4.9 • 15.1K Ratings
🗓️ 20 July 2022
⏱️ 35 minutes
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Today in our special series, Momentum: Civil Rights in the 1950s, Sharon rewinds and takes us back to the origin story of a life lost far too soon due to a brutal and racist attack: the murder of Emmett Till in 1955. What began with a young boy who desired to connect with family and learn where his mother came from in Mississippi, ended in horror for the Chicago 14-year-old boy. Though no one will ever know exactly what happened in the grocery store co-owned by Carolyn Bryant leading up to the murder, history will show that what began with a lie from Bryant, resulted in the death of Emmett Till at the hands of Roy Bryant and JW Milam. Three days later, when his body was finally found, it was mutilated and nearly unrecognizable.
After viewing and personally identifying his body, his mother, Mamie, did something completely unexpected: She chose to have an open casket at his funeral. Photographs of his body circulated around the country, appearing in magazines and newspapers. “Time” later selected one of the photographs, showing Mamie over the mutilated body of her dead son, as one of the 100 most influential images of all time. They said, “For almost a century, African Americans were lynched with regularity and impunity. Now, thanks to a mother's determination to expose the barbarousness of this crime, the public could no longer pretend to ignore what they couldn't see.”
The trial was held near where Emmett Till’s body was found. The courtroom was filled to capacity, and the town was overrun with reporters after the story captured national attention. The trial was electrifying. With all of the media attention, what did the all-male, all-white jury find in the verdict after 67 minutes of deliberation, and why? How can someone later admit to murder, yet believe they did nothing wrong? And what happened to Caroline Bryant and the unserved warrant after all this time? We hope you will join us to find out.
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0:00.0 | Hello friends, welcome. Welcome to the twelfth installment of our series Momentum. Momentum |
0:19.8 | brings to light the oftentimes overlooked stories, ordinary Americans during the Civil Rights |
0:25.9 | Movement. Before we begin, I would like to issue a content warning. This episode touches |
0:31.3 | on several violent acts and you may want to listen with headphones if you have small |
0:36.4 | children. I'm Sharon McMahon and welcome to the Sharon Says So podcast. Have you got |
0:52.1 | an idea for a podcast? Let's hear it. Acas is your all-in-one podcast platform for recording, |
0:58.6 | editing, publishing, and monetizing. We've got you covered. Getting started is quick, |
1:04.4 | easy, and free. Head to acas.com to join today. |
1:13.1 | When we talked last time, I told you that I wanted to return to 1955 and to an event that |
1:19.2 | shook the nation. An event that Dr. King called one of the most brutal and inhuman crimes |
1:27.0 | of the 20th century. But first, let's rewind a little further back to the 1930s into a |
1:32.6 | whipsmart, determined young black girl who was defying the odds of her time. She was |
1:39.0 | graduating from a predominantly white high school in Chicago's western suburb of Argo, but |
1:44.7 | she'd been born in Mississippi and still had family there. Her name was Mamie Carthon, |
1:51.2 | and she was used to working hard when she was 13, her parents divorced. Mamie took it |
1:56.7 | pretty rough, and living with her single mother and her brother, she buried herself in |
2:02.3 | her studies, becoming the first African-American student in her school to make the honor |
2:08.4 | role. Mamie always knew she wanted to continue her studies after high school, but by the end |
2:13.6 | of her senior year, something else had caught her eye. A young handsome man, an amateur boxer, |
2:22.3 | maybe knew he had a reputation as a ladies man, and she also knew her mother didn't approve. |
2:30.3 | But in October of 1940, Mamie said, I do, and married Louis Till. They were both 18 years |
2:38.6 | old. And nine months later, on July 25, 1941, their son, Emmett, was born. Maybe endured |
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