratrooper who helped found the first Citizens Council in Mississippi, said the Till case led to unprecedented media attention. After that, Patterson lamented, "Whenever something happened to a Negro in the South, it was made a national issue."[13] The Till case as a nexus joining the movement and the media raises several questions. Why did the trial draw national attention? Which news organizations provided the best coverage? This researcher defines best as those publications that quoted a diversity of sources, provided historical context and identified the central problem while following accepted journalistic routines such as attribution and balance. In reporting on the trial, did coverage by mainstream news organizations change when compared to their coverage of blacks in previous decades? If so, in what ways? To explore these questions, this paper will examine coverage by the white press (Life, Look and New York Times) and the black press (the Birmingham World and Jet). The researcher chose these publications for a number of reasons. The New York Times has long been considered the nation's best newspaper.[14] For example, three opinion polls taken in 1960 and 1961 asked 335 editors, 331 publishers and 125 journalism professors to rank the best newspapers in the country. The Times ranked first in all three polls.[15] Life was the nation's best-selling weekly magazine throughout the 1950s. Its penetration was enormous: The magazine estimated that in 1955 it reached more than one-third of all American families.[16] Look also was an enormously popular magazine. The Birmingham World was headed by one of the best editors in the country regarding civil rights coverage.[17] Jet was one of the nation's most influential black magazines. In addition, Jet publisher John J. Johnson was seeking to change the longstanding perception of the black press as primarily a "fighting" press.[18] The paper will focus on those stories that appeared in these five publications between September 1955 (when the initial news stories about the murder of Till were published) and January 1956. Comparing coverage in the black and white press allows for the testing of some longstanding assumptions. One is that the black press has long been a "fighting" press more interested in advancing a point of view than in providing superior news reporting.[19] Another is that New York Times, as the nation's newspaper of record, provides the best journalistic coverage of significant events in the twentieth century, particularly the Civil Rights Movement.[20] Certainly, many at the Times believed this to be the case. Some of the Times' most distinguished reporters, including Harrison Salisbury and David Halberstam, adamantly maintained that John N. Popham, the Times' Deep South correspondent from 1947 to 1958, did a better job of reporting on the South in those years than any other journalist in the country. In Salisbury's view, "To not a few reporters Popham didn't just cover the South—he was the South."[21] Claude Sitton, Popham's successor, said, "Popham knew the South's Negro leaders better than they knew each other."[22] Many of the journalists who covered the Till case said they were profoundly affected by the experience. "I had covered the courts in many areas of this country, but the Till case was just unbelievable," said James Hicks, a reporter for the Amsterdam News and the Negro Press Association. "I just didn't get the sense of being in a courtroom."[23] Dan Wakefield, a reporter for the Nation, was struck outside the courtroom by the omnipresent shadow of race and violence. "On one side red-necks with faces shaggy from lack of a shave sat on benches, on the other side Negroes sat on the burnt grass beneath a Confederate statute dedicated to 'the cause that never failed,' " he observed. "Deputies wearing gun belts ambled in and out, as if it were the set of a TV western, and frisked everyone who entered the courtroom. One of our band of outsiders from a New York daily stood on the courthouse steps, surveyed the scene, and said, 'Faulkner is just a reporter.' "[24] More than 70 reporters and photographers attended. Among the news organizations represented were the New York Times, the three television networks, Life, Look, Time, Newsweek and the black press. Together, they provided unprecedented national coverage of a lynching.[25] The Times alone published more than three dozen articles about the murder. Moore was not overstating matters when he called the Till case "the best advertised lynching that I had ever heard."[26] The New York Times and the Birmingham World began coverage of the Till case on the same day—September 2, 1955. One was the pre-eminent newspaper in the United States; the other was a black semiweekly whose circulation barely topped 10,000. Their coverage could hardly have been more different. The first story in the Times appeared on the next-to-last page of that day's final edition below two other race-related articles.[27] The Associated Press story carried a one-column headline: "Mississippi to Sift Negro Boy's Slaying." The brief story quoted one person, Mississippi Governor Hugh White. The story reported that in a telegram to the NAACP, White promised that the "court will do their duty in prosecution." The story also reported that in a press conference, White denied Till had been lynched. "This is not a lynching," the Governor said. "It is straight-out murder." That first story would set a pattern for the newspaper's coverage of the Till case: The Times would rely on few sources, provide little context and seldom include interviews with blacks. Not so with the Birmingham World. Its first story included statements from five persons—Sheriff George Smith of Leflore County, where Milam and Bryant kidnapped Till; NAACP head Roy Wilkins; a deputy sheriff; an NAACP spokesman; and Till's uncle.[28] The front-page story described the killing as a "murder" but noted an NAACP spokesman said it "appeared to 'qualify as a lynching.' " Wilkins was incensed. "The state of Mississippi," he said, "has decided to maintain white supremacy by murdering children."[29] The World story also provides important context: It noted that Till was the third black killed in Mississippi in recent months in a race-related case. "A Belzoni, Miss. minister, Rev. George Lee was shot to death because he had urged Negroes to register and vote," the story said. "And Lamar Smith, another Negro urging Negroes to vote in the recent Mississippi primary, was killed on the court-house grounds earlier this month."[30] The Tuskegee Institute, the nation's most authoritative source on lynching, determined that Lee and Smith, like Till, were the victims of lynching.[31] Lee's killing appeared to be carefully planned. As he was driving home late one night, a shot was fired into one of his tires. When Lee slowed down, another car pulled alongside him and a shotgun blast tore away much of his face. Ike Shelton, sheriff in the Delta town of Belzoni, initially said Lee died in a traffic accident. An FBI autopsy found that lead pellets had struck Lee, causing a fatal hemorrhage and asphyxiation.[32] Smith was shot to death while climbing the courthouse steps in Brookhaven in southwest Mississippi at 10 a.m. on August 13, 1955—just 15 days before Till was kidnapped.[33] Yet, reporters for the Times never included information on the murders of Lee and Smith in their coverage of the Till case. In fact, not one of the Times' stories on the Till case addressed Mississippi's history of lynching. The Scott Newspaper Syndicate produced the story in the World. W.A. Scott, a black newspaper publisher based in Atlanta, launched the syndicate and the Birmingham World in 1931. The World quickly became the dominant black newspaper in Alabama and remained so for four decades.[34] The syndicate published newspapers in more than a dozen cities and from these publications Scott created a black wire service.[35] The Birmingham World relied on it for much of its coverage of the Till case. The Times published eleven Till stories in the weeks leading up to the trial. The wire services produced seven of these. The second appeared on September 4 deep inside the newspaper, as did virtually all the Till stories in the Times.[36] The brief Associated Press story reported that an estimated 10,000 persons had turned out in Chicago to pay their respects to the dead boy. The story quoted one person, an unidentified black minister. In the story's only direct quote, the minister denied any Communist connections, asserting, "We don't need Communists." Three days later, another Associated Press story in the Times reported that a grand jury had indicted Milam and Bryant on charges of murder and kidnapping.[37] On September 13, United Press reported that Till's mother had agreed to testify.[38] The next Till story in the Times carried the byline of John N. Popham, the newspaper's chief correspondent in the Deep South. Popham, 45, was unique. Based in Chattanooga, he was the sole national newspaper correspondent covering the South fulltime. Turner Catledge, the managing editor of the Times, had assigned Popham the beat in 1947.[39] The reporter and the editor shared a common heritage: Popham was born in Virigina; Catledge was a native of Philadelphia, Mississippi. Their heritage was hardly unique at the New York Times. Southerners—including Edwin L. James from Irvington, Virginia and Clifton Daniel from Zebulon, North Carolina as well as Catledge—held the top editor's position at the Times from 1932 to 1968.[40] Popham was determined to know the South firsthand. Between 1947 and 1958, he drove 70,000 to 80,000 miles yearly searching for stories. "I was like a troubadour," he later observed. "I was the one that roamed from state to state to bring you all the latest stories and all the little peccadilloes."[41] Popham soon became a legend among white journalists and southern officials. Both groups regarded him as the quintessential southern gentleman. His dignified manners beguiled local politicians. Journalists loved hearing his stories. Claude Sitton, who succeeded Popham as the chief correspondent for the Times in the South, said of the man he replaced: "Eyes popping, eyebrows arching, knuckles cracking—all in furious concentration on the tale at hand—Popham launches into a soaring soliloquy. His delivery and Tidewater accent approximate nothing so much as dollop of sorghum syrup spat from a Gatling gun. This tidal wave of sound has been known to levitate a listener who, transfixed by the onrush of oratory, rises up on tip toes, wide-eyed and open-mouthed. The man comes as close as most to matching the legend, an elfin figure with a twinkle of Irish con in his eyes."[42]
