Research Assignment #3
Emmett Till: The murder that shocked the world and propelled the Civil Rights Movement, is an interesting account of a brutal murder in Money Mississippi in 1955. The author compiled several documents that had been previously unavailable to the public, interviews with family members, and newspaper articles to tell the story of a fourteen year old African American boys life and death. Emmett Till was raised by a single mother and his grandmother in Chicago.1 The author gives a very detailed account of not only Emmetts short life but of his mothers life shortlyt before Emmetts birth until after his death. Emmett and his mother were victims of racial prejuidices and voilence. In july of 1955, Emmett turned fourteen, he was five feet and three
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In August 1955, Emmett went down south to Money, Mississippi to visit family for the first time since he was nine years old. His mama tried to remind him of the different laws for blacks in the South but like most teenage boys, it went in one ear and out the other. A few days into his visit, Emmett entered the general store and innocently flirted with the clerk,Carolyn Bryant. A few days later two male members of the clerk's family kidnapped Emmett from his uncle house. They beat him, gouged out his eye, tied him to a cotton gin fan with barb wire and then threw him into the Tallahatchie river. The men accused of this murder were found not guilty by an all white jury but later told a Look Magazine that they did commit the crime. This murder is believed by some to be what fuel the flames of the Civil Rights movement. Emmetts mother insisted on an open casket service so that everyone could see what had be done to her son. People began to see more clearly the brutallity of Jim Crow laws in the South and they
Emmett Till was a 14-year-old, African-American boy who was brutally murdered. Emmett Till was visiting realities in Money, Mississippi, and went into a small store, but no one saw what really happened. Carolyn (store owner) said he wolf-whistled at her. Carolyn was insulted and told her husband. Roy Bryant was furious.
The white cashier he apparently flirted with was the wife of the owner of the store, Roy Bryant. Four days later Emmett Till was kidnapped from his home, beaten brutally, shot and left to rot in the Tallahatchie River. This left Emmett Till’s face unrecognizable. He was able to be recognized by the ring he was wearing engraved with his father’s initials. The people responsible for his death were Roy Bryant, the husband of the cashier and his half brother J.W. Milam.
Emmett Till, a 14 year old African-American, was brutally murdered racists. When Emmett was little he had a slight studded due to polio. He was born on July 25, 1921 and lived in Chicago, Illinois with his mother, Mamie Till Mobley. Emmett went to visit family in Money, Mississippi where he supposedly whistled at a white women and was brutally murdered after. Though he went to a segregated school he, he faced little racism compared to those in the south.
Although there are doubts about who was involved in Emmett Till’s death, the only perpetrators that were tried in court were Roy Bryant, and J.W Milam (Anderson). August 28, 1955 was the day Till was kidnapped and murdered (Emmett Till Biography). Roy Bryant and J.W. Milam went in Mose Wright`s house and demanded the Chicago nigger (Linder).Till was wake up out of his sleep to be dragged to the back of a pickup truck (Linder). He was shot in the right ear, beat with a 45. Colt, and had a gin fan wrapped around his neck with barbed wire (Huie).
In the year of 1955, Emmett Till had been brutally murdered by the suspected Roy Bryant and J. W. Milam. On August 20, Till had gone to stay for two-weeks with his relatives in the town of Money, Mississippi. Four days after arriving to Money, Emmett and some of his relatives drove to the local grocery and meat market. In the grocery store, Emmett Till had pursued flirting with the cashier, Carolyn Bryant, and even grabbed her by the waist. Once outside the store, Till had even whistled at the cashier, something not acceptable for African-Americans to do towards whites at this time.
