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Mississippi State Sovereignty Commission

The Mississippi State Sovereignty Commission (also called the MSSC or Sov-Com) was a state agency in Mississippi active from 1956 to 1977 and tasked with fighting desegregation and controlling civil rights activism. It was overseen by the Governor of Mississippi.[2] The stated objective of the commission was to "[...] protect the sovereignty of the state of Mississippi, and her sister states" from "encroachment thereon by the Federal Government".[3] It coordinated activities to portray the state and racial segregation in a more positive light. Serving governors and lieutenant governors of Mississippi were ex officio members of the commission. The Sovereignty Commission spied on and conspired against civil rights activists and organized pressure and economic retaliation against those who supported the civil rights movement in Mississippi.

Millsaps College students protesting the death of Jackson State University student and civil rights worker Benjamin Brown, who was killed by police at a protest. Photo shot by the commission with numbers used to identify individual students.[1]

The agency was given unusual authority to investigate citizens of the state, issue subpoenas and even exercise police powers, although it was not attached to any law enforcement agency. During its existence, the commission profiled more than 87,000 persons associated with, or suspected to be associated with, the civil rights movement (which it opposed).[4] It investigated the work and credit histories and even personal relations of persons it investigated. It collaborated with local white officials of government, police, and business to pressure African Americans to give up activism, especially by economic pressures, such as causing them to be fired, evicted from rental housing, or to have their businesses boycotted.

Creation edit

After James P. Coleman won Mississippi's gubernatorial election in 1955, he proposed to the Legal Educational Advisory Committee the creation of "a permanent authority for maintenance of racial segregation with a full staff and funds for its operations to come out of tax money."[5] After Coleman took office, the Mississippi House of Representatives proposed House Bill 880, which would create a State Sovereignty Commission. While most legislators and the local media were supportive of the bill, some representatives were skeptical of its power to give funds to private entities, fearing that the body would essentially become a partner of Citizens' Councils, civic groups organized to block desegregation.[5] The House passed the bill over these legislators' objections, though the Mississippi State Senate added an amendment to the measure authorizing the Mississippi State Auditor to review the commission's expenditures. The amended bill was then passed by the House with 107 votes in support and 33 abstentions/absences.[6] Coleman signed it into law on March 30, 1956.[7]

Structure edit

 
Mississippi State Capitol in Jackson, where the commission was headquartered

Itself an agency in the executive branch of Mississippi's state government, the State Sovereignty Commission comprised three divisions: executive, public relations, and investigative. The commission was led by a board of twelve members, who determined policy and reviewed its work.[7] It comprised some ex officio members: the governor, lieutenant governor, the Speaker of the Mississippi House of Representatives, and the state attorney general; three members of the House, two members of the Senate, and three others appointed by the governor who served during the governor's term.[8] The governor sat as the chairman of the board and appointed the agency director with the board's approval.[7] The lieutenant governor served as the board's vice-chairman.[8] The commission maintained its offices in the Mississippi State Capitol and retained three secretaries as support staff.[7]

Public relations was originally the main focus of the organization, and from 1956 until 1963 the commission retained a separate director of public relations. The mission crafted for the relations division tasked it with countering negative media attention and perceptions about race relations and segregation in Mississippi.[7] Its investigative division never had more than three full-time investigators, but the commission would sometimes employ part-time investigators or contract work out to private entities. Their job was to "obtain facts which will be of value in protecting the sovereignty of this State and preserving segregation in Mississippi."[7] The Sovereignty Commission's first investigator was Leonard Hicks, who began his position in 1956. In 1958 Zack Van Landingham became an investigator, followed by R.C. "Bob" Thomas, State Representative Hugh Boren, Andy Hopkins, and Tom Scarbrough in 1960.[9] Landingham was a former Federal Bureau of Investigation agent, and modeled the commission's filing system after the one used by the federal agency.[10] Other principal investigators for the Sovereignty Commission were Virgil Downing, Leland Cole, Fulton Tutor, Edgar C. Fortenberry, and James "Mack" Mohead.[citation needed] Many had worked in law enforcement agencies. Their duties included special assignments from the commission director, but they also carried out routine analyses of racial incidents in the state.[10] They frequently relied upon informants, who were sometimes compensated for their expenses or regularly as much as $500 a month.[8]