In the view of many reporters, Popham was without peer in covering the South. For some, it bordered on hero worship. Halberstam wrote, "Popham was a true American original: a Virginia aristocrat with a secret radical heart."[43] That the New York Times was devoting this much attention to a southern lynching was radical. The content of Popham's stories was less so. Popham published three stories prior to the trial. His most extensive appeared on the eve of the proceedings.[44] He began with the obvious, noting that a "sordid murder case has focused the glare of national attention" on race relations in Mississippi. His story concentrated on the reaction among Southern whites, though he quoted only Sheriff Smith by name. Initially, Popham wrote, "The white community of Mississippi reacted to Till's slaying with sincere and vehement expressions of outrage." But this was followed by a backlash fed by fears regarding the NAACP. "Public speakers and writers of letters-to-the-editor have blanketed the state with assertions that the NAACP is a 'Communist-led organization' that seeks to 'mongrelize' the races," Popham wrote. Thus, two pre-trial stories in the Times—one by the AP, the other by Popham—raised the specter that black groups involved in the Till case may have had Communist connections. The Birmingham World published five stories prior to the murder trial. None mentions possible Communist involvement, and no evidence has since emerged that suggests such involvement. The World provided more detail and more named sources than the Times. In its story on Till's funeral, the newspaper draws a far clearer picture of the thousands of mourners who stood inside and outside the Church of God in Christ on the South side of Chicago. "Services at the church were carried by loud speakers to the huge group of mourners standing in the street," it said. "The church, which seats 1,800, was filled to capacity."[45] Arichbald Carey, a minister and former Chicago alderman, asked for forebearance. "A mob in Chicago is no better than a mob in Mississippi," he said. Unlike the Times, the World story noted the international implications of the case. It concluded by quoting Bishop Louis Ford, who told mourners, "Our country is spending millions trying to win the good will of colored people in Africa and India." But, said Ford, President Eisenhower "ought to be seeking the good will of colored people in Mississippi, Alabama and Georgia." The World also published several powerful photographs covering the full cast of characters in the case. On a single day, it ran eleven—Bryant and Milam staring stolidly ahead at they enter the courtroom; Carolyn Bryant posing with a winsome smile; Wright lifting his gaunt face to the camera beneath a straw hat; 270-pound Tallahatchie County Sheriff H.C. Strider serving a subpoena on Till's mother, their eyes locked as though in combat.[46] The photos used by the Times were much like its stories—focused almost exclusively on whites. During its four-month coverage of the Till case, the newspaper published three photos of Bryant, two of Milam and one of a defense attorney. It published one photograph of African Americans involved in the case. The World did not publish the most famous photograph in the Till case. That distinction fell to Jet, a four-year-old magazine that covered celebrities and civil rights and successfully packaged it into a pocket-sized weekly.[47] Six months after its inaugural issue, the black news magazine was selling 300,000 copies weekly.[48] On September 15, Jet published a four-page spread about the Till murder that included a half-dozen photographs.[49] One was a close-up of Till's savaged head that resembled a bloated death mask. Johnson had reservations about publishing the photograph. But the Jet publisher, based in Chicago, believed it was his responsibility to include it. The issue sold out immediately.[50] The photograph of Till had a profound impact on black Americans. U.S. Rep. Charles C. Diggs Jr., a black congressman from Michigan who attended the trial, recalled years later, "I think the picture in Jet magazine showing Emmett Till's mutilation was probably the greatest media product in the last forty or fifty years, because that picture stimulated a lot of interest and anger on the part of blacks all over the world."[51] Popham's final pre-trial story reported that Wright would testify.[52] The article is significant because it was the only one in which Popham interviewed and quoted a black American. Even then, he used a single paraphrased statement—that Wright could identify one defendant as the man who took Till from his home. Popham added, "The interview was arranged through one of the defense attorneys, a development that puzzled observers." Puzzling, of course, because Wright would be the prosecution's key witness. Popham's decision to reveal the circumstances of this "interview" is equally puzzling. It represents the only instance in his ten Till stories in which Popham explained how he obtained an interview. Equally puzzling was Popham's failure to quote Wright directly. Standard journalistic practice calls for a reporter to provide a direct quote to substantiate a paraphrased statement, particularly in an important matter such as a murder trial.[53] Jet's final pre-trial article focused on whether Till's family could expect justice.[54] As the headline put it: "Will Mississippi Whitewash the Emmett Till Slaying?" The article includes seven interviews—five whites and two blacks. It provided context, noting that Till was the third black murdered in Mississippi in four months in a race-related case. According to the article, Sheriff Strider "has repeatedly said he doubts that the body found in the river is Till's," a contention that would become the defense team's key argument in seeking acquittal. The article provided balance, noting that John Cothran, a Leflore County deputy sheriff, and Till's mother strongly disagreed. Said Bradley, "I've seen the body and what mother wouldn't know her own son." It concluded with a quote from an editorial in the Clarksdale Press Register: "Mississippi may as well burn all its law books and close its courts if the maximum penalty of the law cannot be secured in this heinous crime."[55] Because authorities recovered Till's body in Tallahatchie County, the trial was held in Sumner, the county seat. Blacks accounted for almost two-thirds of the 30,000 residents of Tallahatchie County.[56] But the twelve jurors and one alternate were all white men—ten farmers, a carpenter, an insurance salesman and a retired carpenter.[57] They lived in the Yazoo-Mississippi Delta, a fertile plain encompassing more than 7,000 square miles and bounded by the Mississippi River on the west, a line of bluffs on the east and stretching from just below Memphis to Vicksburg.[58] Ever since white planters and black slaves had settled the area, the Delta had encapsulated extremes--white wealth and black poverty, white violence and black suffering, white power and black survival.[59] For the historian Rupert Vance, the Delta embodied the Old South more than 60 years after the end of the Civil War. "Nowhere are antebellum conditions so nearly preserved than in the Yazoo Delta," he wrote in 1932.[60] The novelist Richard Wright, born near Natchez in 1908, spent part of one summer as a boy in the Delta and was astonished by the ignorance he found among black children. "I had been pitying myself for not having books to read," he wrote, "and now I saw children who had never read a book."[61] Simeon Booker, who covered the Till trial for Jet, found most blacks in the Delta ruled by lethargy and fear.[62] The novelist Robert Penn Warren visited the Delta one year after the Till trial and came away with a deep sense of foreboding. Warren described it as "sad and baleful," an area of "ruined, gaunt, classic clay hills, with the creek bottoms throttled long since in pink sand."[63] Yet the Delta was no cultural wasteland. It produced more early blues performers—including Robert Johnson and Muddy Waters—than any other area of the country.[64] Richard Ford, a writer who lived in the Delta for a time, said it was Mississippi in miniature. "What the South is to the rest of the country, the Delta is to the Mississippi," said Ford. "It is the South's South."[65] The atmosphere of the Till murder trial bordered on the surreal, a mixture of palpable tension and comic opera. Jet best captured it in a five-page spread entitled "The Strange Trial of the Till Kidnappers."[66] This was not surprising. Johnson assigned three black reporters and a white photographer to cover the trial, almost certainly the only inter-racial team to report on the case.[67] The article described Judge Curtis Swango sipping a Coke during jury selection, while two spectators drank beer. Other spectators ate box lunches during testimony. Milam's children crawled about restlessly. According to the story, "One of them played a solitary game, waving his toy water pistol at a sheriff and shouting 'boom, boom, boom.' Another time, little Harvey Milam amused himself by slipping a rope around his brother's neck and tugging at it." The Jet article included seven photographs. One showed the "Jim Crow press table" where black reporters and photographers were forced to sit. As Sheriff Strider passed by the table, the story reported, he "liked to demonstrate his friendliness with Negro reporters covering the trial by greeting them each day with: 'Good morning, niggers.' "[68] The defining moment came on the trial's third day when Wright took the stand. A prosecutor asked Wright if he could identify the men who had come to his house and taken Till. Wright rose from his chair, extended his right arm, pointed to Milam and said, "Thar he." Then he gestured at the man sitting next to Milam and said, "And thar's Mr. Bryant."[69] Murray Kempton, a columnist for the New York Post, described it as "the hardest half hour in the hardest life possible for a human being in these United States."[70] The New York Times published ten stories about the trial. Popham wrote seven. They largely failed to capture the drama—and buffoonery—of the proceedings. His articles were straightforward, focusing on testimony. He quoted blacks in two stories, in each case relying solely on what they said in court.[71] The Birmingham World's trial coverage highlighted several points the Times overlooked. In its initial story, the newspaper explained why the jury included no blacks (none was registered to vote) or women (Mississippi law prohibited this).[72] The story also identified what would become the defense team's key argument in asking for an acquittal—that the boy's body could not be positively identified. After the jury handed down its verdict, the World ran a package of four stories. Again they contained historical background absent from the Times. One noted that no jury in Mississippi had assessed the death penalty against a white man accused of killing a black since 1890.