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Byron De La Beckwith

Byron De La Beckwith Jr. (November 9, 1920 – January 21, 2001) was an American murderer, white supremacist and a member of the Ku Klux Klan from Greenwood, Mississippi who murdered the civil rights leader Medgar Evers on June 12, 1963. Two trials in 1964 on that charge, with all-white male Mississippi juries, resulted in hung juries. In 1994, he was tried by the state in a new trial, which was based on new evidence. He was convicted of murder and sentenced to life in prison.

Byron De La Beckwith
De La Beckwith in 1973
Born(1920-11-09)November 9, 1920
DiedJanuary 21, 2001(2001-01-21) (aged 80)
OccupationSalesman
Criminal statusDeceased
Conviction(s)Murder
Criminal penaltyLife imprisonment

Early life and career edit

De La Beckwith was born in Sacramento, California, the only child of Byron De La Beckwith Sr., a postmaster for the town of Colusa, and Susan Southworth Yerger.[1] His father died of pneumonia when he was 5.[2][page needed] One year later, he and his mother settled in Greenwood, Mississippi, to be near family. His mother died of lung cancer when he was 12 years old,[3] leaving him orphaned. He was raised by his maternal uncle William Greene Yerger and his wife.[3] He was related by marriage to the socialist author Upton Sinclair, and attended the prestigious southern prep school in Bell Buckle, Tennessee, called The Webb School.

In January 1942, De La Beckwith enlisted in the U.S. Marine Corps, serving as a machine gunner in the Pacific theater of World War II. He fought in the Battle of Guadalcanal and was shot in the waist during the Battle of Tarawa.[4] He was honorably discharged in August 1945.

After serving in the Marine Corps, De La Beckwith moved to Providence, Rhode Island, where he married Mary Louise Williams.[3] The couple relocated to Mississippi, where they settled in his hometown of Greenwood. They had a son together, Delay De La Beckwith. De La Beckwith and Williams divorced, and he later married Thelma Lindsay Neff.[1]

De La Beckwith worked as a salesman for most of his life, selling tobacco, fertilizer, wood stoves, and other goods.[1] In 1954, following the United States Supreme Court ruling in Brown v. Board of Education that segregated public schools were unconstitutional, he joined his local White Citizens' Council, and was also a member of the Ku Klux Klan.

Murder of Medgar Evers edit

 
De La Beckwith's rifle which he used to kill Evers

On June 12, 1963, at age 42, De La Beckwith murdered NAACP and civil rights leader Medgar Evers shortly after the activist arrived home in Jackson. Beckwith had positioned himself across the street with a rifle, and he shot Evers in the back.[5] Evers died an hour later, aged 37. Myrlie Evers, his wife, and his three children, James, Reena, and Darrell Evers, were home at the time of the assassination. Their son Darrell recalled the night: "We were ready to greet him, because every time he came home it was special for us. He was traveling a lot at that time. All of a sudden, we heard a shot. We knew what it was."[6]

Trials edit

The state prosecuted De La Beckwith twice for murder in 1964, but both trials ended with hung juries. Mississippi had effectively disenfranchised black voters since 1890, so that, in practice, they were excluded from serving on juries, whose members were drawn from voter rolls. During the second trial, Ross Barnett, Democratic Governor of Mississippi at the time of the assassination,¹ shook hands with De La Beckwith in the courtroom.[1] The White Citizens' Council paid De La Beckwith's legal expenses in both his 1964 trials.[7]

In January 1966, De La Beckwith, along with a number of other members of the White Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, was subpoenaed by the House Un-American Activities Committee to testify about Klan activities. Although De La Beckwith gave his name when asked by the committee (other witnesses, such as Samuel Bowers, invoked the Fifth Amendment in response to that question), he answered no other substantive questions.[2][page needed] In the following years, De La Beckwith became a leader in the segregationist Phineas Priesthood, an offshoot of the white supremacist Christian Identity movement.[citation needed] The group was known for its hostility toward African Americans, Jews, Catholics, and foreigners.

