It was an old-fashioned lynching, carried out with the help of county officials, that came to symbolize hardcore resistance to integration. Dead were three civil rights workers, Michael Schwerner, Andrew Goodman, and James Chaney. All three shot in the dark of night on a lonely road in Neshoba County, Mississippi. Many people predicted such a tragedy when the Mississippi Summer Project, an effort that would bring hundreds of college-age volunteers to the most totalitarian state in the country was announced in April, 1964. The FBI\u27s all-out search for the conspirators who killed the three young men, depicted in the movie Mississippi Burning, was successful, leading three years later to a trial in the courtroom of one of America\u27s most ...
Flowers v Mississippi is a Supreme Court case about a man who was tried six times for the same crime...
In 1966 in Pulaski, Tennessee, Bocephus Haynes watched in horror as his father was brutally murdered...
Few racially motivated crimes have left a more lasting imprint on American memory than the death of ...
All other civil rights groups in 1964 considered Mississippi - the most impenetrable state in the un...
During the Civil Rights Movement, Mississippi was very resistant to activities that challenged the “...
What remained of the badly decomposed body of twelve-year-old Tina Marie Andrews was discovered un...
Faculty Advisor: David Skidmore, Professor Department of Politics and International Relations, Col...
In 1904, a lynch mob of more than 1000 white people burned Luther Holbert, a black Mississippi share...
During the summer of 1936, Helen Clevenger, an honor student at New York University, accompanied her...
A group of witnesses called to testify in the trial of J.W. Milam and Roy Bryant for the murder of E...
Article about two men, Theodore A. Carr and Aubrey Cauthen, who were tried and acquitted of firebomb...
The 1988 film Mississippi Burning drew extensive criticism for its misleading portrayal of the FBI’s...
By Adam Nossiter Da Capo Press (Paperback, $17.50, ISBN: 0306811626, 6/2002) First published: 1994 I...
Article about civil rights activist Robert Moses\u27s request for a federal investigation into racia...
Dr. Susan Brand, Professor, Education; and Michelle Gonzalez, Consultant, Multicultural Center. From...
Flowers v Mississippi is a Supreme Court case about a man who was tried six times for the same crime...
In 1966 in Pulaski, Tennessee, Bocephus Haynes watched in horror as his father was brutally murdered...
Few racially motivated crimes have left a more lasting imprint on American memory than the death of ...
All other civil rights groups in 1964 considered Mississippi - the most impenetrable state in the un...
During the Civil Rights Movement, Mississippi was very resistant to activities that challenged the “...
What remained of the badly decomposed body of twelve-year-old Tina Marie Andrews was discovered un...
Faculty Advisor: David Skidmore, Professor Department of Politics and International Relations, Col...
In 1904, a lynch mob of more than 1000 white people burned Luther Holbert, a black Mississippi share...
During the summer of 1936, Helen Clevenger, an honor student at New York University, accompanied her...
A group of witnesses called to testify in the trial of J.W. Milam and Roy Bryant for the murder of E...
Article about two men, Theodore A. Carr and Aubrey Cauthen, who were tried and acquitted of firebomb...
The 1988 film Mississippi Burning drew extensive criticism for its misleading portrayal of the FBI’s...
By Adam Nossiter Da Capo Press (Paperback, $17.50, ISBN: 0306811626, 6/2002) First published: 1994 I...
Article about civil rights activist Robert Moses\u27s request for a federal investigation into racia...
Dr. Susan Brand, Professor, Education; and Michelle Gonzalez, Consultant, Multicultural Center. From...
Flowers v Mississippi is a Supreme Court case about a man who was tried six times for the same crime...
In 1966 in Pulaski, Tennessee, Bocephus Haynes watched in horror as his father was brutally murdered...
Few racially motivated crimes have left a more lasting imprint on American memory than the death of ...