The Mississippi State Sovereignty Commission served as an organizational template for creation of the Louisiana State Sovereignty Commission (1960–1970), and the Alabama State Sovereignty Commission (1963–1973).[11]

Directors edit

Activities edit

Overview edit

As the state's public relations campaign failed to dampen rising civil rights activism, the commission put people to work as a de facto intelligence organization, trying to identify citizens who might be supporting civil rights initiatives, be allied with communists, or whose associations, activities, and travels did not seem to conform to segregationist norms. Swept up on lists of people under suspicion by such broad criteria were tens of thousands of African-American and white professionals, teachers, and government workers in agricultural and other agencies, churches, and community organizations. The "commission penetrated most of the major civil rights organizations in Mississippi, even planting clerical workers in the offices of activist attorneys. It informed police about planned marches or boycotts and encouraged police harassment of African-Americans who cooperated with civil rights groups. Its agents obstructed voter registration by blacks and harassed African-Americans seeking to attend white schools."[16]

The commission's activities included attempting to preserve the state's segregation and Jim Crow laws, opposing school integration, and ensuring portrayal of the state "in a positive light." Among its first employees were a former FBI agent and a transfer from the state highway patrol. "The agency outwardly extolled racial harmony, but it secretly paid investigators and spies to gather both information and misinformation."[17] Staff of the commission worked closely with, and in some cases funded, the notorious White Citizens' Councils. From 1960 to 1964, the commission secretly funded the White Citizens Council, a private organization, with $190,000 of state funds.[18]: 75 

The commission also used its intelligence-gathering capabilities to assist in the defense of Byron De La Beckwith, the murderer of Medgar Evers in 1963, during his second trial in 1964. Sov-Com investigator Andy Hopkins provided De La Beckwith's attorneys with information on the potential jurors, which the attorneys used during the selection process.[18]: 204–5 

In 1964, the Sov-Com passed on information regarding civil rights workers James Chaney, Michael Schwerner, and Andrew Goodman, to the conspirators in their murders during Freedom Summer.[19] Commission agent A.L. Hopkins met with Neshoba County law enforcement and suggested the disappearance of the three young men was a propaganda ploy.[20]

Coleman administration edit

During Governor Coleman's tenure, the commission was primarily deployed as a public relations agency, seeking to control activities and events which were thought to suggest that Mississippi's race relations were poor or that its citizens broke the law. He also forbade the commission from giving funds to Citizens' Councils.[21]

Barnett administration edit

Ross Barnett served as governor of Mississippi from 1960 to 1964. During his tenure the commission enlarged its investigative operations, sending agents across the state to report on civil rights activities. It also surveyed literature and libraries and collected information on persons viewed to be expressing liberal ideas or violating traditional racial mores. During this time the commission also channeled money to Citizens' Councils.[21]

Johnson administration edit

Paul B. Johnson Jr. served as governor of Mississippi from 1964 to 1968.[21] During his tenure, the agency director, Erle Johnston, owner of The Scott County Times, expanded the public relations role. He tried to form closer ties with business while monitoring proclaimed subversive groups, such as the Congress of Racial Equality, founded by James Farmer.[22] Johnson, for his part, largely ignored the commission during his first two years as governor and did not convene any meetings of its leadership. After a requirement was attached to a state appropriations bill in June 1966 that the commission formally convene before receiving any money, the agency's leadership met on August 8, formally adopting a policy declaring the commission as a "watch dog over subversive individuals and organizations that advocate civil disobedience; as a public relations agency for the state; and as an advisor for local communities on problems resulting from federal laws or court orders."[21] During Johnson's tenure the commission continued to monitor individuals and groups who challenged racial norms and provided advice to other government officials on ways to work around the Civil Rights Act of 1964.[21]

Williams administration edit

John Bell Williams served as governor of Mississippi from 1968 to 1972. He paid more direct attention to the commission than his predecessor, regularly convening meetings of its members and typically attending them in person. Williams placed emphasis on the agency's investigative activities, appointing a former FBI agent, W. Webb Burke, as its director in September 1968 but neglecting to fill the public relations director role. In a 1971 internal report, Burke omitted any mention of public relations but summarized the commission's activities as "conducting investigations into matters of interest to the public and which matters pertain to tax supported institutions."[21] During this time the commission followed up on requests form local officials to investigate civil rights-related activities and examined drug use and disruptions on university campuses.[21]