According to Delmar Dennis, who acted as a key witness for the prosecution at the 1994 trial, De La Beckwith boasted of his role in the death of Medgar Evers at several Ku Klux Klan rallies and similar gatherings in the years following his mistrials. In 1967, he unsuccessfully sought the Democratic Party's nomination for Lieutenant Governor of Mississippi.[2][page needed]

In 1969, De La Beckwith's previous charges were dismissed. In 1973, informants alerted the Federal Bureau of Investigation that he planned to murder A.I. Botnick, director of the New Orleans-based B'nai B'rith Anti-Defamation League. The attack was a racially motivated retaliation for comments that Botnick had made about white Southerners and race relations. Following several days of surveillance, New Orleans Police Department officers stopped De La Beckwith as he was traveling by car on the Lake Pontchartrain Causeway Bridge to New Orleans. Among the contents of his vehicle were several loaded firearms, a map with highlighted directions to Botnick's house, and a dynamite time bomb. On August 1, 1975, De La Beckwith was convicted of conspiracy to commit murder and sentenced to five years in prison. After losing his appeal, Beckwith was detained in Washington, D.C. after failing to report to prison. He served nearly three years of his five year sentence at the Angola Prison in Louisiana from May 1977 until he was paroled in January 1980.[2][8] Just before entering prison to serve his sentence, De La Beckwith was ordained by Reverend Dewey "Buddy" Tucker as a minister in the Temple Memorial Baptist Church, a Christian Identity congregation in Knoxville, Tennessee.[9]

In the 1980s, the Jackson Clarion-Ledger published reports on its investigation of De La Beckwith's trials in the 1960s. It found that the Mississippi State Sovereignty Commission, a state agency supported by taxpayers' money to purportedly protect the image of the state, had assisted De La Beckwith's attorneys in his second trial. The commission had worked against the civil rights movement in numerous ways; for this trial, it used state resources to investigate members of the jury pool during voir dire to aid the defense in picking a sympathetic jury.[1][2][page needed] These findings of illegality contributed to a retrial of De La Beckwith by the state in 1994.

1994 trial for Evers murder edit

Myrlie Evers, who later became the third woman to chair the NAACP, refused to abandon her husband's case. When new documents showed that jurors in the previous case were investigated illegally and screened by a state agency, she pressed authorities to reopen the case. In the 1980s, reporting by Jerry Mitchell of the Jackson Clarion-Ledger about the earlier Beckwith trials resulted in the state's mounting a new investigation. It ultimately initiated a third prosecution, based on this and other new evidence.[1]

By this time, De La Beckwith was living in Walden, Tennessee, just outside Signal Mountain, Tennessee, a suburb of Chattanooga. He was extradited to Mississippi for trial at the Hinds County Courthouse in Jackson. Before his trial, the 71-year-old white supremacist had asked the justices to dismiss the case against him on the grounds that it violated his rights to a speedy trial, due process and protection from double jeopardy.[10] The Mississippi Supreme Court ruled against his motion by a 4–3 vote, and the case was scheduled to be heard in January 1994.

During this third trial, the murder weapon was presented, an Enfield .30-06 caliber rifle, with Beckwith's fingerprints. Beckwith claimed that the gun was stolen from his house. He listed his health problems, high blood pressure, lack of energy and kidney problems, saying, "I need a list to recite everything I suffer from, and I hate to complain because I'm not the complaining type".[11] On February 5, 1994, a jury composed of eight African-Americans and four whites, convicted De La Beckwith of murder for killing Medgar Evers. He was sentenced to life in prison.[12][13][14] New evidence included testimony that during the three decades since the crime had occurred, De La Beckwith had boasted of having committed the murder on multiple occasions, including at a Klan rally. The physical evidence was essentially the same as that presented during the first two trials.[1]

De La Beckwith appealed the guilty verdict, but the Mississippi Supreme Court upheld the conviction in 1997. The court said that the 31-year lapse between the murder and De La Beckwith's conviction did not deny him a fair trial. De La Beckwith sought judicial review in the United States Supreme Court, but his petition for certiorari was denied.[15]

On January 21, 2001, De La Beckwith died after he was transferred from prison to the University of Mississippi Medical Center in Jackson, Mississippi. He was 80 years old. He had suffered from heart disease, high blood pressure, and other ailments for some time.[1]

