This Nonviolent Stuff'll Get You Killed

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by Charles E. Cobb


  Cunningham, Frank, 165, 166

  Cure Violence, 243

  Cutrer Jr., Jesse H., 209, 212

  Dahmer, Vernon, 96, 185

  Dallas County (Alabama), 147

  Daniels, Jonathan, 182–183

  Daniels, Rufe, 74–75

  Danville (Virginia), 161

  Darien (Georgia)

  Darien Insurrection in, 71

  Davis, Leonard, 20

  Dawson, William, 131

  Deacons for Defense and Justice, 12–13, 15–16, 126, 187, 192–194, 204, 229

  in Bogalusa, LA, 207–213, 241

  disbanding of, 17

  formation of, 201–202, 205–206

  spread of, 207–208, 225–226

  Decatur (Mississippi), 83–84, 92

  Declaration of Independence, 33

  and slavery, 35

  Delta Democratic Times, 126

  Democratic Party, 44, 68, 230

  black participation in, 60

  National Convention (1936) of, 60

  National Convention (1948) of, 60

  National Convention (1964) of, 230–232

  in the South, 17, 79, 98, 100, 103

  Denegale, Henry, 71

  Dennis, David “Dave,” 175, 178, 187–190, 192, 202, 206, 213, 227

  Detroit (Michigan), 67, 228

  Dickson, “Father” Moses (Manual of the Knights of Tabor and Daughters of the Tabernacle), 39, 40

  Dillon, Willie and Matti, 143

  Dittmer, John (Local People), 248

  Dixiecrats, 17, 60–61, 97, 230

  domestic servants

  as “Eleanorites,” 66

  Donaldson, Ivanhoe, 161–162, 183, 243–244, 245

  Dorrough, Charles, 22–25, 116, 118, 123, 125–126, 129, 141

  Douglass, Frederick (My Bondage and My Freedom), 27, 41, 47, 99, 145, 249

  Dream Defenders, 245

  Drew, Charles R., 64

  Du Bois, W. E. B., 3–4, 41, 42, 55, 101

  on black soldiers, 76, 77

  guns of, 70

  and Niagara Movement, 72

  on Reconstruction, 54

  and talented tenth, 163, 165–166

  on Woodrow Wilson, 68

  Dunbar, Paul Lawrence, 120

  Durham (North Carolina), 148, 203

  Earl of Dunmore, 36, 37

  East St. Louis (Illinois)