Demise and legacy edit

Closure of the commission edit

In the 1971 state elections, Bill Waller was elected governor and William F. Winter—a former legislator who had opposed the commission's creation—was elected lieutenant governor. At the time they took office, the commission was conducting little business. Both men demurred on making their allotted appointments to the commission and avoided attending its monthly meetings, sending representatives in their stead. After the legislature approved funding for the commission to continue in 1973, Waller vetoed the appropriation. Winter attended the commission's last meeting in June to acknowledge the suspension of funding,[23] and the commission was effectively shut down on June 30.[24]

Six cabinets containing the body's records were placed in the custody of the Mississippi Secretary of State and then stowed in the underground vault of the Vital Records Center in Flora.[24] In January 1977 a bill was introduced in the Mississippi Legislature to abolish the commission and dispose of its assets. After intense debate over what to do about the agency's records, the legislature decided to have them sealed at the Mississippi Department of Archives and History until July 1, 2027. Governor Cliff Finch signed the bill into law on March 4, and that day the secretary of state's office handed the files over to the Department of Archives and History, comprising the filing cabinets, two cardboard boxes of financial records, a meeting minute book, and two loose manila folders. Several days later a package of other records kept in the governor's office was handed over to the archives. The department locked all the relevant records in its vault.[8]

Records releases edit

The year the commission's records were sealed, the Mississippi chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union filed a class-action lawsuit against the state, arguing that it should release the files, as they were compiled from illegal surveillance of citizens. In 1998, United States District Court Judge William H. Barbour Jr. ordered all commission records not involved in litigation to be unsealed, and the majority of records were made available by March 17. After subsequent court orders, the Department of Archives and History released more files on July 31, 2000 and January 18, 2001. In 2002, the department made all of the commission's records accessible on its website.[8]

Once unsealed, the records revealed more than 87,000 names of citizens about whom the state had collected information, or classified as "suspects". Today, the records of the commission are available online for search.[25] The records also revealed the state's complicity in the murders of Chaney, Goodman, and Schwerner at Philadelphia, Mississippi. Its investigator A. L. Hopkins gave information about the workers to the commission, including the car license number of a new civil rights worker. It passed the information to the Sheriff of Neshoba County, who was implicated in the murders.[26]

In popular culture edit

Dawn Porter directed the 2014 film Spies of Mississippi about the Commission.[citation needed]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Mississippi State Sovereignty Commission (1967-05-11). . Mississippi Department of Archives and History. Archived from the original on August 6, 2011.
  2. ^ Hendrickson, Paul (2003). Sons of Mississippi. New York City: Alfred A. Knopf. ISBN 0-375-40461-9.
  3. ^ Rowe-Sims, Sarah (September 2002). . Mississippi Historical Society. Archived from the original on 2019-12-05. Retrieved 2016-10-23.
  4. ^ Mississippi Commission's Files a Treasure Trove of Innuendo." Associated Press 18 March 1998. Accessed 9 May 2008. July 29, 2015, at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ a b Irons 2010, p. 15.
  6. ^ Irons 2010, pp. 15–16.
  7. ^ a b c d e f Irons 2010, p. 16.
  8. ^ a b c d e "Sovereignty Commission Online : Agency History". Mississippi Department of Archives & History. Retrieved September 15, 2022.
  9. ^ Sack, Kevin (March 18, 1998). "Mississippi Reveals Dark Secrets of a Racist Time". The New York Times. p. A1.
  10. ^ a b Irons 2010, p. 17.
  11. ^ Katagiri, Yasuhiro (September 18, 2009). The Mississippi State Sovereignty Commission: Civil Rights and States' Rights. University Press of Mississippi. ISBN 9781496801258 – via Google Books.
  12. ^ "Jones, Albert N. - Civil Rights Digital Library".
  13. ^ "Oral history with Mr. Erle Johnston - the Civil Rights History Project: Survey of Collections and Repositories (The American Folklife Center, Library of Congress)". Library of Congress.
  14. ^ "Johnston, Erle".
  15. ^ "MS Digital Archives".
  16. ^ "Silent Partner: How the South’s Fight To Uphold Segregation Was Funded Up North", The Wall Street Journal, 11 June 1999, accessed 6/9/2009
  17. ^ "Mississippi Commission's Files a Treasure Trove of Innuendo", Associated Press (AP), 18 Mar 1998, accessed 9 May 2008 May 29, 2004, at the Wayback Machine
  18. ^ a b 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 9 September 2011.
  19. ^ Irons 2010, p. xiv.
  20. ^ Irons 2010, p. 169.
  21. ^ a b c d e f g Rowe-Sims, Sarah (September 2002). "The Mississippi State Sovereignty Commission: An Agency History". Mississippi History Now. Mississippi Department of Archives and History. Retrieved March 17, 2023.
  22. ^ Irons 2010, p. 135.
  23. ^ Bolton 2013, p. 164.
  24. ^ a b Katagiri 2001, Conclusion : To Grapple With the Past.
  25. ^ Series 2515: Mississippi State Sovereignty Commission Records, 1994-2006 2011-01-15 at the Wayback Machine, Mississippi Department of Archives and History, accessed 2 December 2011.
  26. ^ "Mississippi Commission's Files a Treasure Trove of Innuendo." Associated Press, 18 March 1998. Accessed 9 May 2008. "Facts about Mississippi Sovereignty Commission". from the original on May 29, 2004. Retrieved 2008-05-09.