[73] The stories also highlighted the defense team's use of race in its closing arguments. Attorney John W. Whitten denounced activists, who, he said, had injected race into the case. As he told the jury, "They would not be above putting a body in the river in the hopes it might be identified as Emmett Till."[74] Popham's most ambitious piece followed the acquittal of Milam and Bryant.[75] It was the only Till story to appear on the front page of the Times. Popham quoted ten persons, all white. Two items in the story revealed the depths of racial prejudice in Mississippi. The first came from jury foreman J.A. Shaw, Jr. after some jurors said they reached a not guilty verdict because they believed the state had not proven the dead body was that of Till. Asked about his mother's testimony, which contradicted this, Shaw replied, "If she had tried a little harder, she might have got out a tear." The second came from Whitten. During his closing argument, he said the Till case "had brought notoriety and national newspaper coverage to Sumner." But, Whitten told the jurors, "He said he was 'sure that every last Anglo-Saxon one of you has the courage to free these men in the face of that pressure.' "[76] Despite such blatantly bigoted statements, Popham concluded the jury acquitted Milam and Bryant not because of racial prejudice but rather because of bureaucratic bungling. In his next story, Popham wrote, "Perhaps the clearest lesson of the trial is the need for improvements in law enforcement machinery."[77] Here was a case in which a dozen white men acquitted two other white men of murdering a 14-year-old black in Mississippi after a white defense attorney implored them to remember their Anglo-Saxon roots, and the Times concluded race was not the central issue. For their part, the Birmingham World and Jet hammered away at racial prejudice as the central issue. The magazine poignantly captured this in its final paragraph on the trial: When it was over and the jury had announced its 'not guilty' decision, the mass of sweating, shirt-sleeved, cotton-farming spectators arose to go, but first turned a damning glance toward the handful of Negroes who sat crowded around their press table. And in that single, hate-filled look it was obvious that to these white southerners, some of whom had never seen television or could believe that a Negro Congressman was not a violation of federal law, 'white supremacy' had again triumphed. It was their way of letting it be known that no white man in the state had been punished for the murder of a Negro in 65 years.[78]
Life did not shy away from race in its coverage of the case, which it described as a "national cause celebre."[79] It had a weekly circulation that exceeded five million.[80] The magazine's formula for success relied on a minimum of text accompanied by a rich mixture of illustrations and photographs. The Till case was no exception. The story, just four paragraphs, never loses sight of the centrality of race. It began by pointing out that "the prosecution was up against the whole mass of Mississippi prejudice." It concluded by noting that "the undertones of racial hatred in the case came out when the defense suggested that the whole thing was a plot by outsiders to help destroy 'the way of life of Southern white people.' " The decision by the nation's best-selling magazine to devote three pages to a lynching was unheard of. The magazine commissioned artist Franklin McMahon who produced six black-and-white drawings. The largest and most powerful shows Wright rising out of his chair to identify the kidnappers and pointing a long black finger at Milam, who glares back while Judge Swango looks on impassively.[81] Another shows the all-white jury, each man looking down sullenly. In a third, Bradley wears a look of defiance when she testifies, "I just know that it was my boy." The magazine also published a half-dozen photographs. One showed the Bryants' general store in Money where, the caption read, "Emmett gave a wolf-whistle at Bryant's pretty young wife Carolyn." The largest photograph shows Milam seated in the courtroom, smiling and playing with his two young sons, both shirtless. Just below it is another that captures Milam and Bryant just minutes after being acquitted. Each has an arm draped about his wife's shoulder. Milam wears an expansive smile punctuated by a large cigar jutting from the right corner of his mouth. If there is a hero in Life's coverage, it is Wright. Popham also finds a hero in the Till case—the white judge. "The dominant figure in the case was Judge Swango, 47 years old, handsome and impeccably groomed, a blend of judicial dignity and great natural charm," wrote Popham. "His voice was cultured, precise in grammar and soft in tone. His commitment to the law and its search for equal justice was total."[82] The World and Jet found a richer collection of heroes, black and white. Bradley for focusing media attention on the lynching of her son. Judge Swango for his handling of the case. Wright for identifying the kidnapers. Both publications gave special praise to Tallahatchie County District Attorney Gerald Chatham, especially the newspaper in a story written by Hicks. "Here was a southern-born white man facing an all-white jury and asking that jury to render a verdict which would hang two white men for killing a Negro," he wrote. "It was a challenging and difficult moment in the career of Mr. Chatham but . . . he rose to the challenge with all the ability at his command."[83] Chatham said testimony clearly showed the body recovered from the Tallahatchie River was that of Till. "If there was one ear left, one hairline, one part of his nose, any part of Emmett Till's body, then I say to you that Mamie Bradley was God's given witness to identify him," he said. When Chatham concluded, Bradley whispered to Hicks, "He couldn't have done any better."[84] After the verdict, coverage by the New York Times and the Birmingham World remained dramatically different. The Times published 17 follow-up articles. The wire services provided most, which the Times buried deep inside the newspaper. The final eleven stories did not quote a single black American; eight relied on a single white source, usually a public official. Blacks were quoted in just four stories. Two involved protests.[85] The lesson in hindsight: Minorities who want to get their message into the mainstream media should take to the streets. The black-oriented publications had a broader focus. The World's first post-trial story examined the international reaction to the case.[86] It noted that rightwing and Communist publications alike denounced the verdict. "L'Aurore's report on the trial of the accused kidnap-murderers of Emmett Till called the court proceedings 'an awful comedy,' " the World reported. "Paris' pro-Communist Liberation said the trial 'scandalized all honest people in America.' " Similarly, the story noted, London's Daily Mirror carried the verdict in a three-column headline of heavy black type. Ironically, the Times, which has long prided itself on its international coverage, paid almost no attention to the reaction abroad.[87] Jet detailed what happened to several key participants after they testified. Soon after the trial ended, the black news magazine published a gripping first-person account by Wright explaining how he escaped from Mississippi.[88] A month later, Jet examined the impact of the case on Bradley and other principal figures.[89] The most sensational post-trial story appeared in a most unlikely publication—Look. The magazine published the story in January 1956.[90] It was entitled "The Shocking Story of Approved Killing in Mississippi." The author was William Bradford Huie, an early practitioner of checkbook journalism. Huie paid Milam and Bryant approximately $4,000 to tell their version of the truth about the Till case.[91] Bryant and Milam described kidnapping Till intending only to "scare some sense into him." They pistol-whipped him, repeatedly smashing his face with their revolvers. But, they said, Till wouldn't scare. "Bobo," as Till was nicknamed, was full of "poison," according to Milam, adding, "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." There was a problem. Milam needed something to weigh down the body. He recalled recently seeing a discarded cotton gin fan, so they drove to get it. "When we got to that gin, it was daylight, and I was worried for the first time," Milam said. "Somebody might see us and accuse us of stealing the fan." So he and Bryant told Till to load the fan into Milam's pick-up truck. Then the three drove to a clearing on the Tallahatchie River where Milam sometimes went squirrel hunting. Milam ordered Till to carry the fan to the riverbank, then had him strip. This was followed by their last exchange. Milam: 'You still as good as I am?' Bobo: 'Yeah.' Milam: 'You've still 'had' white women before?' Bobo: 'Yeah.' That big .45 jumped in Milam's hand. The youth turned to catch that big, expanding bullet at his right ear. He dropped. They barb-wired the gin fan to his neck [and] rolled him into 20 feet of water. For three hours that morning, there was a fire in Big Milam's back yard: Bobo's crepe-soled shoes were hard to burn.[92]
