EMMETT TILL

Life, Lynching, and Legacy of Emmett Till

AI AUDIO OVERVIEW

I. The Boy from Chicago: A Life Abridged

A. Emmett’s World: A Portrait of a Northern Black Life

Emmett Louis Till was born on July 25, 1941, in Chicago, Illinois, a city and a world apart from the rural Mississippi Delta where his life would tragically end. Nicknamed “Bobo,” he was a 14-year-old on the cusp of adulthood, raised in a bustling urban environment that had become a refuge for many African American families during the Great Migration. His family, like many, had moved from the South to escape the pervasive racial violence and deep-seated economic and social disparities of the Jim Crow era.  

Till’s early life was marked by certain challenges. He was born with facial scars after a difficult birth, and doctors initially believed he might be permanently disabled, though he began walking at 11 months. At the age of six, he contracted polio, which left him with a persistent stutter and weak ankles for which he had to wear special shoes. Despite these physical hurdles, he was known for his happy and fun-loving disposition. He was a “jokester” who often took center stage among his peers and was described as a smart dresser. Beyond his cheerful demeanor, he was also a dutiful son to his single mother, Mamie Till-Mobley. He assisted with various household tasks, including cleaning, laundry, and cooking, to help his working mother. His parents had separated when he was a toddler, and his mother had secured employment as a civilian clerk for the U.S. Air Force to better support them. The family resided in a home on St. Lawrence Avenue owned by his maternal grandmother, which has since been designated a Chicago Landmark.  

B. The Journey South: A Mother’s Warning

In the summer of 1955, Emmett’s great-uncle, Moses “Mose” Wright, visited Chicago from Mississippi and invited Emmett to spend part of his summer vacation in the South. Mamie Till-Mobley was initially reluctant to let him go, acutely aware of the dangers that a Northern Black child might face in the Jim Crow South. Her anxiety was not simply a mother’s natural fear; it was a deep understanding of the life-and-death stakes of the racial customs from which her family had fled. She “lectured and schooled” him on how to conduct himself, emphasizing that the racial dynamics were “not the same as Argo or Chicago” and that he had to “be extra careful to avoid getting in trouble with white people”.  

Despite her profound hesitation, she eventually relented. On August 20, 1955, Emmett boarded a southbound train with his great-uncle Mose Wright and another cousin, Wheeler Parker, Jr.. Before he left, Mamie gave him a ring that had belonged to his father, Louis Till, inscribed with the initials L.T.. This ring would become a crucial and heartbreaking means of identification after his death, serving as a final, tangible link between mother and son. The tragic irony of the situation lies in the fact that Till’s family had moved north specifically to escape racial violence, only for him to return to it in the Delta, where his life would come to a horrific and premature end.  

II. The Fateful Days in the Mississippi Delta: A Timeline of Terror

A. An Accusation in Money: The Incident at Bryant’s Grocery

Emmett Till arrived in Money, Mississippi, on August 21, 1955, and settled in at his great-uncle Mose Wright’s home. He spent his first three days experiencing the life of his cousins, picking cotton, shooting fireworks, and swimming in a pond. It was a rural world far removed from his Chicago life. On the evening of August 24, Emmett and a group of cousins went to Bryant’s Grocery and Meat Market, a local store that sold supplies and candy to a primarily Black clientele of sharecroppers.  

What happened inside the store has long been a matter of intense dispute and the central point of contention in the narrative of his death. The most widely accepted account, provided by his cousin Simeon Wright, is that as Carolyn Bryant, the white woman who owned the store with her husband, left, Emmett whistled at her. His cousin described it as a “loud wolf whistle, a big city ‘whee wheeeee!’”. This action, born of youthful bravado and a misunderstanding of local customs, was an immediate and profound transgression of the Jim Crow-era racial code. Till’s Mississippi cousins instantly understood the gravity of his mistake and the danger it posed. They quickly fled the scene, knowing they had violated a “longstanding taboo relating to social conduct between blacks and whites”.  

B. The Night of the Abduction: A Plot of Vengeance

The incident at Bryant’s Grocery quickly became “the talk” of the small town. On Friday, August 26, Roy Bryant returned home from a trip to Texas and was informed of the events by a Black customer. He was infuriated and, according to a later interview, felt that to do nothing would have made him appear to be a “coward and a fool”. In the rigid social structure of the Jim Crow South, an act of perceived disrespect by a Black man towards a white woman could not go unpunished. The lynching that followed was not merely a crime of passion but a premeditated act of social enforcement, intended as a lesson to Emmett and a message to the entire Black community.  