Works cited edit

Further reading edit

  • Amy Lemco (28 April 2023). Wading In: Desegregation on the Mississippi Gulf Coast. University Press of Mississippi. ISBN 9781496847164.

External links edit

  • Records of the Sovereignty Commission
  • The Mississippi Sovereignty Commission (Mississippi Public Broadcasting) 2015-09-06 at the Wayback Machine
  • Mississippi State Secrets and Dr. J. Horace Germany (Video)
  • "Spies of Mississippi", film presented on Independent Lens

mississippi, state, sovereignty, commission, also, called, mssc, state, agency, mississippi, active, from, 1956, 1977, tasked, with, fighting, desegregation, controlling, civil, rights, activism, overseen, governor, mississippi, stated, objective, commission, . The Mississippi State Sovereignty Commission also called the MSSC or Sov Com was a state agency in Mississippi active from 1956 to 1977 and tasked with fighting desegregation and controlling civil rights activism It was overseen by the Governor of Mississippi 2 The stated objective of the commission was to protect the sovereignty of the state of Mississippi and her sister states from encroachment thereon by the Federal Government 3 It coordinated activities to portray the state and racial segregation in a more positive light Serving governors and lieutenant governors of Mississippi were ex officio members of the commission The Sovereignty Commission spied on and conspired against civil rights activists and organized pressure and economic retaliation against those who supported the civil rights movement in Mississippi Millsaps College students protesting the death of Jackson State University student and civil rights worker Benjamin Brown who was killed by police at a protest Photo shot by the commission with numbers used to identify individual students 1 The agency was given unusual authority to investigate citizens of the state issue subpoenas and even exercise police powers although it was not attached to any law enforcement agency During its existence the commission profiled more than 87 000 persons associated with or suspected to be associated with the civil rights movement which it opposed 4 It investigated the work and credit histories and even personal relations of persons it investigated It collaborated with local white officials of government police and business to pressure African Americans to give up activism especially by economic pressures such as causing them to be fired evicted from rental housing or to have their businesses boycotted Contents 1 Creation 2 Structure 2 1 Directors 3 Activities 3 1 Overview 3 2 Coleman administration 3 3 Barnett administration 3 4 Johnson administration 3 5 Williams administration 4 Demise and legacy 4 1 Closure of the commission 4 2 Records releases 5 In popular culture 6 See also 7 References 8 Works cited 9 Further reading 10 External linksCreation editAfter James P Coleman won Mississippi s gubernatorial election in 1955 he proposed to the Legal Educational Advisory Committee the creation of a permanent authority for maintenance of racial segregation with a full staff and funds for its operations to come out of tax money 5 After Coleman took office the Mississippi House of Representatives proposed House Bill 880 which would create a State Sovereignty Commission While most legislators and the local media were supportive of the bill some representatives were skeptical of its power to give funds to private entities fearing that the body would essentially become a partner of Citizens Councils civic groups organized to block desegregation 5 The House passed the bill over these legislators objections though the Mississippi State Senate added an amendment to the measure authorizing the Mississippi State Auditor to review the commission s expenditures The amended bill was then passed by the House with 107 votes in support and 33 abstentions absences 6 Coleman signed it into law on March 30 1956 7 Structure edit nbsp Mississippi State Capitol in Jackson where the commission was headquarteredItself an agency in the executive branch of Mississippi s state government the State Sovereignty Commission comprised three divisions executive public relations and investigative The commission was led by a board of twelve members who determined policy and reviewed its work 7 It comprised some ex officio members the governor lieutenant governor the Speaker of the Mississippi House of Representatives and the state attorney general three members of the House two members of the Senate and three others appointed by the governor who served during the governor s term 8 The governor sat as the chairman of the board and appointed the agency director with the board s approval 7 The lieutenant governor served as the board s vice chairman 8 The commission maintained its offices in the Mississippi