Representation in other media edit

  • Where Is the Voice Coming From?[16] (1963), a short story by Eudora Welty, was published in The New Yorker on July 6, 1963. Welty, who was from Jackson, Mississippi, later said: "Whoever the murderer is, I know him: not his identity, but his coming about, in this time and place. That is, I ought to have learned by now, from here, what such a man, intent on such a deed, had going on in his mind. I wrote his story—my fiction—in the first person: about that character's point of view."[17] It was published before De La Beckwith's arrest. So accurate was her portrayal that the magazine changed several details in the story before publication for legal reasons.[18]
  • Byron De La Beckwith was the subject of the 1963 Bob Dylan song "Only a Pawn in Their Game", which deplores Evers' murder and attempts to minimize De La Beckwith as "only a pawn in the game" as a poor white man manipulated by Southern politicians.
  • In 2001, Bobby DeLaughter published his memoir of the case and trial, Never Too Late: A Prosecutor’s Story of Justice in the Medgar Evers Trial.[19]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Stout, David (January 23, 2001). "Byron De La Beckwith Dies; Killer of Medgar Evers Was 80". The New York Times. Retrieved April 28, 2010.
  2. ^ a b c d e Vollers, Maryanne (April 1995). Ghosts of Mississippi: The Murder of Medgar Evers, the Trials of Byron de la Beckwith, and the Haunting of the New South. Little, Brown. ISBN 978-0-316-91485-7. Retrieved September 9, 2011.
  3. ^ a b c . Time. July 5, 1963. Archived from the original on April 5, 2008. Retrieved September 10, 2011.
  4. ^ Russ, Martin (1975). Line of departure: Tarawa. Doubleday. pp. 69–70. ISBN 978-0-385-09669-0. Retrieved September 9, 2011.
  5. ^ "Medgar Evers". Federal Bureau of Investigation.
  6. ^ Hansen, Mark. ABA Journal, March 1993, Vol.79, p.26(1); Justice, Glen. "'The Word Is Free': For the Three Children of Civil Rights Martyr Medgar Evers, the Conviction of Their Father's Murderer after 30 Years Has Finally Ended a Lifetime in Limbo. Quietly, Each Is Fulfilling Their Father's Dreams by Living out Their Own", Los Angeles Times, March 20, 1994. Web. May 16, 2017.
  7. ^ Luders, Joseph (January 2006). "The Economics of Movement Success: Business Responses to Civil Rights Mobilization". American Journal of Sociology. 111 (4): 963–998. doi:10.1086/498632. S2CID 144120696.
  8. ^ Smith, J. Y.; Lewis, Alfred E. (April 30, 1977). "Byron De La Beckwith Held Here on Louisiana Warrant". Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved October 13, 2023.
  9. ^ Lloyd, James B. (January 11, 1995). "Tennessee, Racism, and the New Right: The Second Beckwith Collection," The Library Development Review 1994-95: 3.
  10. ^ "Third trial allowed; white supremacist loses appeal: Byron De La Beckwith". Hansen, Mark. ABA Journal, March 1993, Vol.79, p.26(1)
  11. ^ "Sentenced, Byron De La Beckwith", Time, February 14, 1994, Vol.143(7), p.18(1)
  12. ^ Harrist, Ron (February 5, 1994). "White supremacist convicted of killing Medgar Evers". Associated Press. Retrieved May 24, 2021.
  13. ^ "White supremacist convicted of killing Medgar Evers". History.com. Retrieved May 24, 2021.
  14. ^ "De La Beckwith v. State, 707 So. 2d 547 | Casetext Search + Citator". casetext.com. Retrieved January 26, 2023.
  15. ^ De La Beckwith v. State, 707 So. 2d 547 (Miss. 1997), cert. denied, 525 U.S. 880 (1998).
  16. ^ "Where Is The Voice Coming From?". web.mit.edu.
  17. ^ Welty, Eudora (1980). The Collected Stories of Eudora Welty. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. ISBN 978-0-15-618921-7. Retrieved September 9, 2011.
  18. ^ Eudora Welty, "Preface", The Collected Stories of Eudora Welty (1980).
  19. ^ Never Too Late: A Prosecutor's Story of Justice in the Medgar Evers Case. New York: Simon and Schuster. September 16, 2001. ISBN 9780743223393. Retrieved June 13, 2013.