On the night of Saturday, August 27, Roy Bryant and his half-brother, J.W. Milam, finalized their plan. The two men were described as being “particularly close,” and Milam, a burly 235-pound man who resembled a “plantation overseer,” was armed with a.45 automatic pistol. In the early morning hours of Sunday, August 28, at approximately 2:30 a.m., they drove to Mose Wright’s home, woke the family, and, at gunpoint, demanded that Emmett be handed over to them.  

The following TIMELINE provides a chronological overview of these key events.


Chicago, IL

Emmett Louis Till is born.


Chicago, IL

Till leaves Chicago by train to visit family in Mississippi.


Money, MS

Till arrives and stays with his great-uncle Mose Wright.


Money, MS

Till allegedly whistles at Carolyn Bryant at Bryant’s Grocery.


Money, MS

Roy Bryant and J.W. Milam abduct Till from Mose Wright’s home.


Tallahatchie County, MS

Till is tortured, murdered, and his body is thrown into the Tallahatchie River.


Tallahatchie River, MS

Till’s body is discovered in the river.


Chicago, IL

Till’s body is returned to Chicago.


Alsip, IL

Till is buried in an open-casket funeral.


Sumner, MS

The murder trial of Bryant and Milam begins.


Sumner, MS

The all-white jury acquits Bryant and Milam.


Published in Look Magazine

Bryant and Milam confess to the murder in Look magazine.

III. The Unspeakable Atrocity: The Brutality and the Body

A. The Lynching: The Full Account of the Torture

After abducting Emmett, Roy Bryant and J.W. Milam reportedly took him to a barn on Milam’s property. Drawing from their own shocking confession published in a 1956  

Look magazine article entitled, “The Shocking Story of Approved Killing in Mississippi,” the full extent of the horror was revealed. The men “tortured and beat him with a gun” for hours.

According to the killers, Till’s defiance during the beating sealed his fate. In a desperate act of courage, he allegedly told them, “You bastards, I’m not afraid of you. I’m as good as you are. I’ve had white women”. To the men, this was the ultimate provocation, a direct assault on the racial caste system they were so intent on preserving. J.W. Milam later stated, “When a nigger gets close to mentioning sex with a white woman, he’s tired of living”.  

After the prolonged beating, the men forced Till to remove his clothes, shot him in the head “above his right ear,” and then proceeded with a final act of depravity. To ensure his body would sink and never be found, they tied a 74-pound metal fan used for ginning cotton to his neck with barbed wire. They then drove to the Tallahatchie River and threw his body in. The murder was not a simple crime but a calculated act of “racial terrorism”.

B. The Discovery and an Unrecognizable Body

Three days later, on August 31, 1955, a 17-year-old boy fishing in the Tallahatchie River discovered Emmett’s bloated, nude, and severely disfigured body. The body had been brutalized almost beyond recognition; his face was “beaten to a pulp,” and his eyes had been “gouged out”. The cotton gin fan was still secured around his neck with barbed wire, a chilling sign of the premeditated violence.  

Moses Wright, who was called to identify the body, could only do so by the ring on his finger, which bore the initials L.T. and was the same ring Mamie Till-Mobley had given him just before he left Chicago. The body was a horrifying testament to the violence he had endured, a stark contrast to the lively boy who had left Chicago just days before.  

C. An Act of Courage: A Mother’s Choice

Local Mississippi authorities sought to bury Emmett’s body immediately, but his mother insisted it be returned to Chicago. After a Chicago congressman intervened, the body was sent home in a sealed casket, with the explicit instruction that it was not to be opened. Upon its arrival, however, Mamie Till-Mobley’s courage and resolve took a powerful and historic turn. She demanded that the casket be opened so she could see her son. The funeral director hesitated, but her will was unshakeable.  

Her now-famous words, “Let the people see what I’ve seen,” guided her decision for an open-casket funeral. Her reasoning was profound: she refused to let his death be a quiet tragedy. She chose to expose the unvarnished brutality of the lynching to the world. A photographer from the Black-owned  

Jet magazine, David Jackson, was granted permission to photograph the brutalized body. This decision was an act of profound resistance against the systemic indifference and cover-up that had already begun.  