State Capitol and retained three secretaries as support staff 7 Public relations was originally the main focus of the organization and from 1956 until 1963 the commission retained a separate director of public relations The mission crafted for the relations division tasked it with countering negative media attention and perceptions about race relations and segregation in Mississippi 7 Its investigative division never had more than three full time investigators but the commission would sometimes employ part time investigators or contract work out to private entities Their job was to obtain facts which will be of value in protecting the sovereignty of this State and preserving segregation in Mississippi 7 The Sovereignty Commission s first investigator was Leonard Hicks who began his position in 1956 In 1958 Zack Van Landingham became an investigator followed by R C Bob Thomas State Representative Hugh Boren Andy Hopkins and Tom Scarbrough in 1960 9 Landingham was a former Federal Bureau of Investigation agent and modeled the commission s filing system after the one used by the federal agency 10 Other principal investigators for the Sovereignty Commission were Virgil Downing Leland Cole Fulton Tutor Edgar C Fortenberry and James Mack Mohead citation needed Many had worked in law enforcement agencies Their duties included special assignments from the commission director but they also carried out routine analyses of racial incidents in the state 10 They frequently relied upon informants who were sometimes compensated for their expenses or regularly as much as 500 a month 8 The Mississippi State Sovereignty Commission served as an organizational template for creation of the Louisiana State Sovereignty Commission 1960 1970 and the Alabama State Sovereignty Commission 1963 1973 11 Directors edit Ney Gore 1956 1957 Maurice L Malone 1958 1960 Albert N Jones 1960 1963 12 Erle Johnston 1963 1968 13 14 W Webb Burke 1968 1973 15 Activities editOverview edit As the state s public relations campaign failed to dampen rising civil rights activism the commission put people to work as a de facto intelligence organization trying to identify citizens who might be supporting civil rights initiatives be allied with communists or whose associations activities and travels did not seem to conform to segregationist norms Swept up on lists of people under suspicion by such broad criteria were tens of thousands of African American and white professionals teachers and government workers in agricultural and other agencies churches and community organizations The commission penetrated most of the major civil rights organizations in Mississippi even planting clerical workers in the offices of activist attorneys It informed police about planned marches or boycotts and encouraged police harassment of African Americans who cooperated with civil rights groups Its agents obstructed voter registration by blacks and harassed African Americans seeking to attend white schools 16 The commission s activities included attempting to preserve the state s segregation and Jim Crow laws opposing school integration and ensuring portrayal of the state in a positive light Among its first employees were a former FBI agent and a transfer from the state highway patrol The agency outwardly extolled racial harmony but it secretly paid investigators and spies to gather both information and misinformation 17 Staff of the commission worked closely with and in some cases funded the notorious White Citizens Councils From 1960 to 1964 the commission secretly funded the White Citizens Council a private organization with 190 000 of state funds 18 75 The commission also used its intelligence gathering capabilities to assist in the defense of Byron De La Beckwith the murderer of Medgar Evers in 1963 during his second trial in 1964 Sov Com investigator Andy Hopkins provided De La Beckwith s attorneys with information on the potential jurors which the attorneys used during the selection process 18 204 5 In 1964 the Sov Com passed on information regarding civil rights workers James Chaney Michael Schwerner and Andrew Goodman to the conspirators in their murders during Freedom Summer 19 Commission agent A L Hopkins met with Neshoba County law enforcement and suggested the disappearance of the three young men was a propaganda ploy 20 Coleman administration edit During Governor Coleman s tenure the commission was primarily deployed as a public relations agency seeking to control activities and events which were thought to suggest that Mississippi s race relations were poor or that its citizens broke the law He also forbade the commission from giving funds to Citizens Councils 21 Barnett administration edit Ross Barnett served as governor of Mississippi from 1960 to 1964 During his tenure the commission enlarged