During the first three days of his visit, Emmett sampled life in Mississippi, and he did things such as picking cotton, shooting off fireworks stealing watermelons, and swimming in a snake-infested pond. On August 24, Emmett and 5 of his relatives and their friends, drove to Bryant's Grocery and Meat Market, just a few miles away in Money. After a few minutes in front of the store, Emmett followed one of the other boys inside the store. The other boy made his purchase, and Emmett was left alone in the store for a minute or two with Carolyn Bryant, the white woman who was working the cash register. According to testimony by Carolyn, Emmett asked her for some candy that was inside a candy
Days later, Roy Bryant, Carolyn's husband, along with 2 other people arrived at Emmett’s house shortly after midnight. That same night the young boy went missing. On August 31, 1955 a man fishing had seen part of Emmett's body floating in the Tallahatchie River.
Less than two weeks after he was buried, Roy and Bryant went to trail in a segregated courthouse in Summer, Mississippi for the murder of Emmett Till. There were witness beside Mose Wright At the time in the south, you couldn’t get in trouble for killing a black person with murdering a black person was not illegal, so on September 23, they were found not guilty for killing Emmett. They didn’t show any remorse but justification to say what they did to him, like he got what he deserved “ Overall they were charged with kidnapping, people all over was so offend and
The death of the fourteen year old Emmett Till is one that will spark the civil rights movement and go down in history. What occurred on August 24, 1955, proved that he was not ready to go to the South. When Till was dared to ask out the lady behind the cash register, Carolyn Bryant, he “was heard saying, ‘Bye baby’ to the woman” (“August 28, 1955 : The Murder of Emmett Till). This showed that Till was not ready to go to the South and did not take his mother’s warning.
In 1955 a 14 year old African American from Chicago wolf whistled to a young white woman in a grocery store. The white women presumed to tell her husband and that very night and he and his half brother hunted Emmett ferociously, beat Emmett to death, shot him in the head, and left his body in the Tallahatchie River to rot. Three days later his body was retrieved unrecognizable from the cruel mutalization and bloating his body had endured. His mother, Mamie Till decided to have an open casket ceremony where thousands of people saw Emmet and the horrific abuse that was inflicted upon him for something so minuscule.
He was a seven year who had no intention of doing anyone any harm, but be a typical teen and enjoy his summer with his cousins. One afternoon on August 24th, Emmett along with his cousins and other kids go out to town. This is where Jones one of the black boy who were with Emmett dare him to enter the Grocery and Meat market where only whites are allowed. Emmett not realizing that in Mississippi people who are black are to aby by the rules, or pay the price. Emmett being a teen takes the prank and enters the store and makes eye contact with Carloyn Bryant.
Emmett Till Research Paper Equality and civil rights come with a price. A price that has been paid through the centuries due to racism. Black men and women have been dealing with racism for centuries. Emmett Till's case may have been just one of thousands of similar cases, but it was one of the most famous cases of racism seen in the public eye. The circumstances of Emmett Till’s life, murder, and the trial that followed had rallied momentum for the civil rights movement.
“Emmett Till and I were about the same age. A week after he was murdered . . . I stood on the corner with a gang of boys, looking at pictures of him in the black newspapers and magazines. In one, he was laughing and happy. In the other, his head was swollen and bashed in, his eyes bulging out of their sockets and his mouth twisted and broken.
Fourteen-year-old Emmett Till was murdered in cold blood on August 28, 1955, after he was accused of flirting with a white married proprietor of a small grocery store. What Till was accused of violating the code of conduct for an African American male in the south. After the event Roy Bryant, husband of the woman from the grocery store, and J.W. Milam, his half-brother, kidnapped Emmett Till from his home. The fourteen-year-old was beaten, maimed, and shot him in the head before drowning his body in the nearby river.
Emmett Till was a loving, fun fourteen year old boy who grew up on the Southside of Chicago. During 1955, classrooms were segregated yet Till found a way to cope with the changes that was happening in the world. Looking forward to a visit with his cousins, Emmett was ecstatic and was not prepared for the level of segregation that would occur in Money, Mississippi when he arrived. Emmett was a big prankster, but his mother reminded him of his race and the differences that it caused. When Till arrived in Money, he joined in with his family and visited a local neighborhood store for a quick beverage.