An estimated 50,000 mourners attended the open-casket funeral in Chicago. The publication of the graphic photos in  

Jet magazine and other Black publications, such as the Chicago Defender, shocked the nation. While mainstream white-centered media largely chose not to print the images, the photos nevertheless reached a national audience and served as a powerful symbol of state-sanctioned racial violence. This act of defiance by a grieving mother transformed private grief into a national tragedy and directly challenged the user’s assumption that “no one cared” by demonstrating a courageous and public demand for justice.  

IV. A Mockery of Justice: The Trial and the Acquittal

A. The Stage is Set: A Racially Rigged System

The murder trial of Roy Bryant and J.W. Milam began on September 19, 1955, in Sumner, Mississippi, at the Tallahatchie County Courthouse. From the outset, the legal proceedings were a clear reflection of the racial inequities of the time. The jury selection process, in particular, was a systemic failure of justice. The chosen jury was an “all-white, all-male jury” made up of nine farmers, two carpenters, and one insurance agent. This composition was a direct result of state laws that required jurors to be registered voters, a right that was systematically denied to Black citizens in Tallahatchie County, even though they comprised over 63% of the population. The stage was not set for a fair trial but for a legal ritual that would uphold the existing racial order.  

B. The Courageous Witnesses: Speaking Truth to Power

Despite the predetermined nature of the trial, several Black witnesses demonstrated immense courage by taking the stand and testifying against the white defendants, an act that put their own lives in peril. The most powerful testimony came from Emmett’s great-uncle, Moses Wright. In an unprecedented act of defiance, he stood up in the courtroom and pointed his finger directly at Roy Bryant and J.W. Milam, identifying them as the men who had abducted his great-nephew. This action was a moment of profound bravery, challenging the unwritten rules of the Jim Crow South and shattering the expectation that a Black man would cower in the face of white supremacy.  

Another Black witness, Willie Reed, testified that he had seen a truck carrying Till entering the Milam property and had heard “whipping and hollering” from inside a nearby barn. Mamie Till-Mobley also traveled from Chicago to testify, courageously identifying her son’s body and enduring attempts by the defense to suggest she had incorrectly identified him.  

C. The Verdict: The Southern Way of Life on Trial

The defense lawyers, recognizing the racial biases of the jury, did not even attempt to deny the accusation of kidnapping. Instead, they appealed to the jurors’ commitment to the racial hierarchy, with one defense lawyer, John Whitten, accusing civil rights groups of planting the body in the river to challenge the “Southern way of life”. District Attorney Gerald Chatham, in a similar vein, argued that while Emmett deserved some punishment for “insulting white womanhood,” Roy Bryant should have limited his vengeance to a beating with a “razor strap”.  

The jury, needing no further convincing, deliberated for only 67 minutes before returning a “Not Guilty” verdict on September 23, 1955. One juror would later infamously state, “We wouldn’t have taken so long if we hadn’t stopped to drink pop”. The acquittal was not a failure of evidence but a deliberate act of a system that prioritized racial hierarchy over justice. This verdict sent a clear message to the nation that in the eyes of the Mississippi legal system, a white man could murder a Black child with impunity. Bryant and Milam were acquitted of murder and later released from custody when a grand jury refused to indict them on kidnapping charges, ensuring they would never face legal consequences for their crime.  

V. The Fates of the Perpetrators: Confession, Unindicted, and Deceased

A. A Confession for Pay: The Look Magazine Story

Following their acquittal, Roy Bryant and J.W. Milam were protected from further prosecution for murder by the constitutional principle of double jeopardy. Just a few months after the trial, they chose to sell their story to Look magazine for a reported $4,000. In the January 1956 article, they admitted to the kidnapping and murder, detailing the “grisly details” of the crime, including the pistol-whipping, the shooting, and the use of the cotton gin fan. This confession, while a shocking public admission of their guilt, also served as a final, bitter confirmation that the justice system had been a sham.  

B. The Final Chapter: Roy Bryant and J.W. Milam

Neither man faced any further legal consequences for their actions. J.W. Milam died of cancer at the age of 61 in 1980. Roy Bryant, who had also suffered from cancer, died at age 63 in 1994. Both men passed away having lived out their lives without ever being held accountable for their barbaric crime. Their ability to confess to the murder and still evade justice for the rest of their lives remains a painful testament to the racial inequities of the era.  