Six photographs accompany the four-page story. A small one shows Till looking expectantly at the camera. A larger one shows Milam laughing with his wife Juanita. There also is a drawing that takes up more than a half page. It shows Milam holding his pistol and standing over Till's naked body as it collapses to the ground. The caption below reads: " 'The youth turned to catch that . . . bullet . . . . He dropped." The combination of the killers' confession, the photographs and the artwork make for a powerful magazine package. Still, there are two fundamental journalistic problems with Huie's account. First, he makes no mention of having paid the killers to talk. Second, the article includes no quotes from blacks, though the brazenness of Milam's confession begs for comment from Bradley, Wright, Wilkins and others. Look, like other mainstream news organizations, gave the Till case unprecedented publicity but remained largely one-dimensional in its coverage. So which news organizations produced the most accomplished journalistic coverage? The evidence suggests the black-oriented publications did so by providing a greater range of sources, broader context, more depth and a clear statement of the central problem while following accepted journalistic routines such as attribution and balance. Look at the persons interviewed. In covering the Till murder case, the New York Times published 38 stories; one-third contained quotes from more than one person (see Tables 1 and 2). The Birmingham World published 15 stories about the Till case; 80 percent contained quotes from more than one person (see Tables 3 and 4). In other words, one in three stories about the Till case in the Times relied on multiple sources compared to four of every five in the World. The black publications drew on a broader range of sources. The Birmingham World published 14 stories about the Till case in which at least one person is quoted. Whites are quoted in 13—or almost 93 percent—while blacks are quoted in twelve, or almost 86 percent (Table 4). Thus, the World quoted blacks almost as often as it quoted whites. The New York Times had a decidedly different record. It published 31 stories about the Till case in which at least one person is quoted. Whites are quoted in 25, or 80 percent, while blacks are quoted in twelve, or less than 39 percent (Table 2). Thus, the Times quoted whites twice as often as it quoted blacks. Many of these stories were produced by the wire services. However, the record of Popham, the Times' southern correspondent, was no different. He wrote nine stories for the Times about the Till case in which at least one person is quoted. Popham quoted whites in eight and quoted blacks in three. In every instance save one in which he quoted a black American, Popham based it solely on testimony at the murder trial. He interviewed and quoted an African American once, using a single paraphrased statement.[93] In Popham's most ambitious piece, which examined the acquittal of the two defendants, he quoted ten whites and no blacks.[94] The magazines displayed a similar disparity. Life, in its coverage of the Till case, published one story. It used a minimum of text and quoted no one. Look also published one article about the Till case, Huie's checkbook expose in which Till's killers confess. Huie quoted Milam and Bryant—two white men—and no one else. Jet published seven stories about the Till murder case. Many contained a broad range of sources. A September 15, 1955, story included interviews with four blacks and three whites.[95] A story published one week later included interviews with five whites and two blacks.[96] The photographs published by the New York Times and the Birmingham World of the Till case mirrored their written coverage. The Times' photographs, like its news stories, were dominated by whites. The Birmingham World published far more photographs, ones that represented the full cast of characters. On a single day, it published eleven. Jet published a wealth of photographs that captured the diversity of actors in the murder case as well as the famous one—the close-up of Till's savaged head. In covering a news story, a reporter should identify the key players and issues. The journalist also has a responsibility to provide context for the actors and issues by examining their history, communities and the social questions posed by the events at hand. The New York Times failed to meet these challenges in covering the Till case. Its first story included no interviews with blacks, provided no context and quoted a single white official.[97] By contrast, the first Till story in the Birmingham World included statements from two whites and three blacks.[98] Throughout their coverage, the Times, Life and Look provided little historical context. But early on, the Birmingham World and Jet provided important context for the Till case, noting he was the third black murdered in Mississippi in four months in a race-related case.[99] The two publications also examined Mississippi's long history of sanctioning white violence against blacks. The black publications also did a better job identifying the central issue in the Till case. Popham concluded the jury acquitted Milam and Bryant because of bureaucratic bungling. Jet said the fundamental problem that led to their acquittal was racial prejudice.[100] The black publications also did superior work in tracing the reaction abroad to the Till case. The Times paid minimal attention to the foreign implications of the acquittal. The Birmingham World examined the international reaction to the case in detail, noting that newspapers in foreign capitols from London to Paris denounced the verdict.[101] That a tiny black newspaper in the Deep South could trump the most influential newspaper in the country in documenting the reaction overseas to the case is astonishing. In reporting on the Till case, white and black publications framed black Americans in decidedly different ways. The primary frame used by the New York Times, Life and Look was that of a victim.[102] Look epitomized this. The magazine did so with words as when it quoted Milam telling Till, "Goddamn you, I'm going to make an example of you just so everybody can know how me and my folks stand."[103] Look did so with art, such as the illustration that showed Milam holding his pistol and standing over Till's naked body. These events did happen, and Look found a compelling—though journalistically dishonest—way to present them. But the magazine did not examine the actions of Bradley (Till's mother) and Wright (the chief prosecution witness) and Diggs (the black congressman from Michigan) and other black actors involved in the case. Look failed to provide a complete picture. The Birmingham World and Jet provided a set of frames for the central characters more diverse and nuanced than that of the New York Times, Life and Look. This was particularly true in their coverage of the black community. They graphically captured Till the victim, epitomized by Jet's horrific photo of his savaged head. They also found black activists (Bradley), heroes (Wright) and leaders (Diggs and NAACP chief Roy Wilkins) along with white allies (Chatham, the district attorney). The Till case was a rehearsal for the civil rights revolution. The black publications captured this. Mainstream publications like the New York Times, Life and Look did make significant journalistic strides in their coverage of the Till case. Southern whites had lynched thousands of blacks without getting widespread or sustained national publicity. That changed with the Till murder case. Over a four-month period, the New York Times published 38 stories about the case, about one story every three days. Life magazine devoted a three-page spread to the trial and traced the acquittal of Milam and Bryant to "racial hatred." Look magazine published the sensational confession of the killers including Milam's statement that he murdered Till because "I just decided it was time a few people got put on notice." The unprecedented coverage underscored two points. One, white violence threatened southern blacks daily. Two, southern whites who assaulted and killed blacks now faced unprecedented exposure. It is little wonder activists like Diggs and Moore, segregationists like Patterson and journalists like Booker and Halberstam and Popham said the civil rights revolution began with the Till case.[104] Indeed, reporters of both races recognized this. Booker, who covered the case for Jet, said it launched the Civil Rights Movement.[105] Bill Minor, who covered the case for the New Orleans Times-Picayune, said that because of the Till case "for the first time you couldn't have a quiet little lynching without getting real attention."[106] This was an important gain. White violence against blacks without legal consequences had long been the norm in the South. As Myrdal noted, "Any white man can strike or beat a Negro, steal or destroy his property, cheat him in a transaction and even take his life, without much fear of legal reprisal."[107] This was still true in 1955 in the Delta and large areas of the rural South. In the space of six months, four blacks were lynched in Mississippi. The Rev. George Lee and Lamar Smith for voter registration activism.[108] Till for, in the memorable words of Penn Warren, "showing off before the country cousins."[109] And Clinton Melton, a black service station attendant, after a disagreement with a customer about how much gas he wanted.[110] When Milam said he wanted to set an example by murdering Till, he might have been speaking for the other killers as well. Lynching, as the NAACP's Walter White has observed, "is much more an expression of Southern fear of Negro progress than of Negro crime."[111] But white violence could not withstand the growth in black political power coupled with national media coverage. There would be more race-related murders, to be sure, but they would become national scandals. National coverage meant the perpetrators, for the first time, faced real consequences. The movement eventually provided southern blacks with an unprecedented measure of personal safety. Some political analysts consider this the movement's single greatest accomplishment. According to Frances Fox Piven and Richard A. Cloward, "In the South the deepest meaning of the winning of democratic political rights is that the historical primacy of terror as a means of social control has been substantially diminished."[112] In its coverage of the Till case, the New York Times and other mainstream publications framed blacks primarily as victims. This was unusual. So was the degree of attention the Times gave to the trial. This also represented progress. These stories were evidence that the most powerful newspaper in the country considered it news—indeed, front-page news—when white southerners murdered a black southerner. Why? Because, as the Till case foreshadowed, the mainstream media were willing to abandon their longstanding treatment of African Americans. Beginning with the Till case, those news organizations adopted a new frame in reporting on blacks—neither invisible nor criminals.[113] Instead, the New York Times, Life and Look portrayed blacks as the innocent victims of deadly racial hatred. King understood the power of the media as a potential tool to fight injustice. As he wrote in his 1964 book on the Birmingham campaign, Why We Can't Wait, "The brutality with which officials would have quelled the black individual became impotent when it could not be pursued with stealth and remain unobserved. It was caught—as a fugitive from a penitentiary is often caught—in gigantic circling spotlights. It was imprisoned in a luminous glare revealing the naked truth to the whole world."[114] The political scientist E.E. Schattschneider has noted that conflict is the heart of politics and that in every conflict, the audience plays the central role. In his words, "If a fight starts watch the crowd, because the crowd plays the decisive role."[115] In the Till case, the media provided black Americans with a powerful new instrument with which to attract a crowd. Once that happened, Jim Crow did not have a chance.
