The Barn by Wright Thompson is an important nonfiction book subtitled A Secrete History of a Murder in Mississippi. Thompson recounts the killing of barely fourteen-year-old Emmett Till in August 1955, covering the historical conditions that led to the murder, the events around it, and what happened after, up to present day.
It's an often-repeated idea, but those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it. Just as the last remaining people who fought in WWII are dying, with it so important that we remember the evil that was attempted to be perpetrated by the Nazis, it is also crucial that we remember the racial injustices that precipitated Emmett's murder to try to prevent them today and in the future.
Emmett came from Chicago to Mississippi to stay with his great uncle Moses Wright and cousins Simeon Wright and Wheeler Parker. Emmett was in a store with a woman, Carolyn Bryant, behind the counter and what likely occurred is he handed her money for a transaction, touching her hand in the process, rather than putting the money on the counter. She took offense and angrily followed him out of the store, and Emmett then whistled at her. For the rest of her life, Bryant would repeat an impossible to have happened lie of what Emmett said and did to her in the store.
Roy Bryant and J.W. Milam came to Moses Wright's house and demanded to take Emmett, J.W. with a gun drawn, ready to shoot anyone who would resist. Willie Reed saw a pickup truck go by with Emmett in the back, and later heard him crying out while being beaten in Leslie Milam's barn on the property he rented within the thirty-six-square-mile grid Township 22 North, Range 4 West. Emmett had a broken skull, broken wrist, and broken femur, and then was shot and killed, with his body dumped in the Tallahatchie River.
Willie Reed testified to what he saw, and then was sprinted out of Mississippi at night. He went back to a month later to testify to a grand jury, and immediately left the state again. Wheeler Parker and Moses Wright also had to leave Mississippi as it was too dangerous to stay. During the trial of Bryant and Milam, the defense argued in from of Emmett's mom, Mamie Till-Mosbley, that it it wasn't him that had died, he was fine, and this was all a conspiracy cooked up by the NAACP. Bryant and Milam were acquitted by a jury of their neighbors and extended family, with at least six other people that were likely at the site of the murder never charged.
Thompson delves into the conditions that led to the killing with no legal consequences. He covers a history of slavery, segregation, and the Mississippi Delta land that cotton has been farmed on. At this time of the Emmett's murder, politicians in Mississippi were working to prevent the May 1955 Brown v. Board of Education Supreme Court decision to integrate public schools from taking effect locally. It wasn't until 1969 that a federal judge demanded that Mississippi comply with the ruling, and when Clarksdale, MS public schools reopened after Christmas break, 574 of the 585 white students had changed schools, going to segregated academies.
Emmett would have recently turned eighty-year-old, and places like the Emmett Till Interpretive Center in Sumner, MS and the Till Institute in Chicago work to keep his memory alive, just as this excellent book does.