C. Carolyn Bryant Donham: A Lifelong Fugitive from Justice

Carolyn Bryant, who later remarried and became Carolyn Bryant Donham, was a central figure whose court testimony had provided the alleged motive for the crime. The integrity of her testimony was called into question decades later. In a 2017 interview with historian Timothy Tyson, she reportedly recanted her testimony, admitting that her claims that Emmett Till had touched, threatened, or harassed her were fabricated. While her confession has been debated, it is widely believed that she lied on the stand.  

For decades, the search for justice in the Till case continued. The FBI reopened the investigation in 2004 to determine if any other individuals were involved. As part of this renewed effort, Till’s body was exhumed for an official autopsy in 2005, which confirmed the identity and the horrific nature of his death.  

A stunning turn of events occurred in 2022 when a 1955 arrest warrant for “Mrs. Roy Bryant” for kidnapping was discovered. The warrant had never been served, as Leflore County Sheriff George Smith had refused to do so, famously stating, “We aren’t going to bother the woman, she’s got two small boys to take care of”. This discovery showed that her immunity was not accidental but a deliberate act of systemic protection, where the comfort of a white woman was valued more than justice for a murdered Black child. Despite this renewed evidence and the family’s fervent pleas, a grand jury in Leflore County declined to indict her in August 2022. Carolyn Bryant Donham died in hospice care in Louisiana on April 25, 2023, at the age of 88, never having been formally charged or held accountable for her role in the lynching.  

The ultimate fates of the perpetrators demonstrate a complete and utter failure of justice at every level of society. Not only were Bryant and Milam acquitted by a racially biased jury, but the legal system actively protected them, allowing them to live out their lives unpunished. The story of Carolyn Bryant Donham adds a final, bitter chapter to this legacy, as she too was shielded from accountability until her death.


Victim

Kidnapped, tortured, and murdered at age 14. His death served as a catalyst for the Civil Rights Movement.


Mother

Actively sought justice for her son, holding an open-casket funeral and becoming a prominent civil rights activist until her death in 2003.


Perpetrator

Acquitted of murder in 1955. Later confessed in Look magazine. Died of cancer in 1994 at age 63.


Perpetrator

Acquitted of murder in 1955. Later confessed in Look magazine. Died of cancer in 1980 at age 61.


Accuser

Accusations led to Till’s lynching. Died in 2023 at age 88 without ever being indicted for her role, despite the discovery of an unserved 1955 arrest warrant.

VI. The Enduring Legacy: A Catalyst for a Movement

A. A Spark for a Movement: A New Generation Awakened

The brutal murder of Emmett Till and the subsequent acquittal of his killers did not, as the user’s initial query might suggest, lead to a state of nationwide indifference. Instead, it was the catalytic event that galvanized a new phase of the Civil Rights Movement. The power of Emmett’s story lay in its ability to strip away any remaining illusions about racial justice in America. The images of his mutilated body, published by Mamie Till-Mobley’s brave choice, made the abstract concept of lynching a horrifying reality for people across the country and around the world.  

The profound effect of the case was particularly felt by a generation of young African Americans. Activists such as Rosa Parks, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., and Julian Bond have all cited Emmett Till’s murder as a pivotal event that motivated their involvement in the struggle for equality. Cleveland Sellers, who was 11 years old at the time, later recalled that he was “devastated by the fact that Emmett could have been me or any other black kid around that same age”. The tragic nature of the case inspired a new wave of activism and a resolve to fight for remedies to a society that would allow such a tragedy to occur and would condone the release of those responsible.  

B. In Search of Justice: The Fight That Continues

The pursuit of justice for Emmett Till did not end with the 1955 acquittal; it became an ongoing struggle. The FBI reopened the case in 2004 to determine if anyone else had been involved in the crime. A year later, in 2005, Emmett’s body was exhumed for an official autopsy, a procedure that definitively confirmed his identity and the manner of his death. Although the investigation did not lead to new prosecutions, the case continues to be a powerful symbol. The Emmett Till Interpretive Center and numerous historical markers now exist in the Mississippi Delta, ensuring his story is not forgotten.  