its investigative operations sending agents across the state to report on civil rights activities It also surveyed literature and libraries and collected information on persons viewed to be expressing liberal ideas or violating traditional racial mores During this time the commission also channeled money to Citizens Councils 21 Johnson administration edit Paul B Johnson Jr served as governor of Mississippi from 1964 to 1968 21 During his tenure the agency director Erle Johnston owner of The Scott County Times expanded the public relations role He tried to form closer ties with business while monitoring proclaimed subversive groups such as the Congress of Racial Equality founded by James Farmer 22 Johnson for his part largely ignored the commission during his first two years as governor and did not convene any meetings of its leadership After a requirement was attached to a state appropriations bill in June 1966 that the commission formally convene before receiving any money the agency s leadership met on August 8 formally adopting a policy declaring the commission as a watch dog over subversive individuals and organizations that advocate civil disobedience as a public relations agency for the state and as an advisor for local communities on problems resulting from federal laws or court orders 21 During Johnson s tenure the commission continued to monitor individuals and groups who challenged racial norms and provided advice to other government officials on ways to work around the Civil Rights Act of 1964 21 Williams administration edit John Bell Williams served as governor of Mississippi from 1968 to 1972 He paid more direct attention to the commission than his predecessor regularly convening meetings of its members and typically attending them in person Williams placed emphasis on the agency s investigative activities appointing a former FBI agent W Webb Burke as its director in September 1968 but neglecting to fill the public relations director role In a 1971 internal report Burke omitted any mention of public relations but summarized the commission s activities as conducting investigations into matters of interest to the public and which matters pertain to tax supported institutions 21 During this time the commission followed up on requests form local officials to investigate civil rights related activities and examined drug use and disruptions on university campuses 21 Demise and legacy editClosure of the commission edit In the 1971 state elections Bill Waller was elected governor and William F Winter a former legislator who had opposed the commission s creation was elected lieutenant governor At the time they took office the commission was conducting little business Both men demurred on making their allotted appointments to the commission and avoided attending its monthly meetings sending representatives in their stead After the legislature approved funding for the commission to continue in 1973 Waller vetoed the appropriation Winter attended the commission s last meeting in June to acknowledge the suspension of funding 23 and the commission was effectively shut down on June 30 24 Six cabinets containing the body s records were placed in the custody of the Mississippi Secretary of State and then stowed in the underground vault of the Vital Records Center in Flora 24 In January 1977 a bill was introduced in the Mississippi Legislature to abolish the commission and dispose of its assets After intense debate over what to do about the agency s records the legislature decided to have them sealed at the Mississippi Department of Archives and History until July 1 2027 Governor Cliff Finch signed the bill into law on March 4 and that day the secretary of state s office handed the files over to the Department of Archives and History comprising the filing cabinets two cardboard boxes of financial records a meeting minute book and two loose manila folders Several days later a package of other records kept in the governor s office was handed over to the archives The department locked all the relevant records in its vault 8 Records releases edit The year the commission s records were sealed the Mississippi chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union filed a class action lawsuit against the state arguing that it should release the files as they were compiled from illegal surveillance of citizens In 1998 United States District Court Judge William H Barbour Jr ordered all commission records not involved in litigation to be unsealed and the majority of records were made available by March 17 After subsequent court orders the Department of Archives and History released more files on July 31 2000 and January 18 2001 In 2002 the department made all of the commission s records accessible on its website 8 Once unsealed the records revealed