Emmett Louis Till was a fourteen-year-old African American boy from Chicago. In August 1955 white women falsely claimed that Emmett till cat whistled at her in Money, Mississippi. Emmett Till did not know that he had broken the unwritten Jim Crow laws. Three days later, Emmett Till was pulled out of his bed in the middle of the night and was beaten and shot by two white men. Due to the gruesomeness of Emmett Till's murder and the way he was killed his mother demanded an open burial and an open casket. Thousands of people went to Emmett Till's burial or saw pictures of his burial in magazines and daily newspapers. The two men that were accused of murdering Emmett Till will be acquitted after a five day trial with an all-white male jury. …show more content…
The judge should have had both black and white on the jury or they could have at least put people that were not against blacks. The only reason why Emmett Till was charged is that there was an all-white jury who were against African American and they would do anything to put an African American to jail or even in Emmett Till's case kill. I don't understand why two white men could kill Emmett Till so brutally.What made them snap and why were they the only ones who tried to kill Emmett Till? I believe that if there were not millions of people trying to kill Emmett Till what made just two men want or crave to kill Emmett Till.The color of your skin should not determine what you are or who you are there, the two white men should have been judged way more than Emmett Till they killed him not even thinking of him they did it out of demise but the world didn't care until Emmett Till's mother put his body on display.Emmett Till's mother did not put Emmett Till's body on display just for the attention she put it on display to show the world how he was killed and how they beat him.No one should ever be killed for no reason no one should be killed period no human being should determine what consequences someone should get no human should take another humans life
In the Emmett Till case, two white men murdered Emmett Till at age 14 for no reason at all. They tried to hide his body, deny killing him, and threaten the person who saw them
“I say to you, gentlemen, your forefathers will absolutely turn over in their graves if you don’t set these boys loose. ”(191)These were the last words spoken to the Jury during the trial of the Murder of Emmett Till as told in Chris Crowe’s, Mississippi Trial, 1955. How could the prosecution have lost in a case so black and white? The only thing I can think of that would cause the Jury to acquit the defendants is a lapse in judgement. The prosecution should have won because the defense lacked in evidence, they had eyewitness accounts, and Bryant and Milam confessed.
One of the reasons the people who murdered Emmett Till got away was because the men on the jury were men like them, and unless there would have been more people who were of different races and genders there might have been some justice served to Emmett Till and his
On the day of August 24, 1955, 14 year old Emmett Till was on vacation to Money, Mississippi when he was murdered because he was flirting with a white woman. He was killed by the woman’s husband and her brother. The murderers made him carry a 75 pound cotton gin to the banks of the Tallahatchie River, where he was forced to take off his clothes, and was beaten to death, had an eye gouged out, shot in the head, and then tied to the cotton gin with barbed wire. He was then thrown into the river to die. Till grew up in a working class neighborhood south of Chicago, and he went to a segregated school, but he wasn’t ready for the segregation he would face in Mississippi.
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 brutally murdered for wolf whistling at a white women. In the early morning hours of August 28, 1995, fourteen year old Emmett Till. Visiting from Chicago, was rousted from his bed in his uncle's Mississippi shack. By two white men in search of vengeance. His crime was for flirting with a white women.
Emmett Till was a young African American male, who was fatally beaten to death for a , now proven, false accusation. On August 21, 1955, Emmett Till went to stay with and visit his family members in Mississippi. Mississippi in the 1950’s was a very segregated state and followed the Jim Crow Laws. After an incident that occurred in the store with a White American woman, Emmett Till was kidnapped and murdered by the woman’s husband and half brother, August 24, 1955. On August 31, 1955, Emmett Till’s body was found beaten to where identification was hard from his mother was hard and a bullet hole in his head.
In Till’s case, the anger came from the senseless killing of a fourteen year old and how, as a result, the murderers got off with almost no trouble. The jury did not even have to think twice about the innocence of the cruel monsters just because they were white and their victim was black. The pigs were even laughing and rejoicing with their wives as if they did not destroy that boy’s family. It was honestly appalling. The Scottsboro Boys’ trial was even more tragic because it actually scarred them and led some of the boys to a path of devastation.
The murder of Emmett Till was a day that no one will ever forget it was the most horrific murder of all time. July 25, 1941 Emmett Louis Till was born Emmett was raised in a nice middle class neighborhood in the southside of Chicago, Illinois being raised by a single mother after his father Louis Till was hung in the army after being accused of rape and a killing. Emmett Till attended Mccosh Elementary school and was one of the first African American kid to get honor roll. July 25, 1946 Emmett aka “Bobo” was diagnosed with Polio at the age of five but Emmett managed to have a full recovery by the age of eight. August 1955 Emmett’s uncle Moses Wright from Money, Mississippi came to visit his sister Mamie Till and Emmett, Moses and Emmett
“Black people are 7 times more likely than white people to be wrongly convicted of murder” (Vox). The trial of Emmett Till was unsuccessful. The Emmett Till murder was important because it changed the world and sparked The Civil Rights movement. In the summer of 1955, a 14-year-old boy from Chicago named Emmett Till was brutally kidnapped and murdered. Till was visiting his relatives in Money, Mississippi when he was wrongfully accused of whistling at Carolyn Bryant, a white woman.
Emmett Louis Till was brutally murdered after he whistled at a twenty-one year old white woman, named Carolyn Bryant in Bryant’s Grocery and Meat Market in Money, Mississippi. When Emmett Till was murdered it became the primary cause that sparked the Civil Rights Movement. The murder of Emmett Till can be viewed as culturally, politically, and socially and can be related to the murder of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, and the aftermath protests that occurred. On August 24, 1955 Emmett Louis Till was allegedly bragging to his friends that he had relationships with white girls and was dared to flirt with a white woman running into the store.
The murder of Emmett outraged many blacks and sympathetic whites. The outcome of the trial also angered the same people because of the amount of evidence against Roy and Milam. But the most important event was the picture of Emmett taken by David Jackson. Mamie wanted to have an open casket at his funeral. She wanted this to “Let people see what they’ve done to my boy.”
A couple of months later, Bryant and Milian admitted that they committed the crime during a magazine interview for which they got paid. Since the Double Jeopardy laws was in place, the men could not be tried twice for the murder (Bio). The trial was unfair because there was only white men in the jury, the courts said they were unable to identify Till's body, but they found the body with his ring with the initials on it, in addition there was an eye witness, Till's uncle Moses Wright who testified against Milian and Roy. This murder played a big part in the African Civil Rights Movement (Osborne). A little black boy lost his life for speaking to a white woman.
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.