The enduring legacy of Emmett Till’s murder culminated in a powerful legislative achievement. In 2022, after decades of advocacy, the Emmett Till Antilynching Act was signed into law, making lynching a federal hate crime. This act, passed in Emmett’s name, stands as a testament to the decades-long fight for justice and a national recognition of the violence that took his life. While justice was never fully served for Emmett Till, his murder became a powerful catalyst, transforming a nation’s grief into a sustained and unwavering movement for civil rights that continues to this day.

SUPPLEMENTAL: Look Magazine Interview with Roy Bryant & J.W. Milam

The Shocking Story of Approved Killing in Mississippi
By William Bradford Huie
Look Magazine January 24th. 1956

Editors Note: In the long history of man’s inhumanity to man, racial conflict has produced some of the most horrible examples of brutality. The recent slaying of Emmett Till in Mississippi is a case in point. The editors of Look are convinced that they are presenting here, for the first time, the real story of that killing — the story no jury heard and no newspaper reader saw.

Disclosed here is the true account of the slaying in Mississippi of a Negro youth named Emmett Till.

Last September in Sumner, Miss., a petit jury found the youth’s admitted abductors not guilty of murder. In November, in Greenwood, a grand jury declined to indict them for kidnapping.

Of the murder trial, the Memphis Commercial Appeal said: “Evidence necessary for convicting on a murder charge was lacking.” But with truth absent, hypocrisy and myth have flourished. Now, hypocrisy can be exposed; myth dispelled. Here are the facts.

Carolyn Holloway Bryant is 21, five feet tall, weighs 103 pounds. An Irish girl, with black hair and black eyes, she is a small farmer’s daughter who, at 17, quit high school at Indianola, Miss., to marry a soldier, Roy Bryant, then 20, now 24. The couple have two boys, three and two; and they operate a store at a dusty crossroads called Money: post office, filling station and three stores clustered around a school and a gin, and set in the vast, lonely cotton patch that is the Mississippi Delta.

Carolyn and Roy Bryant are poor: no car, no TV. They live in the back of the store which Roy’s brothers helped set up when he got out of the 82nd Airborne in 1953. They sell “snuff-and-fatback” to Negro field hands on credit: and they earn little because, for one reason, the government has been giving the Negroes food they formerly bought.

Carolyn and Roy Bryant’s social life is visits to their families, to the Baptist church, and, whenever they can borrow a car, to a drive-in, with the kids sleeping in the back seat. They call Shane the best picture they ever saw.

For extra money, Carolyn tends store when Roy works outside — like truck driving for a brother. And he has many brothers. His mother had two husbands, 11 children. The first five — all boys — were “Milam children”; the next six — three boys, three girls — were “Bryant children.”

This is a lusty and devoted clan. They work, fight, vote and play as a family. The “half” in their fraternity is forgotten. For years, they have operated a chain of cottonfield stores, as well as trucks and mechanical cotton pickers. In relation to the Negroes, they are somewhat like white traders in portions of Africa today; and they are determined to resist the revolt of colored men against white rule.

On Wednesday evening, August 24, 1955, Roy was in Texas, on a brother’s truck. He had carted shrimp from New Orleans to San Antonio, proceeded to Brownsville. Carolyn was alone in the store. But back in the living quarters was her sister-in-law Juanita Milam, 27, with her two small sons and Carolyn’s two. The store was kept open till 9 on week nights, 11 on Saturday.

When her husband was away, Carolyn Bryant never slept in the store, never stayed there alone after dark. Moreover, in the Delta, no white woman ever travels country roads after dark unattended by a man.

This meant that during Roy’s absences — particularly since he had no car — there was family inconvenience. Each afternoon, a sister-in-law arrived to stay with Carolyn until closing time. Then, the two women, with their children, waited for a brother-in-law to convoy them to his home. Next morning, the sister-in-law drove Carolyn back.

Juanita Milam had driven from her home in Glendora. She had parked in front of the store to the left; and under the front seat of this car was Roy Bryant’s pistol, a .38 Colt automatic. Carolyn knew it was there. After 9, Juanita’s husband, J. W. Milam, would arrive in his pickup to shepherd them to his home for the night.

About 7:30 pm, eight young Negroes — seven boys and a girl — in a ’46 Ford had stopped outside. They included sons, grandsons and a nephew of Moses (Preacher) Wright, 64, a ‘cropper. They were between 13 and 19 years old. Four were natives of the Delta and others, including the nephew, Emmett (Bobo) Till, were visiting from the Chicago area.