Further reading edit

  • Ronald Bailey (1988). Remembering Medgar Evers -- For a New Generation. Heritage Publications. ISBN 978-0-942373-00-4. Retrieved September 12, 2011.
  • David T. Beito; Linda Royster Beito (2004). "T.R.M. Howard: Pragmatism over Strict Integrationist Ideology in the Mississippi Delta, 1942–1954". In Glenn Feldman (ed.). Before Brown: civil rights and white backlash in the modern South. University of Alabama Press. pp. 68–95. ISBN 978-0-8173-1431-6. Retrieved September 12, 2011.
  • Jennie Brown (June 1, 1994). Medgar Evers. Holloway House Publishing. ISBN 978-0-87067-594-2. Retrieved September 12, 2011.
  • John Dittmer (May 1, 1995). Local People: The Struggle for Civil Rights in Mississippi. University of Illinois Press. ISBN 978-0-252-06507-1. Retrieved September 12, 2011.
  • Myrlie Evers; William Peters (journalist) (February 1, 1996). For Us, the Living. Univ. Press of Mississippi. ISBN 978-0-87805-841-9. Retrieved September 12, 2011.
  • James E. Jackson (1963). At the funeral of Medgar Evers in Jackson, Mississippi: a tribute in tears and a thrust for freedom. Publisher's New Press. Retrieved September 12, 2011.
  • Stephen Hunter (November 1, 1993). Point of Impact. Random House Digital, Inc. ISBN 978-0-553-56351-1. Retrieved September 12, 2011.
  • Reed Massengill (January 1997). Portrait of a Racist: The Real Life of Byron De La Beckwith. St. Martin's Griffin. ISBN 978-0-312-16725-7. Retrieved September 12, 2011.
  • Adam Nossiter (June 19, 2002). Of Long Memory: Mississippi and the Murder of Medgar Evers. Da Capo Press. ISBN 978-0-306-81162-3. Retrieved September 12, 2011.
  • Charles M. Payne (March 16, 2007). I've Got the Light of Freedom: The Organizing Tradition and the Mississippi Freedom Struggle. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-25176-2. Retrieved September 12, 2011.
  • Randy Radic (December 14, 2009). "For God's Sake: The Assassination of Medgar Evers". CrimeMagazine.com. Retrieved September 12, 2011.
  • John R. Salter (November 1, 2011). Jackson, Mississippi: An American Chronicle of Struggle and Schism. UNP – Bison Books. ISBN 978-0-8032-3808-4. Retrieved September 12, 2011.[permanent dead link]
  • R. W. Scott (1991). Glory in Conflict: A Saga of Byron De La Beckwith. Camark Press. Retrieved September 12, 2011.
Never Too Late: A Prosecutor's Story of Justice in the Medgar Evers Case. New York: Simon and Schuster. 2001-09-16. ISBN 9780743223393. Retrieved June 13, 2013. 

External links edit

  • Byron De La Beckwith at IMDb
  • "Byron De La Beckwith". Find a Grave. Retrieved August 10, 2010.