more than 87 000 names of citizens about whom the state had collected information or classified as suspects Today the records of the commission are available online for search 25 The records also revealed the state s complicity in the murders of Chaney Goodman and Schwerner at Philadelphia Mississippi Its investigator A L Hopkins gave information about the workers to the commission including the car license number of a new civil rights worker It passed the information to the Sheriff of Neshoba County who was implicated in the murders 26 In popular culture editDawn Porter directed the 2014 film Spies of Mississippi about the Commission citation needed See also edit nbsp Mississippi portal nbsp United States portalCocking affair Florida Legislative Investigation Committee Political violence in the United States during the Cold WarReferences edit Mississippi State Sovereignty Commission 1967 05 11 Millsaps students protest death of JSU student Ben Brown Mississippi Department of Archives and History Archived from the original on August 6 2011 Hendrickson Paul 2003 Sons of Mississippi New York City Alfred A Knopf ISBN 0 375 40461 9 Rowe Sims Sarah September 2002 The Mississippi State Sovereignty Commission An Agency History Mississippi Historical Society Archived from the original on 2019 12 05 Retrieved 2016 10 23 Mississippi Commission s Files a Treasure Trove of Innuendo Associated Press 18 March 1998 Accessed 9 May 2008 Archived July 29 2015 at the Wayback Machine a b Irons 2010 p 15 Irons 2010 pp 15 16 a b c d e f Irons 2010 p 16 a b c d e Sovereignty Commission Online Agency History Mississippi Department of Archives amp History Retrieved September 15 2022 Sack Kevin March 18 1998 Mississippi Reveals Dark Secrets of a Racist Time The New York Times p A1 a b Irons 2010 p 17 Katagiri Yasuhiro September 18 2009 The Mississippi State Sovereignty Commission Civil Rights and States Rights University Press of Mississippi ISBN 9781496801258 via Google Books Jones Albert N Civil Rights Digital Library Oral history with Mr Erle Johnston the Civil Rights History Project Survey of Collections and Repositories The American Folklife Center Library of Congress Library of Congress Johnston Erle MS Digital Archives Silent Partner How the South s Fight To Uphold Segregation Was Funded Up North The Wall Street Journal 11 June 1999 accessed 6 9 2009 Mississippi Commission s Files a Treasure Trove of Innuendo Associated Press AP 18 Mar 1998 accessed 9 May 2008 Archived May 29 2004 at the Wayback Machine a b 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 9 September 2011 Irons 2010 p xiv Irons 2010 p 169 a b c d e f g Rowe Sims Sarah September 2002 The Mississippi State Sovereignty Commission An Agency History Mississippi History Now Mississippi Department of Archives and History Retrieved March 17 2023 Irons 2010 p 135 Bolton 2013 p 164 a b Katagiri 2001 Conclusion To Grapple With the Past Series 2515 Mississippi State Sovereignty Commission Records 1994 2006 Archived 2011 01 15 at the Wayback Machine Mississippi Department of Archives and History accessed 2 December 2011 Mississippi Commission s Files a Treasure Trove of Innuendo Associated Press 18 March 1998 Accessed 9 May 2008 Facts about Mississippi Sovereignty Commission Archived from the original on May 29 2004 Retrieved 2008 05 09 Works cited editBolton Charles C 2013 William F Winter and the New Mississippi A Biography Jackson University Press of Mississippi ISBN 978 1 61703 787 0 Irons Jenny 2010 Reconstituting whiteness the Mississippi State Sovereignty Commission Nashville Vanderbilt University Press ISBN 978 0 8265 1685 5 Katagiri Yasuhiro 2001 The Mississippi State Sovereignty Commission Civil Rights and States Rights Jackson MS University Press of Mississippi ISBN 978 1 60473 008 1 Further reading editEubanks W Ralph 2003 Ever Is a Long Time A Journey into Mississippi s Dark Past New York Basic Books ISBN 978 0 465 02105 5 Bowers Rick Jan 12 2011 Spies of Mississippi The True Story of the Spy Network that Tried to Destroy the Civil Rights Movement New York Random House ISBN 9781426305955 Hendrickson Paul 2003 Sons of Mississippi New York Alfred A Knopf ISBN 0 375 40461 9 Amy Lemco 28 April 2023 Wading In Desegregation on the Mississippi Gulf Coast University Press of Mississippi ISBN 9781496847164 External links editRecords of the Sovereignty Commission The Mississippi Sovereignty Commission Mississippi Public Broadcasting Archived 2015 09 06 at the Wayback Machine Mississippi State Secrets and Dr J Horace Germany Video Spies of Mississippi film presented on Independent Lens Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mississippi State Sovereignty Commission amp oldid 1189221921, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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