Bobo Till was 14 years old: born on July 25, 1941. He was stocky, muscular, weighing about 160, five feet four or five. Preacher later testified: “He looked like a man.”

Bobo’s party joined a dozen other young Negroes, including two other girls, in front of the store. Bryant had built checkerboards there. Some were playing checkers, others were wrestling and “kiddin’ about girls.”

Bobo bragged about his white girl. He showed the boys a picture of a white girl in his wallet; and to their jeers of disbelief, he boasted of success with her.

“You talkin’ mighty big, Bo,” one youth said. “There’s a pretty little white woman in the store. Since you know how to handle white girls, let’s see you go in and get a date with her?”

“You ain’t chicken, are yuh, Bo?” another youth taunted him.

Bobo had to fire or fall back. He entered the store, alone, stopped at the candy case. Carolyn was behind the counter; Bobo in front. He asked for two cents’ worth of bubble gum. She handed it to him. He squeezed her hand and said: “How about a date, baby?”

She jerked away and started for Juanita Milam. At the break between counters, Bobo jumped in front of her, perhaps caught her at the waist, and said: “You needn’t be afraid o’ me, Baby. I been with white girls before.”

At this point, a cousin ran in, grabbed Bobo and began pulling him out of the store. Carolyn now ran, not for Juanita, but out the front, and got the pistol from the Milam car.

Outside, with Bobo being ushered off by his cousins, and with Carolyn getting the gun, Bobo executed the “wolf whistle” which gave the case its name:

THE WOLF-WHISTLE MURDER: A NEGRO “CHILD” OR “BOY” WHISTLED AT HER AND THEY KILLED HIM.

That was the sum of the facts on which most newspaper readers based an opinion. TheNegroes drove away; and Carolyn, shaken, told Juanita. The two women determined to keep the incident from their “Men-folks.” They didn’t tell J. W. Milam when he came to escort them home.

By Thursday afternoon, Carolyn Bryant could see the story was getting around. She spent Thursday night at the Milams, where at 4 a.m. (Friday) Roy got back from Texas. Since he had slept little for five nights, he went to bed at the Milams’ while Carolyn returned to the store.

During Friday afternoon, Roy reached the store, and shortly thereafter a Negro told him what “the talk” was, and told him that the “Chicago boy” was “visitin’ Preacher.” Carolyn then told Roy what had happened.

Once Roy Bryant knew, in his environment, in the opinion of most white people around him, for him to have done nothing would have marked him for a coward and a fool.

On Friday night, he couldn’t do anything. He and Carolyn were alone, and he had no car. Saturday was collection day, their busy day in the store. About 10:30 Saturday night, J. W. Milam drove by. Roy took him aside.

“I want you to come over early in the morning,” he said. “I need a little transportation.”

J.W. protested: “Sunday’s the only morning I can sleep. Can’t we make it around noon?”

Roy then told him.

“I’ll be there,” he said. “Early.”

J. W. drove to another brother’s store at Minter City, where he was working. He closed that store about 12:30 a.m., drove home to Glendora. Juanita was away, visiting her folks at Greenville. J. W. had been thinking. He decided not to go to bed. He pumped the pickup — a half-ton ’55 Chevrolet — full of gas and headed for Money.

J. W. “Big Milam” is 36: six feet two, 235 pounds; an extrovert. Short boots accentuate his height; khaki trousers; red sports shirt; sun helmet. Dark-visaged; his lower lip curls when he chuckles; and though bald, his remaining hair is jet-black.

He is slavery’s plantation overseer. Today, he rents Negro-driven mechanical cotton pickers to plantation owners. Those who know him say that he can handle Negroes better than anybody in the country.

Big Milam soldiered in the Patton manner. With a ninth-grade education, he was commissioned in battle by the 75th Division. He was an expert platoon leader, expert street fighter, expert in night patrol, expert with the “grease gun,” with every device for close range killing. A German bullet tore clear through his chest; his body bears “multiple shrapnel wounds.” Of his medals, he cherishes one: combat infantryman’s badge.

Big Milam, like many soldiers, brought home his favorite gun: the .45 Colt automatic pistol.