Table 1: New York Times Articles about the Emmett Till Case
PRE-TRIAL COVERAGE 1 Associated Press, "Mississippi to Sift Negro Boy's Slaying," September 2, 1955, p. 37. 2 Associated Press, "Slain Youth's Body Seen by Thousands," September 4, 1955, sec. 5, p. 9. 3 Associated Press, "Report on Slaying Due," September 6, 1955, p. 52. 4 Associated Press, "2 Held for Trial in Slaying of Boy," September 7, 1955, p. 19. 5 United Press, "U.S. Urged to Halt 'Fury in Mississippi,' " September 8, 1955, p. 10. 6 Associated Press, "Murder Trial Date Set," September 10, 1955, p. 5. 7 "Murder Most Foul," September 11, 1955, sec. 4, p. 2. 8 United Press, "Mother to Testify," September 13, 1955, p. 28. 9 John N. Popham, "Trial Tomorrow in Boy's Murder," Sept. 18, 1955, p. 50. 10 John N. Popham, "Racial Issues Stirred by Mississippi Killing," September 18, 1955, sec. 4, p. 7. 11 John N. Popham, "Slain Boy's Uncle Ready to Testify," September 19, 1955, p. 50.
TRIAL COVERAGE 12 John N. Popham, "Trial under way in Youth's Killing," September 20, 1955, p. 32. 13 John N. Popham, "Trial Is Delayed in Boy's Slaying," September 21, 1955, p. 24. 14 John N. Popham, "Slain Boy's Uncle on Stand at Trial," September 22, 1955, p. 64. 15 John N. Popham, "State Rests in Youth's Killing," September 23, 1955, p. 15. 16 John N. Popham, "Mississippi Jury Acquits 2 Accused in Youth's Killing," September 24, 1955, pp. 1, 38. 17 Associated Press, "Boy's Mother 'Not Surprised,' " September 24, 1955, p. 38. 18 John N. Popham, "Mississippi Seeks Kidnapping Count," September 25, 1955, p. 32. 19 "Misssissippi Jury Denounced Here," September 25, 1955, p. 33. 20 John N. Popham, "The Mississippi Trial Is Deep South Drama," September 25, 1955, sec. 4, p. 8. 21 "Case of Emmett Till," September 25, 1955, sec. 4, pp. 33-34.
POST-TRIAL COVERAGE 22 "10,000 in Harlem Protest Verdict," September 26, 1955, p. 10. 23 Associated Press, "Mississippi Pair Seeking Freedom," September 30, 1955, p. 18. 24 United Press, "Mississippi Men Released on Bail," October 1, 1955, p. 40. 25 Associated Press, "Negroes Protect Two in Till Case," October 2, 1955, p. 56/ 26 Associated Press, "Till Trial Protested," October 8, 1955, p. 7. 27 "Boycott Is Urged in Youth's Killing," October 12, 1955, p. 62. 28 "Survey Finds U.S. Is Hurt by Till Case," October 22, 1955, p. 40. 29 "Day of Mourning Asked," October 24, 1955, p. 24. 30 United Press International, "U.S. Bars Till Action," October 25, 1955, p. 27. (table continued)
31 "Till Case Linked to Negro's Plight," October 30, 1955, p. 86. 32 Associated Press, "Till Case Moves into New Phase," November 6, 1955, p. 82. 33 Associated Press, "2 Negroes Testify in Till Kidnap Case," November 9, 1955, p. 39. 34 United Press, "Grand Jury in Till Case Fails to Indict Two White Men Accused in Kidnapping," November 10, 1955, p. 31. 35 Associated Press, "Till Case Inquiry Asked," November 11, 1955, p. 17. 36 Associated Press, "U.S. Aide Deplores Delay in Till Case," November 21, 1955, p. 33. 37 United Press International, "Federal Action Ruled Out," December 7, 1955, p.30. 38 "Till Case Decried by Brownell Aide," January 5, 1956, p. 22.
Table 2: Persons Quoted in New York Times about the Till Case by Race
Findings: 1 The New York Times published 38 stories about the Till murder case between August 1955, when the murder occurred, and January 1956.
2 There are seven stories with no quotes. There are 18 stories with one quote. There are 13 stories with more than one person quoted or 34 percent of the 38 stories.
3 There are 25 stories in which at least one white is quoted or 80 percent of the 31 stories in which persons are quoted.
4 There are twelve stories in which at least one black is quoted or 38.7 percent of the 31 stories in which persons are quoted.
5 There are five stories in which at least one white and at least one black are quoted or 16 percent of the 31 stories in which persons are quoted.
Key: * -- story carries the byline of New York Times reporter John N. Popham
White Black 1) "Mississippi to Sift Negro Boy's Slaying" (9/2/55) 1 -- 2) "Slain Youth's Body Seen by Thousands" (9/4/55) -- 1 3) "Report on Slaying Due" (9/6/55) 1 -- 4) "2 Held for Trial in Slaying of Boy" (9/7/55) 2 1 5) "U.S. Urged to Halt 'Fury in Mississippi' " (9/8/55) 1 -- 6. "Murder Trial Date Set" (9/10/55) 1 -- 7) "Murder Most Foul" (9/11/55) -- -- 8) "Mother to Testify" (9/13/55) -- 1 9) "Trial Tomorrow in Boy's Murder (9/18/55) * 2 -- 10) "Racial Issues Stirred by Mississippi Killing" (9/18/55) * 1 -- 11) "Slain Boy's Uncle Ready to Testify" (9/19/55) * -- 1 12) "Trial under way in Youth's Killing" (9/20/55) * 1 -- 13) "Trial Is Delayed in Boy's Slaying" (9/21/55) * 3 -- 14) "Slain Boy's Uncle on Stand at Trial" (9/22/55) * 3 1 15) "State Rests in Youth's Killing" (9/23/55) * 6 4 16) "Mississippi Jury Acquits 2 Accused in Killing"(9/24/55) * 10 -- 17) "Boy's Mother 'Not Surprised' " (9/24/55) -- 2 18) "Mississippi Seeks Kidnapping Count" (9/25/55) * 4 -- 19) "Misssissippi Jury Denounced Here" (9/25/55) 2 2 20) "The Mississippi Trial Is Deep South Drama" (9/25/55) * -- -- 21) "Case of Emmett Till" (9/25/55) -- -- 22) "10,000 in Harlem Protest Verdict" (9/26/55) -- 3 23) "Mississippi Pair Seeking Freedom" (9/30/55) 1 2 (table continued)
White Black 24) "Mississippi Men Released on Bail" (10/1/55) 2 -- 25 "Negroes Protect Two in Till Case" (10/2/55) -- 1 26 "Till Trial Protested" (10/8/55) -- -- 27) "Boycott Is Urged in Youth's Killing" (10/12/55) 2 2 28) "Survey Finds U.S. Is Hurt by Till Case" (10/22/55) -- -- 29) "Day of Mourning Asked" (10/24/55) -- -- 30) "U.S. Bars Till Action" (10/25/55) 1 -- 31) "Till Case Linked to Negro's Plight" (10/30/55) 1 --
32) "Till Case Moves into New Phase" (11/6/55) 1 -- 33) "2 Negroes Testify in Till Kidnap Case" (11/9/55) -- -- 34) "Grand Jury in Till Case Fails to Indict Two" (11/10/55) 1 -- 35) "Till Case Inquiry Asked" (11/11/55) 1 -- 36) "U.S. Aide Deplores Delay in Till Case" (11/21/55) 1 --
37) "Federal Action Ruled Out" (12/7/55) 1 --
38) "Till Case Decried by Brownell Aide" (1/5/56) 1 --
Table 3: Birmingham World Articles about the Emmett Till Case
PRE-TRIAL 1) Scott News Service, "Battered Body of Boy, 14, Found in River in Miss.," September 2, 1955, pp. 1, 8. 2) "50,000 View Body of 14-Year-Old Boy Found Slain in Mississippi," September 6, 1955, p. 1. 3) Scott News Service, "Possibility of Early Trial Looms for Miss. Lynch-Murder Suspects," September 9, 1955, pp. 1, 8. 4) E.J. Mays, "Rites Held in Chicago for Victim as Hearing Goes On," September 9, 1955, pp. 1, 8. 5) E.J. Mays, "Accused of Kidnap-Death of 14-Year-Old Chicago Boy," September 13, 1955, p. 1.