  terrorism in, 78

  Eastland, James O., 62, 97, 105

  Ebony magazine, 132, 137, 215

  Edmund Pettus Bridge, 224, 241

  Edwards, Alonzo, 74–75

  Eleanor Clubs, 66

  Evers, Charles, 91–93, 95, 96, 98, 137

  early years of, 83–86

  Evers, Darrell Kenyatta, 137

  Evers, James “Crazy Jim,” 84, 93, 94–95, 137

  Evers, Jessie, 137

  Evers, Medgar, 91–96, 97–98, 129, 146, 163

  death of, 142, 176, 216

  early years of, 83–86

  and Kenyatta, Jomo, 136–137

  and NAACP, 172, 185

  Evers-Williams, Myrlie, 92, 96, 137

  Fanon, Frantz, 11

  Farmer, James, 4, 150, 151, 192, 203–204, 224, 228

  in Bogalusa, LA, 212–213

  Fayette (Mississippi), 98

  Fellowship of Reconciliation (FOR), 7, 150, 189

  Fenton, Charlie, 200–202

  First African Baptist Church (Tuscaloosa), 216, 217–219

  Fisher, Earl, 126

  Fisk University, 170

  Fleming, John Calhoun, 56, 57

  Fleming, William “Billy,” 56–57, 63

  Forman, James “Jim,” 141, 213, 243

  Forman Jr, James, 243

  Forrest, Nathan Bedford, 41

  Fort Benning (Georgia), 214

  Fort Deposit (Alabama), 183

  Fort Hood (Texas), 91

  Fort Pillow (Tennessee), 41

  Fortune, T. Thomas, 70

  Fourteenth Amendment, 45, 48

  France, 73

  black soldiers in, 67, 77

  Franklin, John Hope, 42

  fraternal associations

  and Freemasonry, 39

  among Haitians, 39

  and Knights of Tabor, 40

  and Prince Hall Masons, 90, 194

  and Twelve Knights of Liberty/Order of Twelve, 39–40

  Freedom Movement, 97, 112, 129, 149, 166, 227, 236, 240

  and armed defense, 6, 9–10, 138, 144–145, 187–188

  in canon, 249

  and community organizing, 13

  definition of, 2, 246–248

  and miscegenation, 62

  nonviolence of, 4–5, 115, 242

  veterans role in, 82, 87, 91–92

  women in, 12, 94

  Freedom Rides (1961), 3, 88, 151, 155, 174

  and Freedom Riders, 128, 163, 170, 175, 241

  Freedom School, 249–250

  Freedom Summer (1964), 183, 195, 204, 250

  Freeman’s Standard, 47–48

  Freemasons. See fraternal associations

  Fugitive Slave Act (1850), 51

  F. W. Woolworth, 154–155

  Gandhi, Mohandas, 8, 149–150, 191, 242

  Garrison, William Lloyd, 249

  Garvey, Marcus, 72, 79, 80, 90

  Gathering for Justice, 244

  Geltson, George C., 215

  George III, 35

  Georgia

  black majority in, 43

  and county unit system, 103–104

  Georgia Voters League, 103

  Germany, 62, 80–81

  Glendora (Mississippi), 181

  Goldwater, Barry, 232

  Gone with the Wind, 42

  Goodman, Andrew, 142, 176, 184–185, 198, 214

  Graham, Frank Porter, 104

  Granger, Lester B., 79

  Grant Parish (Louisiana), 50–52

  Grant, Ulysses S., 50, 51, 53

  Great Migration, 67

  Green, George, 184

  Greensboro (North Carolina), 115

  and sit-ins, 154, 160, 164, 166

  Greenville (Mississippi), 126, 176

  Greenwood (Mississippi), 142, 146, 176, 177–179

  Gregory, James, 29

  Griffin, Walter, 57, 58–59

  Gross, Teny, 244

  Gruening, Martha, 76

  gun control laws, 9, 45, 48

  and slave revolts, 14, 29

  Guyot, Lawrence, 21, 121, 146, 179

  Haiti

  and Battle of Vertières, 37–38

  and Freemasonry, 39

  Haley, Richard, 202

  Hall, Prathia, 178

  Hamer, Fannie Lou, 17, 93–94, 121, 123, 128, 146, 178, 236

  and Democratic National Convention (1964), 232

  and voter registration, 19–20, 21–22, 122

  Hamer, Perry “Pap,” 22

  Hamlin, François, 249

  Hancock County (Georgia), 47

  Harding, Vincent G. (There Is a River), 4, 14, 248–249

  Hardy, John, 170, 173

  Harlan, Henry Clay, 63–64

  Harlem (New York), 144

  Harlem Renaissance, 77

  Harris, Don, 179

  Harris, Jessie, 21

  Harrison, Hubert, 78

  Harrison, William, 47

  Hastie, William H., 83

  Hayling, Robert, 215–216

  Hays, Brooks, 208–209

  Henry, Aaron, 98–100, 134, 136, 175, 178, 231–232

  Herzfeld, Willie, 217, 221

  Hicks, Robert, 209–211

  Hicks, Valeria “Jackie,” 210

  Highlander Folk School, 167–168

  Hill, Lance, 205–206

  Hillet, Vivian, 22

  Hinds, James M., 49

  Hinton, James M., 98

  historically black college and university (HBCU) campuses, 166

  Hitler, Adolf, 81, 98

  Hogan, Wesley, 249

  Holloway’s Prairie (Louisiana), 50
r />   Holly Springs (Mississippi), 204

  Holmes County (Mississippi), 7, 124, 138, 140, 142

  Holsaert, Faith S., 93

  Horton, Jotham W., 46

  Houston (Texas)

  black troops in, 73–77, 112

  Camp Logan in, 75

  Houston, Charles Hamilton, 79, 150

  Howard, Dave, 140

  Howard, Nathaniel, 216

  Howard, Theodore Roosevelt Mason “T. R. M.,” 130–133, 136, 137

  Howard University, 4, 20, 79, 162

  and Rankin Chapel, 150

  Hulett, John, 233, 234

  Humphrey, Hubert, 60, 231–232

  Humphreys County (Mississippi), 135

  Hurst, Eugene, 96

  Hurst, Rodney, 156

  Iberville Parish (Louisiana), 192

  Illinois Central Railroad, 143

  Illinois National Guard, 76

  indentured servitude, 29–30

  Indianola (Mississippi), 19, 21, 121

  and Citizens’ Council, 134

  Institute for the Study and Practice of Nonviolence, 244

  Interdenominational Theological Center (ITC), 165

  International Pulp, Sulfite, and Paper Union, 209

  Jackson Clarion-Ledger, 135

  Jackson, David, 132

  Jackson, Mahalia, 131

  Jackson (Mississippi), 131, 241

  and sit-ins, 6, 20

  Jackson Parish (Louisiana), 194, 198–200, 206

  Citizens’ Council of, 195

  Jackson Parish Progressive Voters League, 195

  Jackson State College/University, 166

  assault at, 16

  Jackson, Wharlest, 96

  Jackson, Y. D., 200

  Jacksonville (Florida), 155–156

  ax-handle Sunday in, 156

  James Meredith March against Fear in Mississippi (1966), 12–13, 223–226, 229, 242