“Best weapon the Army’s got,” he says. “Either for shootin’ or sluggin’.”

Two hours after Big Milam got the word — the instant minute he could close the store — he was looking for the Chicago Negro.
Big Milam reached Money a few minutes shy of 2 a.m., Sunday, August 28. The Bryants were asleep; the store was dark but for the all-night light. He rapped at the back door, and when Roy came, he said: “Let’s go. Let’s make that trip now.”

Roy dressed, brought a gun: this one was a .45 Colt. Both men were and remained — cold sober. Big Milam had drunk a beer at Minter City around 9; Roy had had nothing.

There was no moon as they drove to Preacher’s house: 2.8 miles east of Money.

Preacher’s house stands 50 feet right of the gravel road, with cedar and persimmon trees in the yard. Big Milam drove the pickup in under the trees. He was bareheaded, carrying a five-cell flashlight in his left hand, the .45 in the right.

Roy Bryant pounded on the door.

Preacher: “Who’s that?”

Bryant: “Mr. Bryant from Money, Preacher.”

Preacher: “All right, sir. Just a minute.”

Preacher came out of the screened-in porch.

Bryant: “Preacher, you got a boy from Chicago here?”

Preacher: “Yessir.”

Bryant: “I want to talk to him.”

Preacher: “Yessir. I’ll get him.”

Preacher led them to a back bedroom where four youths were sleeping in two beds. In one was Bobo Till and Simeon Wright, Preacher’s youngest son. Bryant had told Preacher to turn on the lights; Preacher had said they were out of order. So only the flashlight was used.

The visit was not a complete surprise. Preacher testified that he had heard of the “trouble,” that he “sho’ had” talked to his nephew about it. Bobo himself had been afraid; he had wanted to go home the day after the incident. The Negro girl in the party urged that he leave. “They’ll kill him,” she had warned. But Preacher’s wife, Elizabeth Wright, had decided that the danger was being magnified; she had urged Bobo to “finish yo’ visit.”

“I thought they might say something to him, but I didn’t think they’d kill a boy,” Preacher said.

Big Milam shined the light in Bobo’s face, said: “You the nigger who did the talking?”

“Yeah,” Bobo replied.

Milam: “Don’t say, ‘Yeah’ to me: I’ll blow your head off. Get your clothes on.”

Bobo had been sleeping in his shorts. He pulled on a shirt and trousers, then reached for his socks.

“Just the shoes,” Milam hurried him.

“I don’t wear shoes without socks,” Bobo said: and he kept the gun-bearers waiting while he put on his socks, then a pair of canvas shoes with thick crepe soles.

Preacher and his wife tried two arguments in the boy’s behalf.

“He ain’t got good sense,” Preacher begged. “He didn’t know what he was doing. Don’t take him.”

“I’ll pay you gentlemen for the damages,” Elizabeth Wright said.

“You niggers go back to sleep,” Milam replied.

They marched him into the yard, told him to get in the back of the pickup and lie down. He obeyed. They drove toward Money.

Elizabeth Wright rushed to the home of a white neighbor, who got up, looked around, but decided he could do nothing. Then, she and Preacher drove to the home of her brother, Crosby Smith, at Sumner; and Crosby Smith, on Sunday morning, went to the sheriff’s office at Greenwood.

The other young Negroes stayed at Preacher’s house until daylight, when Wheeler Parker telephoned his mother in Chicago, who in turn notified Bobo’s mother, Mamie Bradley, 33, 6427 S. St. Lawrence.

Had there been any doubt as to the identity of the “Chicago boy who done the talking,” Milam and Bryant would have stopped at the store for Carolyn to identify him. But there had been no denial. So they didn’t stop at the store. At Money, they crossed the Tallahatchie River and drove west.

Their intention was to “just whip him… and scare some sense into him.” And for this chore, Big Milam knew “the scariest place in the Delta.” He had come upon it last year hunting wild geese. Over close to Rosedale, the Big River bends around under a bluff. “Brother, she’s a 100-foot sheer drop, and she’s a 100 feet deep after you hit.”

Big Milam’s idea was to stand him up there on that bluff, “whip” him with the .45, and then shine the light on down there toward that water and make him think you’re gonna knock him in.

“Brother, if that won’t scare the Chicago Nigger, hell won’t.”

