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Celebrating Belonging Blog: The Lasting Impact of Emmett Till

August 26, 2022
brown and tan hands embraced on a brown ombre background that reads 黑料专区 Diversity Matters Here

The Lasting Impact of Emmett Till

Amy Lazet, Digital Scholarship Librarian

August 28, 2022 marks the 67th anniversary of the death of Emmett Till – a vigilante act of violence and murder which galvanized the nation and precipitated the Civil Rights Movement.听

Emmett Till鈥檚 Life

In 1955, Emmett Till, a 14-year old African American boy from Chicago, visited his extended family in the Mississippi Delta. While there, he and his cousins went to a store run by a white woman. Being from Chicago, Emmett unknowingly violated social mores for interactions between Black and White people in the South: he put his money into her hand rather than on the counter, and she claimed that he wolf-whistled at her. When the woman鈥檚 husband heard the story, he and his half-brother drove to where Emmett was staying, kidnapped him, and tortured him before shooting him and throwing his body into the river. Three days later his body was found, so disfigured that he could only be identified by his ring. ()

His corpse was returned to his mother, Mamie Till, who brought the issue to national attention by opting for an open-casket funeral on September 6, saying, 鈥淵ou didn鈥檛 die for nothing.鈥 () The funeral received national coverage and the horrific photos of Emmett鈥檚 body shocked the nation. In November 1955, Emmett鈥檚 killers were tried in Mississippi but acquitted by an all-white, all-male jury. ()

The story of Emmett and the images of his funeral made national and international news. For Black people, the images served as a reminder of what could happen to any of them; for many white people, the images were irrefutable proof that racism was rife in the US. The photographs galvanized African Americans across the nation to fight the oppression of segregation and Jim Crow laws, calling themselves the 鈥淓mmett Till Generation.鈥 ()

Effect on the Civil Rights Movement

Emmett鈥檚 murder was a pivotal event which hastened the Civil Rights Movement. Just three months later, on December 1, 1955, Rosa Parks was arrested in Montgomery, Alabama for refusing to vacate her seat at the front of a bus in order to allow a white man to sit. () When asked why she refused to move to the back of the bus, she said, 鈥淚 thought of Emmett Till and I couldn鈥檛 go back.鈥 () Her arrest precipitated the , facilitated by the 鈥嬧婱ontgomery Improvement Association (MIA) and its president, Martin Luther King, Jr. () Her arrest led the MIA to file suit over the constitutionality of bus segregation and in 1956, the US Supreme Court upheld the lower court鈥檚 ruling overturning segregation. ()

The was long and arduous and included the , the Civil Rights Act of 1957, in 1960, the 1961 , and Martin Luther King, Jr.鈥檚 on June 23, 1963 and on August 28, 1963. () These are just a few of the events of the Civil Rights Movement that culminated in the and the . The Acts, although monumental victories for equality in the US, did not immediately or fully eradicate racism and segregation, and were necessary to force desegregation in the following decades.听

Lasting Impact

Emmett Till continues to resonate in our culture, not least because the fight for equal rights is still ongoing. We see echoes of Emmett鈥檚 gruesome murder in the images of dogs and water hoses being turned on peaceful protestors in the 1960s or the videos of Rodney King鈥檚 beating or George Floyd鈥檚 murder. () Because of the courage of his mother, Emmett Till became the symbol of a generation of activists and served as a turning point in the fight for equality for all in the US.

Learn more:

Emmett Till:
(video and online exhibit)
(podcast)
(video)

Detroit Civil Rights:

Sources:

  1. 鈥淢amie Till Mobley鈥 in 鈥淭he Murder of Emmett Till. PBS. 2003. PBS.org, .
  2. Hassan, Adeel. 鈥淓mmett Till鈥檚 Enduring Legacy.鈥 The New York Times, 6 Dec. 2021. NYTimes.com,
  3. 鈥淩osa Parks: In Her Own Words.鈥 Library of Congress. 2019. .
  4. 鈥淓mmett Till with His Mother鈥 in 鈥淩osa Parks: In Her Own Words.鈥 Library of Congress. 2019. . Accessed 17 July 2022.
  5. Stanford University. 鈥淢ontgomery Bus Boycott.鈥 The Martin Luther King, Jr., Research and Education Institute. 26 Apr. 2017..
  6. 鈥淭he Bus Boycott鈥 in 鈥淩osa Parks: In Her Own Words.鈥 Library of Congress. 2019. .听
  7. 鈥淐ivil Rights Era (1950-1963)鈥 in 鈥淭he Civil Rights Act of 1964.鈥 Library of Congress. .