Racial #History
On this dayAug 28, 1955
Emmett Till Abducted and Murdered in Mississippi Delta
On August 28, 1955, two white men named Roy Bryant and J.W. Milam abducted a 14-year-old Black boy named Emmett Till from his great-uncleโs home in Money, Mississippi. The men drove Emmett to a storage shed on Milamโs property in Drew, Mississippi, where they took turns torturing and beating him with a pistol, before forcing him to load a 74-pound fan into the back of their pick-up truck.
Just over one week before, on August 20, Emmett had traveled by train from Chicago to Mississippi to spend two weeks visiting family. A few days into his visit, he and a group of friends and cousins went into a nearby store to buy candy; Emmett was later accused of acting โfamiliarโ with the young white female storekeeper, Carolyn Bryant.
This was a dangerous allegation in the racial caste system of the Mississippi Delta, which was very different from Chicago and unfamiliar to young Emmett. Within a few days, word of the interaction reached Carolyn Bryantโs husband, Roy, and he enlisted his half-brother J.W. in the deadly violence that followed. Two young boys found Emmett Tillโs mutilated and bloated body on August 31.
Devastated by the brutal murder and badly disfigured corpse, Emmettโs mother, Mamie Till Bradley, defiantly held an open-casket funeral in Chicago, where thousands gazed in horror at what was left of her son. To show the world the brutality Emmett had suffered, his mother also distributed a photograph of his corpse for publication in newspapers and magazines and later explained her motivation: โThe whole nation had to bear witness to this.โ
@TheNewsOwl I will probably have nightmares from this. Such a dark part of our history, but he deserves to be remembered and not forgotten.
The men then drove Emmett to the edge of the Tallahatchie River, ordered him to remove his clothes, and shot him in the head. Once the child was dead, Bryant and Milam chained the fan to his corpse and rolled it into the river.