Searching for this bluff, they drove close to 75 miles. Through Shellmound, Schlater, Doddsville, Ruleville, Cleveland to the intersection south of Rosedale. There they turned south on Mississippi No. 1, toward the entrance to Beulah Lake. They tried several dirt and gravel roads, drove along the levee. Finally, they gave up: in the darkness, Big Milam couldn’t find his bluff.

They drove back to Milam’s house at Glendora, and by now it was 5 a.m.. They had been driving nearly three hours, with Milam and Bryant in the cab and Bobo lying in the back.

At some point when the truck slowed down, why hadn’t Bobo jumped and run? He wasn’t tied; nobody was holding him. A partial answer is that those Chevrolet pickups have a wraparound rear window the size of a windshield. Bryant could watch him. But the real answer is the remarkable part of the story.

Bobo wasn’t afraid of them! He was tough as they were. He didn’t think they had the guts to kill him.

Milam: “We were never able to scare him. They had just filled him so full of that poison that he was hopeless.”

Back of Milam’s home is a tool house, with two rooms each about 12 feet square. They took him in there and began “whipping” him, first Milam then Bryant smashing him across the head with those .45’s. Pistol-whipping: a court-martial offense in the Army… but MP’s have been known to do it…. And Milam got information out of German prisoners this way.

But under these blows Bobo never hollered — and he kept making the perfect speeches to insure martyrdom.

Bobo: “You bastards, I’m not afraid of you. I’m as good as you are. I’ve ‘had’ white women. My grandmother was a white woman.”

Milam: “Well, what else could we do? 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. As long as I live and can do anything about it, niggers are gonna stay in their place. Niggers ain’t gonna vote where I live. If they did, they’d control the government. They ain’t gonna go to school with my kids. And when a nigger gets close to mentioning sex with a white woman, he’s tired o’ livin’. I’m likely to kill him. Me and my folks fought for this country, and we got some rights. I stood there in that shed and listened to that nigger throw that poison at me, and I just made up my mind. ‘Chicago boy,’ I said, ‘I’m tired of ’em sending your kind down here to stir up trouble. Goddam you, I’m going to make an example of you — just so everybody can know how me and my folks stand.’”

So Big Milam decided to act. He needed a weight. He tried to think of where he could get an anvil. Then he remembered a gin which had installed new equipment. He had seen two men lifting a discarded fan, a metal fan three feet high and circular, used in ginning cotton.

Bobo wasn’t bleeding much. Pistol-whipping bruises more than it cuts. They ordered him back in the truck and headed west again. They passed through Doddsville, went into the Progressive Ginning Company. This gin is 3.4 miles east of Boyle: Boyle is two miles south of Cleveland. The road to this gin turns left off U.S. 61, after you cross the bayou bridge south of Boyle.

Milam: “When we got to that gin, it was daylight, and I was worried for the first time. Somebody might see us and accuse us of stealing the fan.”

Bryant and Big Milam stood aside while Bobo loaded the fan. Weight: 74 pounds. The youth still thought they were bluffing.

They drove back to Glendora, then north toward Swan Lake and crossed the “new bridge” over the Tallahatchie. At the east end of this bridge, they turned right, along a dirt road which parallels the river. After about two miles, they crossed the property of L.W. Boyce, passing near his house.

About 1.5 miles southeast of the Boyce home is a lonely spot where Big Milam has hunted squirrels. The river bank is steep. The truck stopped 30 yards from the water.

Big Milam ordered Bobo to pick up the fan.

He staggered under its weight… carried it to the river bank. They stood silently… just hating one another.

Milam: “Take off your clothes.”

Slowly, Bobo pulled off his shoes, his socks. He stood up, unbuttoned his shirt, dropped his pants, his shorts.

He stood there naked.

It was Sunday morning, a little before 7.

Milam: “You still as good as I am?”

Bobo: “Yeah.”

Milam: “You still ‘had’ white women?”

Bobo: “Yeah.”

That big .45 jumped in Big 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, 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.

Seventy-two hours later — eight miles downstream — boys were fishing. They saw feet sticking out of the water. Bobo.

The majority — by no means all, but the majority — of the white people in Mississippi 1) either approve Big Milam’s action or else 2) they don’t disapprove enough to risk giving their “enemies” the satisfaction of a conviction.

Government & Archival Sources

Educational & Academic Sources

Media & News Sources