TRIAL COVERAGE 6) "Two White Men on Trial for Murder of Youngster," September 20, 1955, p. 1. 7) Raymond F. Tisby, "Lynch-Murder Victim's Mother Appears at Miss. Murder Trial," September 23, 1955, pp. 1, 4, 6. 8) James L. Kilgallen, "Miss. Acquits Till Death Suspects," September 27, 1955, pp. 1, 4. 9) James Hicks, "Writer Reviews Passionate Closing Plea of Till Case Atty.," September 27, 1955, pp. 1, 2. 10) "Principals in Emmett Till Case May Face $100,000 Suit," September 27, 1955, p. 6. 11) Scott News Service, "No White Man Given Death for Killing in Miss. Since 1890, Writer Observes," September 27, 1955, p. 6.
POST-TRIAL COVERAGE 12) Chester M. Hampton, "World Shocked by Till Trial," September 30, 1955, p. 6. 13) "2 Till Kidnap Suspects Released on $10,000 Bond in Greenwood," October 4, 1955, p. 1. 14) "Miss. Reporter Says Witness 'Captive,' " October 14, 1955, p. 5. 15) "Moses Wright Makes Appearance Before LeFlore County Grand Jury," November 11, 1955, p. 1.
Table 4: Persons Quoted in Birmingham World about Till Case by Race
Findings: 1.The Birmingham World published 15 stories about the Till murder case between August 1955, when the murder occurred, and January 1956.
1.There is one story with no quotes. There are two stories with one quote. There are twelve stories with more than one person quoted or 80 percent of the 15 stories.
2.There are 13 stories in which at least one white is quoted or 92.8 percent of the 14 stories in which persons are quoted.
3.There are twelve stories in which at least one black is quoted or 85.7 percent of the 14 stories in which persons are quoted.
4.There are eleven stories in which at least one white and at least one black are quoted or 78.6 percent of the 14 stories in which persons are quoted.
White Black 1) "Battered Body of Boy, 14, Found in River in Miss." (9/2/55) 2 4 2) "50,000 View Body of 14-Year-Old Boy" (9/6/55) 1 1 3) "Possibility of Early Trial Looms" (9/9/55) 4 2 4) "Rites Held in Chicago for Victim" (9/9/55) 3 2 5) "Accused of Kidnap-Death of Chicago Boy" (9/13/55) 2 2 6) "Two White Men on Trial for Murder of Youngster" (9/20/55) 3 1 7) "Lynch-Murder Victim's Mother Appears at Trial" (9/23/55) 1 2 8) "Miss. Acquits Till Death Suspects" (9/27/55) 5 -- 9) "Writer Reviews Closing Plea of Till Case Atty." (9/27/55) 1 1 10) "Principals in Till Case May Face $100,000 Suit" (9/27/55) -- 1 11) "No White Man Given Death in Miss. Since 1890" (9/27/55) 2 1 12) "World Shocked by Till Trial" (9/30/55) 1 4
13) "2 Till Kidnap Suspects Released on Bond" (10/4/55) 1 -- 14) "Miss. Reporter Says Witness 'Captive,' " (10/14/55) 2 4
15) "Wright Makes Appearance Before Grand Jury" (11/11/55) -- --
[1] Hugh Stephen Whitaker, "A Case Study in Southern Justice: The Emmett Till Case," masters thesis, Florida State University, 1963, pp. 102-105, 109-111, 117-119. Much of his work is based on the trial transcript, which is no longer available. He also interviewed attorneys for the state and the defendants, law enforcement officers involved in the case, several jurors and William Bradford Huie, the journalist who later paid Milam and Bryant for their confessions. [2] "The Lynching Records at Tuskegee Institute," in Eight Negro Bibliographies, No. 7 edited by Daniel T. Williams (New York: Kaus Reprint, 1970): 1,2, 4. [3] Tuskegee University figures as cited in Appendix 1 of Mark Curriden and Leroy Phillips, Jr., Contempt of Court (New York: Faber and Faber, 1999): 354-355. [4] Juan Williams, Eyes on the Prize: America's Civil Rights Years, 1954-1965 (New York: Penguin Books, 1987): 44. [5] Ruby Hurley Interview in Howell Raines, My Soul Is Rested: The Story of the Civil Rights Movement in the Deep South (New York: Penguin, 1977): 132. [6] William Bradford Huie, "The Shocking Story of Approved Killing in Mississippi," Look 20 (January 24, 1956): 50. For description of Milam, see Whitaker, "Case Study," p. 108. [7] Thomas C. Leonard, News for All: America's Coming of Age with the Press (New York: Oxford University Press, 1995): 170. [8] Huie, "The Shocking Story," in Reader's Digest 68 (April 1956): 63-68. [9] Stephen J. Whitfield, A Death in the Delta: The Story of Emmett Till (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1988). Christopher Metress has assembled a worthwhile collection of newspaper accounts in The Lynching of Emmett Till: A Documentary Narrative (Charlottesville, Virginia: University of Virginia Press, 2002). Mamie Till-Mobley published a memoir about her son's murder; see Death of Innocence: The Story of the Hate Crime that Changed America (New York: Random House, 2003). [10] Warren Breed, "Comparative Handling of the Emmett Till Case," Journalism Quarterly (Summer 1958): 291-298. Breed, a sociologist, examined the New York Times and ten unnamed newspapers. He concluded that all but one provided objective coverage. Breed based his analysis on a content analysis in which he mixed news stories and photographs with editorials and letters to the editor. He analyses seven "themes" such as "lynching" and "all-white jury" without ever explaining what constitutes objective—or biased—coverage. John Tisdale interviewed three white reporters who covered the Till trial but provides no assessment of their coverage. See , "Different Assignments, Different Perspectives: How Reporters Reconstruct the Emmett Till Civil Rights Murder Trial," Oral History Review 20 No. 1 (Winter/Spring 2002): 39-58. See also Gerald Baldasty, et. al., "News, Race and the Status Quo: The Case of Emmett Louis Till" (paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Journalism Historians Association, Portland, Oregon, October 1999) and Jane Rhodes, "Racial Coverage of the 1950s Print Media and the Case of Emmett Till" (paper presented at the annual meeting of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication, San Antonio, Texas, August 1987). [11] David Halberstam, The Fifties (New York: Ballantine Books, 1993): 437. Halberstam calls the trial "the first great media event of the civil rights movement." [12] Amzie Moore Interview in Howell Raines, My Soul Is Rested: The Story of the Civil Rights Movement in the Deep South (New York: Penguin, 1977), p. 235. [13] Robert Patterson Interview in Raines, My Soul Is Rested, pp. 298-299. [14] Studies covering four decades have found that the vast majority of American intellectuals, the political elite and newspaper publishers and editors consider the Times the nation's best newspaper. See Charles Kadushin, The American Intellectual Elite (Boston: Little Brown, 1974): 140-141; Leon V. Sigal, Reporters and Officials: The Organization and Politics of Newsmaking (Lexington, Mass.: D.C. Heath and Company, 1973): 47; Ernest C. Hynds, American Newspapers in the 1980s (New York: Hastings House, 1980): 284-285; and Columbia Journalism Review Web site www.cjr.org, CJR Survey, "America's Best Newspapers," (November/December 1999). [15] Edwin Emery and Michael Emery, The Press and America: An Interpretative History of the Mass Media, 4th ed. (Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey: Prentice-Hall, 1978): 461-462. [16] Leonard, News for All, pp. 80, 170. [17] Lamont Yeakey, who wrote a massively-detailed doctoral dissertation examining the Montgomery bus boycott, said Birmingham World managing editor Emory O. Jackson was "the most astute and best informed reporter covering the boycott." See Yeakey, "The Montgomery, Alabama Bus Boycott, 1955-1956," Ph.D. dissertation, Columbia University, 1979, p. 465. David J. Garrow, author of a Pulitzer-Prize winning biography of Martin Luther King Jr. echoed this observation in a January 2002 telephone conversation with this researcher. [18] Adam Paul Green, "Selling the Race: Cultural Production and Notions of Community in Black Chicago, 