See also edit

byron, beckwith, november, 1920, january, 2001, american, murderer, white, supremacist, member, klux, klan, from, greenwood, mississippi, murdered, civil, rights, leader, medgar, evers, june, 1963, trials, 1964, that, charge, with, white, male, mississippi, ju. Byron De La Beckwith Jr November 9 1920 January 21 2001 was an American murderer white supremacist and a member of the Ku Klux Klan from Greenwood Mississippi who murdered the civil rights leader Medgar Evers on June 12 1963 Two trials in 1964 on that charge with all white male Mississippi juries resulted in hung juries In 1994 he was tried by the state in a new trial which was based on new evidence He was convicted of murder and sentenced to life in prison Byron De La BeckwithDe La Beckwith in 1973Born 1920 11 09 November 9 1920Sacramento California U S DiedJanuary 21 2001 2001 01 21 aged 80 University of Mississippi Medical Center Jackson Mississippi U S OccupationSalesmanCriminal statusDeceasedConviction s MurderCriminal penaltyLife imprisonment Contents 1 Early life and career 2 Murder of Medgar Evers 3 Trials 4 1994 trial for Evers murder 5 Representation in other media 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External links 9 See alsoEarly life and career editDe La Beckwith was born in Sacramento California the only child of Byron De La Beckwith Sr a postmaster for the town of Colusa and Susan Southworth Yerger 1 His father died of pneumonia when he was 5 2 page needed One year later he and his mother settled in Greenwood Mississippi to be near family His mother died of lung cancer when he was 12 years old 3 leaving him orphaned He was raised by his maternal uncle William Greene Yerger and his wife 3 He was related by marriage to the socialist author Upton Sinclair and attended the prestigious southern prep school in Bell Buckle Tennessee called The Webb School In January 1942 De La Beckwith enlisted in the U S Marine Corps serving as a machine gunner in the Pacific theater of World War II He fought in the Battle of Guadalcanal and was shot in the waist during the Battle of Tarawa 4 He was honorably discharged in August 1945 After serving in the Marine Corps De La Beckwith moved to Providence Rhode Island where he married Mary Louise Williams 3 The couple relocated to Mississippi where they settled in his hometown of Greenwood They had a son together Delay De La Beckwith De La Beckwith and Williams divorced and he later married Thelma Lindsay Neff 1 De La Beckwith worked as a salesman for most of his life selling tobacco fertilizer wood stoves and other goods 1 In 1954 following the United States Supreme Court ruling in Brown v Board of Education that segregated public schools were unconstitutional he joined his local White Citizens Council and was also a member of the Ku Klux Klan Murder of Medgar Evers edit nbsp De La Beckwith s rifle which he used to kill EversOn June 12 1963 at age 42 De La Beckwith murdered NAACP and civil rights leader Medgar Evers shortly after the activist arrived home in Jackson Beckwith had positioned himself across the street with a rifle and he shot Evers in the back 5 Evers died an hour later aged 37 Myrlie Evers his wife and his three children James Reena and Darrell Evers were home at the time of the assassination Their son Darrell recalled the night We were ready to greet him because every time he came home it was special for us He was traveling a lot at that time All of a sudden we heard a shot We knew what it was 6 Trials editThe state prosecuted De La Beckwith twice for murder in 1964 but both trials ended with hung juries Mississippi had effectively disenfranchised black voters since 1890 so that in practice they were excluded from serving on juries whose members were drawn from voter rolls During the second trial Ross Barnett Democratic Governor of Mississippi at the time of the assassination shook hands with De La Beckwith in the courtroom 1 The White Citizens Council paid De La Beckwith s legal expenses in both his 1964 trials 7 In January 1966 De La Beckwith along with a number of other members of the White Knights of the Ku Klux Klan was subpoenaed by the House Un American Activities Committee to testify about Klan activities Although De La Beckwith gave his name when asked by the committee other witnesses such as Samuel Bowers invoked the Fifth Amendment in response to that question he answered no other substantive questions 2 page needed In the following years De La Beckwith became a leader in the segregationist Phineas Priesthood an offshoot of the white supremacist Christian Identity movement citation needed The group was known for its hostility toward African Americans Jews Catholics and foreigners According to Delmar Dennis who acted as a key witness for the prosecution at the 1994 trial De La Beckwith boasted of his role in the death of Medgar Evers at several Ku Klux Klan rallies and similar gatherings in the years following his mistrials In 1967 he unsuccessfully sought the Democratic Party s nomination for Lieutenant Governor of Mississippi 2 page needed In 1969 De La Beckwith s previous charges were dismissed In 1973 informants alerted the Federal Bureau of Investigation that he planned to murder A I Botnick director of the New Orleans based B nai B rith Anti Defamation League The attack was a racially motivated retaliation for comments that Botnick had made about white Southerners and race relations