  Jamestown (Virginia), 30

  Jefferson County (Mississippi), 98

  Jefferson, Thomas, 31, 229

  as slave owner, 33–34

  Jeffersonian Democrats, 62

  Jeffries, Hasan Kwame, 2–3, 249

  Jenkins, Ira, 171

  Jet magazine, 132

  Jim Crow, 82, 101, 247

  in Mississippi, 99

  and streetcars, 72, 78

  Johnson, Andrew, 45

  Johnson, Bernice, 163, 167

  Johnson C. Smith College, 164

  Johnson, Charles, 158–159

  Johnson, James Weldon, 72

  Johnson, Lyndon, 208, 231

  Johnson, T. V., 135

  Jones, Charles, 164

  Jonesboro (Louisiana), 15, 133, 194–196, 198–201

  and Deacons for Defense and Justice, 201–202, 205–207, 210

  Justice Department. See U.S. Department of Justice

  Kellogg, William Pitt, 52–53

  Kennedy, John F., 88

  administration of, 97

  Kennedy, Robert, 88, 203

  Kenya

  and Mau Mau insurgency, 136–137

  Kenyatta, Jomo, 136–137

  Khazan, Jibreel. See Blair, Ezell

  King, Coretta, 214

  King, Edwin, 232

  King, Lonnie C., 157–159, 160, 163, 165–166

  King Jr., Martin Luther, 16, 87, 111, 147, 151, 165, 191, 218, 223, 224, 235, 240, 242

  on Albany Movement, 247–248

  and armed defense, 8–9, 112

  on Deacons for Defense and Justice, 213–214, 225

  and Democratic National Convention (1964), 232

  and demonstrations, 154, 227–228

  education of, 150

  and Malcolm X, 4

  nonviolence of, 8, 152, 155, 158, 161, 213–214, 216

  weapons of, 7

  King, Yolanda, 214

  King Charles, 30

  Kirkpatrick, Frederick Douglass, 195, 198–201, 205–206, 211

  and “The Deacons” song, 206

  Kluger, Richard (Simple Justice), 248

  Knight, Claxton, 209–210

  Knights of Tabor. See fraternal associations

  Knights of the White Camellia, 52

  Knoxville (Tennessee), 167

  Korean War, 96, 156, 158, 159, 182, 195, 219–220

  Ku Klux Klan, 8, 12, 15, 45, 47, 49, 65, 80, 85, 117, 127, 142, 154, 176, 192, 231, 242