1940-1955," Ph.D. dissertation, 1998, Yale University, pp. 150-157. [19] Scholars have been advancing this idea for at least the past six decades. See Charlotte G. O'Kelly, "Black Newspapers and the Black Protest Movement: Their Historical Relationship, 1827-1945," Phylon 43 No. 1 (First Quarter 1982): 1, 6, 11; Gunnar Myrdal, An American Dilemma: The Negro Problem and Modern Democracy, Vols. I & II (New York: Random House, 1944): 908-926; Tisdale, "Different Assignments, Different Perspectives," p. 41; and Thomas W. Young, "Voice of Protest, Voice of Change" in Race and the News Media, edited by Paul L. Fisher and Ralph L. Lowenstein (New York: Frederick A. Praeger Publishers, 1967): 125-132. The credo of the black-oriented National Newspaper Publishers Association was to be a crusader and an advocate for civil rights; see Benjamin F. Clark, "The Editorial Reaction of Selected Southern Black Newspapers to the Civil Rights Movement, 1954-1968," Ph.D. dissertation, 1989, Howard University, p. 5 [20] Scholarly reliance on the Times can be confirmed by consulting the endnotes of hundreds of works of American history. [21] Harrison Salisbury, Without Fear or Favor: The New York Times and Its Times (New York: Ballantine Books, 1980): 358. (emphasis in the original) [22] Ibid, p. 353. [23] "The Black Press at the Trial: An Interview with James Hicks" in Williams, Eyes on the Prize, p. 51. [24] Dan Wakefield, Between the Lines: A Reporter's Personal Journey Through Public Events (New York: New American Library, 1966): 145. [25] Whitaker, "Case Study," pp. 124, 131, 142-148. [26] Moore Interview, My Soul Is Rested, pp. 234-235. [27] "Mississippi to Sift Negro Boy's Slaying," New York Times, 2 September 1955, p. 37. The story incorrectly lists Till's age as 15. It ran below other two articles: a one-column story on an increase in black college students, and a two-column story by future Times editor Max Frankel on a meeting of scholars to redefine the meaning of equality. [28] "Battered Body of Boy, 14, Found in River in Miss.," Birmingham World, 2 September 1955, pp. 1, 8. [29] Officials and journalists criticized Wilkins for making that statement, and several scholars later joined them. But journalists and scholars did not criticize William Faulkner when, prior to the trial, he issued a statement that echoed Wilkins's words. The Nobel Prize-winning novelist concluded, "If we in America have reached that point in our desperate culture when we must murder children, no matter for what reason or what color, then we don't deserve to survive, and probably won't." See William Faulkner, "Faulkner Calls Lynching Test of Man's Survival," Chicago Defender, 17 September 1955, p. 3. [30] "Battered Body of Boy, 14, Found in River in Miss.," Birmingham World, p. 1. [31] "4,733 Mob Action Victims Since '82, Tuskegee Reports," Montgomery Advertiser, 26 April 1959. [32] Simeon Booker, Black Man's America (Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey: Prentice-Hall, Inc., 1964): 161-163 and Charles M. Payne, I've Got the Light of Freedom: The Organizing Tradition and the Mississippi Freedom Struggle (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1995): 37-39. [33] Philip Dray, At the Hands of Persons Unknown: The Lynching of Black America (New York: Random House, 2002): 426, and Payne, I've Got the Light of Freedom, pp. 39, 41. [34] Allen Woodrow Jones, "Alabama," in The Black Press in the South, 1865-1979, edited by Henry Lewis Suggs (Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1983): 43-46; and Alton Hornsby, Jr., "Georgia," in The Black Press in the South, pp. 127-128. [35] Armistead S. Pride and Clint C. Wilson, A History of the Black Press (Washington: Howard University Press, 1997): 144. [36] "Slain Youth's Body Seen By Thousands," New York Times, 4 September 1955, Sec. 5, p. 9. [37] "2 Held for Trial in Slaying of Boy," New York Times, 7 September 1955, p. 19. [38] "Mother to Testify," New York Times, 13 September 1955, p. 28. [39] Oral history interview with John Popham, 4 April 1987, Archives and Special Collections, J.D. Williams Library, University of Mississippi, pp. 1-2;Turner Catledge, My Life and the Times (New York: Harper & Row, 1971): 219. [40] James was managing editor from 1932-1951, Catledge from 1951-1964 and Daniel from 1964-1969. Catledge was the first executive editor at the Times (1964-1968). Adoph Ochs, the publisher who pushed the Times to greatness after he purchased it in 1896, considered Chattanooga, Tennessee his hometown. Howell Raines, who resigned as editor in 2003, was born in Birmingham, Alabama. See Catledge, My Life and the Times, pp. 185-186, 285, 305; Susan E. Tifft and Alex S. Jones, The Trust: The Private and Powerful Family Behind the New York Times (New York: Little, Brown and Company, 1999): 5-7,30-40; Harrison Salisbury, Without Fear or Favor: An Uncompromising Look at the New York Times (New York: Ballantine Books, 1980): 354; and Gay Telese, The Kingdom and the Power (New York: World Publishing Company, 1969): 38-39, 338-341, 534. [41] Interview with Popham, , J.D. Williams Library, University of Mississippi, pp. 2, 24. [42] Sitton as quoted in Salisbury, Without Fear or Favor, p. 353. [43] Halberstam, The Fifties, p. 437. [44] John Popham, "Racial Issues Stirred by Mississippi Killing," New York Times, 18 September 1955, Sec. 4, p. 7. [45] "50,000 View Body of 14-Year-Old Boy Found Slain in Mississippi," Birmingham World, 6 Sepember 1955, p. 1. [46] "Raymond F. Tisby, "Lynch-Murder Victim's Mother Appears at Miss. Murder Trial," Birmingham World, 23 September 1955, pp. 1, 4. [47] Carla Hall, "John H. Johnson: From Office Worker to Millionaire Publishing Mogul," Washington Post, 14 September 1980, p. L1; Raoul V. Mowatt, "Jet Magazine Finds Niche, Manages to Stay Afloat in Difficult Time," Chicago Tribune, 3 December 2001, Sec. K, p. 4. [48] John H. Johnson, Succeeding Against the Odds (New York: Warner Books, 1989): 207. [49] "Nation Horrified by Murder of Kidnapped Chicago Youth," Jet, 15 September 1955, pp. 6-9. Jet also relied on a broader range of sources than the Times. The magazine's September 15 story included statements from seven persons, black and white. [50] Johnson, Succeeding Against the Odds, p. 240. [51] "An Interview with Congressman Charles Diggs" in Williams, Eyes on the Prize, p. 49. [52] John N. Popham, "Slain's Boy Uncle to Testify," New York Times, 19 September 1955, p. 50. [53] The author, a reporter for 25 years, based the last statement on his own experience. [54] "Will Mississippi Whitewash the Emmett Till Slaying?," Jet, 22 September 1955, pp. 8-12. [55] Ibid, p. 11. [56] U.S. Census Bureau, Census of Population: 1950; Part 24, Mississippi (Washington DC: U.S. Census Bureau, 1952): 24-71. [57] Whitaker, "Case Study," p. 145. [58] James C. Cobb, The Most Southern Place on Earth: The Mississippi Delta and the Roots of Regional Identity (New York: Oxford University Press, 1992): 3-5. [59] Ibid, pp. 28, 153, 183, 198, 231. [60] Rupert Vance, Human Geography of the South (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1932): 270. [61] Richard Wright, Black Boy (New York: Harper & Row, 1966): 151. [62] Booker, recalling the funeral for Rev. Lee, said a white detective moved through the crowd without touching a single black: "A pathway opened automatically as if the Negroes, even with their backs turned, could feel the presence of an approaching white man," he wrote. See Booker, Black Man's America, p. 164. For a fascinating account of how Booker and two white news reporters helped locate two witnesses for the prosecution in the Till case, see Simeon Booker, "A Negro Reporter at the Till Trial," Nieman Reports 53/53 (Winter 1999-2000): 136-137. [63] Robert Penn