Following several days of surveillance New Orleans Police Department officers stopped De La Beckwith as he was traveling by car on the Lake Pontchartrain Causeway Bridge to New Orleans Among the contents of his vehicle were several loaded firearms a map with highlighted directions to Botnick s house and a dynamite time bomb On August 1 1975 De La Beckwith was convicted of conspiracy to commit murder and sentenced to five years in prison After losing his appeal Beckwith was detained in Washington D C after failing to report to prison He served nearly three years of his five year sentence at the Angola Prison in Louisiana from May 1977 until he was paroled in January 1980 2 8 Just before entering prison to serve his sentence De La Beckwith was ordained by Reverend Dewey Buddy Tucker as a minister in the Temple Memorial Baptist Church a Christian Identity congregation in Knoxville Tennessee 9 In the 1980s the Jackson Clarion Ledger published reports on its investigation of De La Beckwith s trials in the 1960s It found that the Mississippi State Sovereignty Commission a state agency supported by taxpayers money to purportedly protect the image of the state had assisted De La Beckwith s attorneys in his second trial The commission had worked against the civil rights movement in numerous ways for this trial it used state resources to investigate members of the jury pool during voir dire to aid the defense in picking a sympathetic jury 1 2 page needed These findings of illegality contributed to a retrial of De La Beckwith by the state in 1994 1994 trial for Evers murder editMyrlie Evers who later became the third woman to chair the NAACP refused to abandon her husband s case When new documents showed that jurors in the previous case were investigated illegally and screened by a state agency she pressed authorities to reopen the case In the 1980s reporting by Jerry Mitchell of the Jackson Clarion Ledger about the earlier Beckwith trials resulted in the state s mounting a new investigation It ultimately initiated a third prosecution based on this and other new evidence 1 By this time De La Beckwith was living in Walden Tennessee just outside Signal Mountain Tennessee a suburb of Chattanooga He was extradited to Mississippi for trial at the Hinds County Courthouse in Jackson Before his trial the 71 year old white supremacist had asked the justices to dismiss the case against him on the grounds that it violated his rights to a speedy trial due process and protection from double jeopardy 10 The Mississippi Supreme Court ruled against his motion by a 4 3 vote and the case was scheduled to be heard in January 1994 During this third trial the murder weapon was presented an Enfield 30 06 caliber rifle with Beckwith s fingerprints Beckwith claimed that the gun was stolen from his house He listed his health problems high blood pressure lack of energy and kidney problems saying I need a list to recite everything I suffer from and I hate to complain because I m not the complaining type 11 On February 5 1994 a jury composed of eight African Americans and four whites convicted De La Beckwith of murder for killing Medgar Evers He was sentenced to life in prison 12 13 14 New evidence included testimony that during the three decades since the crime had occurred De La Beckwith had boasted of having committed the murder on multiple occasions including at a Klan rally The physical evidence was essentially the same as that presented during the first two trials 1 De La Beckwith appealed the guilty verdict but the Mississippi Supreme Court upheld the conviction in 1997 The court said that the 31 year lapse between the murder and De La Beckwith s conviction did not deny him a fair trial De La Beckwith sought judicial review in the United States Supreme Court but his petition for certiorari was denied 15 On January 21 2001 De La Beckwith died after he was transferred from prison to the University of Mississippi Medical Center in Jackson Mississippi He was 80 years old He had suffered from heart disease high blood pressure and other ailments for some time 1 Representation in other media editWhere Is the Voice Coming From 16 1963 a short story by Eudora Welty was published in The New Yorker on July 6 1963 Welty who was from Jackson Mississippi later said Whoever the murderer is I know him not his identity but his coming about in this time and place That is I ought to have learned by now from here what such a man intent on such a deed had going on in his mind I wrote his story my fiction in the first person about that character s point of view 17 It was published before De La Beckwith s arrest So accurate was her portrayal that the magazine changed several details in the story before publication for legal reasons 18 Byron De La Beckwith was the subject of the 1963 Bob Dylan song Only a Pawn in Their Game which deplores Evers murder and attempts to minimize De La Beckwith as only a pawn in the game as a poor white man manipulated by Southern politicians In 1991 the murder of Evers and first trials of Beckwith were the basis of the episode titled Sweet Sweet Blues written by author William James Royce for the NBC television series In the Heat of the Night In the episode actor James Best plays a character based on De La Beckwith an aging Klansman who appears to have gotten away with murder The feature film Ghosts of Mississippi 1996 tells the story of the murder and 1994 