  in Amite County, MS, 171–172

  in Baker County, GA, 180

  in Bogalusa, LA, 208–209, 212

  and federal law, 51–52

  founding of, 58

  in Glendora, MS, 181

  in Greenville, MS, 126

  in Jackson Parish, LA, 194–195, 196, 198–199

  and law enforcement, 9, 19

  leadership of, 41

  in Madison County, GA, 214

  in McComb, MS, 143

  in Monroe, NC, 108–111, 152

  and Original Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, 197

  in Plaquemine, LA, 192, 205

  in popular culture, 42

  in St. Augustine, FL, 215

  in Tuscaloosa, AL, 216, 221–222

  and White Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, 197

  Ladner, Dorie, 163, 184, 185–186

  Ladner, Joyce, 163, 185

  Lafayette, Bernard, 182, 244

  LaPointe, LaVal, 56

  Latino Dream Act, 244

  Lawson, James M., 8, 150, 156, 227

  League for Democracy, 79

  Lee County (Georgia), 168

  Lee, George W., 96, 135, 137

  Lee, Herbert, 21, 24, 96, 117, 172, 176, 177

  Lee, Ulysses, 105

  Lesser, Mike, 195, 198–199

  Lewis, John, 8, 169, 204, 224

  Liberation magazine, 111

  Liberty (Mississippi), 172

  Liberty League, 78

  Liddell, Colia, 163

  Lighthouse and Informer newspaper, 98

  Linton, T. W., 216–217, 221

  Little Rock (Arkansas), 8, 99

  Central High School of, 8

  Little Rock Nine (1957), 8

  Lockridge, Raymond, 59

  Loe, Newt, 199

  Logan, Rayford, 42

  Long, Huey, 193

  Long, Jefferson, 47

  Long, Worth, 114, 148, 154

  Los Angeles (California), 228

  Los Barrios Unidos, 244

  Louisiana, 9, 16, 192

  CORE organizers in, 191, 193, 195

  culture of, 193

  and Corps d’Afrique, 51

  and Deacons for Defense and Justice, 15, 194, 201–202, 205–212

  Red River Valley in, 50, 52

  and State Militia’s Sixth Infantry Regiment, 51

  Louisiana Summer Task Force, 195

  Louisville Courier-Journal, 59–60

  Lowndes County (Alabama), 47, 182–183

  and Black Panther Party, 233–234

  Lowndes County Freedom Organization (LCFO), 233–234

  Loyal Leagues, 44

  Lucy, Autherine, 216–217, 219, 221

  Lumumba, Patrice, 236

  Lynn, Conrad, 113

  Lynd, Staughton, 249–250

  Macon (Georgia), 47

  Madison County (Georgia), 214

  Madison County (Mississippi), 187–191

  Malcolm X, 102, 126, 236

  and Martin Luther King Jr., 4

  Mallisham, Joseph, 15, 219, 220–222

  Mangum, W. W., 108

  Mankin, Helen Douglas, 103, 104

  Marable, William, 218–219

  Marcus, Sissy, 112

  Marlow, William David “W. D.,” 22

  Marshall, Thurgood, 113

  Massachusetts

  and slavery, 28

  Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Society, 249

  Maury County (Tennessee), 57, 58, 63

  McCain, Franklin, 166

  McComb (Mississippi), 123, 143–144, 146, 169–173

  McCray, John Henry, 98

  McDew, Charles
“Chuck,” 117, 157, 158, 163, 171, 184–185, 186

  McDonald, Joe, 22, 24–25, 115–116, 120–122, 125, 128–129, 141, 146

  McDonald, Rebecca, 22, 24–25, 121, 146

  McEnery, John, 52

  McGhee, Laura, 142–143, 146

  McKaine, Osceola, 79, 98

  McKenzie, Edna Chappell, 81–82

  McKissick, Floyd, 224–225, 228

  McLaurin, Charles “Mac,” 22, 23, 24, 118, 128, 141

  on organizing, 120, 122–123

  McMeans, Bessie, 183

  McNair, Landy, 22, 23, 118, 128, 141

  McNeil, Joseph, 155

  Memphis (Tennessee), 223–224

  sanitation workers strike (1968) in, 16

  terrorism in, 46–47, 48

  Tri-State Bank of, 131

  Meredith, James, 21, 223

  Meridian (Mississippi), 175

  Messenger magazine, 73, 77, 78

  and new crowd Negroes, 79

  Middleton, Samuel, 37

  Milam, S. D., 23

  Mileston (Mississippi), 124–125

  military veterans (black), 14–15, 44, 46–47, 50, 62

  as civil rights leaders, 91–92

  in Columbia (Tennessee), 58–60

  and Red Ball Express, 105

  skills of, 105–106

  and state militias, 49

  of World War I, 64, 80, 105

  of World War II, 64, 99, 105, 123–124, 166, 195, 219–220

  Miller, Hosie, 180

  Miller, Steve, 211

  Mississippi, 16

  and Democratic National Convention (1964), 230–231

  freedom riders in, 170

  and sit-ins, 6

  voting rights in, 19, 83–84, 89–91, 121–122

  Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party (MFDP), 21, 79, 143, 196, 230–232, 234

  Mississippi State Penitentiary. See Parchman Farm

  Mitchell, Francis, 137

  Mondale, Walter, 232

  Monroe (Louisiana), 195, 198–200

  Monroe (North Carolina), 12, 129–130, 152, 153, 164

  armed defense in, 107–111, 114, 133

  kissing case in, 112

  Monroe Rifle Club, 110

  Montgomery (Alabama)

  bus boycott in (1955–1956), 3, 7, 115, 150, 152, 155, 240

  Montgomery, Bennie, 108, 110, 152

  Moody, Anne, 167

  Moore, Amzie, 86, 136, 173, 174, 178

  and NAACP, 87–88, 120–121

  and voter registration, 89–91, 175

  Moore, O’Neal, 212

  Moore, Ronnie, 195, 198–199

  Moral Mondays, 245

  Morehouse College, 150, 160, 165

  Morgan, Edmund S., 31

  Morris Brown College, 165

  Morrisroe, Richard, 183

  Morton, James, 57, 58, 64

  Moses, Robert P. “Bob,” 3, 23, 65, 97, 123, 178, 192, 232

  on Cotton Curtain, 88

  on nonviolence, 5–6, 141, 177

  on organizing, 116–119, 120, 173–175

  and SNCC, 87–88, 89–90, 169–172, 173, 175, 204

  Mound Bayou (Mississippi), 130, 137

  Murdock, Cloyte, 132

  Murray, Alberta, 221

  Murray, Pauli, 4, 151

  nadir (of race relations), 70, 72

 

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