Warren, Segregation: The Inner Conflict of the South (New York: Random House, 1956): 5. [64] See " 'The Blues Is a Lowdown Shakin' Chill,' " in Cobb, The Most Southern Place on Earth, p. 325. [65] Ford as quoted in Cobb, The Most Southern Place on Earth, p. 325. [66] "The Strange Trial of the Till Kidnapers," Jet, 6 October 1955, pp. 6-11. [67] Johnson, Succeeding Against the Odds, p. 240. [68] "The Strange Trial of the Till Kidnapers," Jet, p. 8. [69] "An Interview with James Hicks" in Williams, Eyes on the Prize, 50-51, 54; Robert Caro, The Years of Lyndon Johnson: Master of the Senate (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2002): 705. [70] Murray Kempton, "He Went All the Way," in America Comes of Middle Age: Columns, 1950-1962 (Boston: Little, Brown, 1962): 135. [71] Here is Popham's account of Wright's testimony: "The cotton farmer twice rose from the witness chair and singled out the defendants, Roy Bryant, 24, and his half-brother, J.W. Milam, 36, with the words, 'There he is. That's the man.' " Liberal protocol probably accounted for the decision by the Times not to use Wright's dialect. Still, by changing Wright's words, Popham whitewashed the testimony of its powerful simplicity. See John Popham, "Slain Boy's Uncle on Stand at Trial," New York Times, 22 September 1955, p. 64. [72] "Two White Men on Trial for Murder of Youngster," Birmingham World, 20 September 1955, p. 1. [73] "No White Man Given Death for Killing in Miss. Since 1890, Writer Observes," Birmingham World, 27 September 1966, p. 6 [74] James L. Kilgallen, "Miss. Acquits Till Death Suspects," Birmingham World, 27 September 1955, p. 6. [75] John Popham, "Mississippi Jury Acquits 2 Accused in Youth's Killing," New York Times, 24 September 1955, pp. 1, 38. [76] Ibid, p. 38. [77] John Popham, "The Mississippi Trial Is Deep South Drama," New York Times, 25 September 1955, Sec. E, p. 8. [78] "The Strange Trial," Jet, p. 11. [79] "Emmett Till's Day in Court," Life, 3 October 1955, pp. 36-38. [80] Leonard, News for All, p. 170. [81] Jet published an equally powerful, though much smaller photograph that shows Wright standing ramrod straight and leveling a finger at Milam. See "The Strange Trial," p. 9. [82] Popham, "The Mississippi Trial Is Deep South Drama," New York Times, Sec. E, p. 8. [83] James Hicks, "Writer Reviews Passionate Closing Plea of Till Case Atty.," Birmingham World, 27 September 1955, pp. 1, 2. [84] Ibid, p. 2. [85] "10,000 in Harlem Protest Verdict," New York Times, 26 September 1955, p. 10, and "Boycott Is Urged in Youth's Killing," New York Times, 12 October 1955, p. 62. [86] Chester M. Hampton, "World Shocked by Till Trial," Birmingham World, 30 September 1956, p. 6. [87] This is all the more amazing considering the depth and range of the criticism. Le Figaro in France called the verdict "scandalous" and said it was certain to "arouse worldwide indignation." The Vatican's L'Osservatore Romano in Rome expressed outrage. So did Das Freie Volk in Germany, which said the verdict showed that "the life of a Negro in Mississippi is not worth a whistle." See Whitfield, A Death in the Delta, p. 46. The Times finally addressed international reaction almost one month after the verdict, but it relied on second-hand information. In an October 22 story, the newspaper reported that the American Jewish Committee had issued a report that said the Till case had seriously damaged the nation's prestige. The group based its finding on a survey of public reaction in North Africa and Europe. The story provides no details about the report's findings abroad. See "Survey Finds U.S. Hurt by Till Case," New York Times, 22 October 1955, p. 40. [88] Mose Wright, "How I Escaped from Mississippi," Jet, 13 October 1955, pp. 6-11. [89] "How the Till Case Changed Five Lives," Jet, 24 November 1955, pp. 10-13. [90] Huie, "The Shocking Story of Approved Killing in Mississippi," pp. 46-50. [91] William Bradford Huie Interview in Raines, My Soul Is Rested, p. 389. [92] Huie, "The Shocking Story of Approved Killing in Mississippi," p. 50. [93] Popham, "Slain Boy's Uncle to Testify," New York Times, 19 September 1955, p. 50. [94] Popham, ""Mississippi Jury Acquits 2 Accused in Youth's Killing," New York Times, 24 September 1955, pp. 1, 8. [95] "Nation Horrified by Murder of Kidnapped Chicago Youth," Jet, 15 September 1955, pp. 6-9. [96] "Will Mississippi Whitewash the Emmett Till Slaying?," Jet, 22 September 1955, pp. 8-12. [97] "Mississippi to Sift Negro Boy's Slaying," New York Times, 2 September 1955, p. 37. [98] "Battered Body of Boy, 14, Found in River in Miss.," Birmingham World, 2 September 1955, pp. 1, 8. [99] Ibid, p. 1, and "Will Mississippi Whitewash the Emmett Till Slaying?," Jet, p. 9. [100] See "The Strange Trial of the Till Kidnapers," Jet, 6 October 1955, p. 11. [101] Hampton, "World Shocked by Till Trial," Birmingham World, 30 September 1956, p. 6. [102] There were exceptions, such as the story in the Times and the drawing in Life regarding Wright's testimony identifying Milam and Bryant as the men who kidnapped Till. [103] Huie, "The Shocking Story of Approved Killing in Mississippi," Look, 24 January 1956, p. 50. [104] Moore Interview in Raines, My Soul Is Rested, pp. 234-235; Diggs Interview in Williams, Eyes on the Prize, p. 49; Patterson Interview in Raines, My Soul Is Rested, p. 239; Popham as quoted in the Jackson Clarion-Ledger, 25 August, 1985, Sec. A., p. 1; and Halberstam, The Fifties, p. 437. [105] Simeon Booker, "Thirty Years Ago: How Emmett Till's Lynching Launched Civil Rights Drive," Jet 17 June 1985, p. 12. [106] Minor as quoted in the Jackson Clarion-Ledger, 25 August, 1985, Sec. A., p. 1. [107] Myrdal, An American Dilemma, p. 559. [108] Dray, At the Hands of Persons Unknown, p. 426. [109] Robert Penn Warren, Who Speaks for the Negro? (New York: Random House, 1965): 30. [110] Elmer Kimbell, a cotton-gin manager and Milam's best friend, put two bullets in Melton's head. Kimbell claimed self-defense; three witnesses said otherwise. A Tallahatchie County jury acquitted Kimbell of murder despite testimony from the white owner of the gas station and two black witnesses that Melton was unarmed. See David Halberstam, "Tallahatchie County Acquits a Peckerwood," The Reporter 14, 19 April 1956, pp. 26-30; and Whitaker, "Case Study," p. 172. [111] White as quoted in Myrdal, An American Dilemma, p. 563. [112] Frances Fox Piven and Richard A. Cloward, Poor People's Movements: Why They Succeed, How They Fail (New York: Vintage Books, 1977): 182. [113] There is a wealth of studies examining how the nation's news media portrayed black Americans during the first half of the 20th century. They overwhelmingly find that mainstream newspapers either ignored blacks or presented them negatively. The dominant image was that of a criminal. See Chicago Commission on Race Relations, The Negro in Chicago: A Study in Race Relations and a Race Riot (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1922): 524, 635; Noel P. Gist, "The Negro in the Daily Press," Social Forces 10 No. 3 (March 1932): 405-411; Ira B. Harkey, Jr, The Smell of Burning Crosses: An Autobiography of a Mississippi Newspaperman (Jacksonville, Illinois: Harris-Wolfe & Co., 1967): 52; Carolyn Martindale, "Changes in Newspaper Images of Black Americans," Newspaper Research Journal (Winter 1990): 40-50; and Southern Regional Council, Race in the News: Usage in Southern Newspapers (Atlanta: Southern Regional Council, 1949): 2. [114] Martin Luther King, Jr., Why We Can't Wait (New York: New American Library, 1964): 39. [115] E.E. Schattschneider, The Semisovereign People: A Realist's View of Democracy in America (New York: Hold, Rinehart and Winston, 1960): 3.
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