trial James Woods performance as De La Beckwith was nominated for an Academy Award In 2001 Bobby DeLaughter published his memoir of the case and trial Never Too Late A Prosecutor s Story of Justice in the Medgar Evers Trial 19 References edit a b c d e f g h Stout David January 23 2001 Byron De La Beckwith Dies Killer of Medgar Evers Was 80 The New York Times Retrieved April 28 2010 a b c d e Vollers Maryanne April 1995 Ghosts of Mississippi The Murder of Medgar Evers the Trials of Byron de la Beckwith and the Haunting of the New South Little Brown ISBN 978 0 316 91485 7 Retrieved September 9 2011 a b c A Little Abnormal The Life of Byron De La Beckwith Time July 5 1963 Archived from the original on April 5 2008 Retrieved September 10 2011 Russ Martin 1975 Line of departure Tarawa Doubleday pp 69 70 ISBN 978 0 385 09669 0 Retrieved September 9 2011 Medgar Evers Federal Bureau of Investigation Hansen Mark ABA Journal March 1993 Vol 79 p 26 1 Justice Glen The Word Is Free For the Three Children of Civil Rights Martyr Medgar Evers the Conviction of Their Father s Murderer after 30 Years Has Finally Ended a Lifetime in Limbo Quietly Each Is Fulfilling Their Father s Dreams by Living out Their Own Los Angeles Times March 20 1994 Web May 16 2017 Luders Joseph January 2006 The Economics of Movement Success Business Responses to Civil Rights Mobilization American Journal of Sociology 111 4 963 998 doi 10 1086 498632 S2CID 144120696 Smith J Y Lewis Alfred E April 30 1977 Byron De La Beckwith Held Here on Louisiana Warrant Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved October 13 2023 Lloyd James B January 11 1995 Tennessee Racism and the New Right The Second Beckwith Collection The Library Development Review 1994 95 3 Third trial allowed white supremacist loses appeal Byron De La Beckwith Hansen Mark ABA Journal March 1993 Vol 79 p 26 1 Sentenced Byron De La Beckwith Time February 14 1994 Vol 143 7 p 18 1 Harrist Ron February 5 1994 White supremacist convicted of killing Medgar Evers Associated Press Retrieved May 24 2021 White supremacist convicted of killing Medgar Evers History com Retrieved May 24 2021 De La Beckwith v State 707 So 2d 547 Casetext Search Citator casetext com Retrieved January 26 2023 De La Beckwith v State 707 So 2d 547 Miss 1997 cert denied 525 U S 880 1998 Where Is The Voice Coming From web mit edu Welty Eudora 1980 The Collected Stories of Eudora Welty Houghton Mifflin Harcourt ISBN 978 0 15 618921 7 Retrieved September 9 2011 Eudora Welty Preface The Collected Stories of Eudora Welty 1980 Never Too Late A Prosecutor s Story of Justice in the Medgar Evers Case New York Simon and Schuster September 16 2001 ISBN 9780743223393 Retrieved June 13 2013 Further reading editRonald Bailey 1988 Remembering Medgar Evers For a New Generation Heritage Publications ISBN 978 0 942373 00 4 Retrieved September 12 2011 David T Beito Linda Royster Beito 2004 T R M Howard Pragmatism over Strict Integrationist Ideology in the Mississippi Delta 1942 1954 In Glenn Feldman ed Before Brown civil rights and white backlash in the modern South University of Alabama Press pp 68 95 ISBN 978 0 8173 1431 6 Retrieved September 12 2011 Jennie Brown June 1 1994 Medgar Evers Holloway House Publishing ISBN 978 0 87067 594 2 Retrieved September 12 2011 John Dittmer May 1 1995 Local People The Struggle for Civil Rights in Mississippi University of Illinois Press ISBN 978 0 252 06507 1 Retrieved September 12 2011 Myrlie Evers William Peters journalist February 1 1996 For Us the Living Univ Press of Mississippi ISBN 978 0 87805 841 9 Retrieved September 12 2011 James E Jackson 1963 At the funeral of Medgar Evers in Jackson Mississippi a tribute in tears and a thrust for freedom Publisher s New Press Retrieved September 12 2011 Stephen Hunter November 1 1993 Point of Impact Random House Digital Inc ISBN 978 0 553 56351 1 Retrieved September 12 2011 Reed Massengill January 1997 Portrait of a Racist The Real Life of Byron De La Beckwith St Martin s Griffin ISBN 978 0 312 16725 7 Retrieved September 12 2011 Adam Nossiter June 19 2002 Of Long Memory Mississippi and the Murder of Medgar Evers Da Capo Press ISBN 978 0 306 81162 3 Retrieved September 12 2011 Charles M Payne March 16 2007 I ve Got the Light of Freedom The Organizing Tradition and the Mississippi Freedom Struggle University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 25176 2 Retrieved September 12 2011 Randy Radic December 14 2009 For God s Sake The Assassination of Medgar Evers CrimeMagazine com Retrieved September 12 2011 John R Salter November 1 2011 Jackson Mississippi An American Chronicle of Struggle and Schism UNP Bison Books ISBN 978 0 8032 3808 4 Retrieved September 12 2011 permanent dead link R W Scott 1991 Glory in Conflict A Saga of Byron De La Beckwith Camark Press Retrieved September 12 2011 Never Too Late A Prosecutor s Story of Justice in the Medgar Evers Case New York Simon and Schuster 2001 09 16 ISBN 9780743223393 Retrieved June 13 2013 External links editByron De La Beckwith at IMDb Byron De La Beckwith Find a Grave Retrieved August 10 2010 See also edit nbsp Biography portalThomas Edwin Blanton Jr Samuel Bowers Herman Frank Cash Robert Edward Chambliss Bobby Frank Cherry Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Byron De La Beckwith amp oldid 1189120157, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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