This Nonviolent Stuff'll Get You Killed

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This Nonviolent Stuff'll Get You Killed Page 38

by Charles E. Cobb


  definition of, 68

  in Georgia, 71

  Nash, Christopher Columbus, 53

  Nash, Diane, 36, 161, 163

  Nashville (Tennessee), 8, 58, 156, 170, 189–190

  Natchez (Mississippi), 96, 183–185, 198

  Nation of Islam, 4, 126, 203

  National Afro-American League, 70

  National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), 12, 61, 78, 87, 101, 167, 185

  in Amite County, MS, 21, 96, 170–171

  attacks on members, 96

  in Bogalusa, LA, 209

  in Columbia, TN, 59

  formation of, 72

  in Jackson Parish, LA, 195

  in Mississippi, 98, 134, 136, 143, 175

  in Monroe, NC, 15, 109–110, 114, 129–130, 153

  nonviolence of, 130

  in Pike County, MS, 169–170, 172

  in South Carolina, 98

  in Texas, 66, 76

  in Walthall, MS, 170–173

  National Rifle Association, 110

  Nelson, Harold A., 220, 221

  Neshoba County (Mississippi), 142, 176

  New Deal, 61–62

  and Farm Security Administration, 124

  New Orleans (Louisiana), 38

  Arsenal of, 54

  terrorism in, 46, 48, 54, 69

  U.S. Attorney of, 51

  New York Times, 44, 76, 153, 202, 212

  New York University Law Review, 243

  Newfield, Jack, 172, 191

  Newton County (Mississippi), 83–84

  Niagara Movement, 72

  Noble, Billy, 188

  Nonviolent Action Group (NAG), 162–163

  North Carolina Agricultural and Technical College (A&T), 154–155

  North Sunflower County Hospital, 22

  Nosser, John, 185

  Office of the Chief of Military History, 105

  Olin Mathieson Chemical Company, 194

  Orangeburg massacre, 16

  Pan Africanism, 13

  Parchman Farm, 170

  Parker, Christopher, 92

  Parks, Rosa, 151

  Patterson, Robert “Tut,” 134

  Payne, Charles M. (I’ve Got the Light of Freedom), 123, 248, 249

  Peacock, Willie “Wazir,” 177–179

  Peevy, Adrian, 198, 199

  Penn, Lemuel, 214

  Peppers, Hannah, 57

  Perry, Albert E., 109, 110–111, 152

  Perry, Booker T., 108

  Pershing, John Joseph “Black Jack,” 67

  Pierce, Joe, 160

  Pike County (Mississippi), 169–170

  Pittsburgh Courier, 132

  and Double V campaign, 81–82

  Plaquemine (Louisiana), 192, 200, 205

  Pleasant Grove Baptist Church, 195

  Port Gibson (Mississippi), 128

  Powledge, Fred, 202

  Preacely, Peggy Trotter Dammond, 168–169

  Price, Cecil, 142

  Progressive Democratic Party (PDP)

  in South Carolina, 79, 98

  Progressive Voters League, 99

  Prosser, Gabriel, 35–36, 37, 39

  Providence (Rhode Island), 244

  Pulaski (Tennessee), 58

  Punch, John, 29, 30

  Quin, Alyene, 144

  racial identity

  in American colonies, 30–31

  Raines, Annie “Mama Dolly,” 168–169

  Raines, Howell, 187, 208

  Raleigh (North Carolina), 157–158

  Central Prison in, 108

  Ramspeck, Robert, 103

  Randolph, A. Philip, 61, 82

  on enlistment, 73

  Raymond (Mississippi), 146

  Raymond, George, 189, 190

  Reagon, Bernice Johnson, 247–248

  Reconstruction, 68

  Acts of, 47, 48–49

  and black codes, 43

  and Radical Reconstruction, 14

  and Redemption era, 54, 64–65, 71–72, 73

  reversals of, 41–45, 50–54

  Reddix, Jacob L., 166

  Reed, Roy, 202

  Regional Council of Negro Leadership (RCNL), 92, 135, 136

  and armed defense, 130–133

  Republican Party

  and Radical Republicans, 48, 50

  in the South, 17, 61

  and Union Leagues, 44

  Reuther, Walter, 232

  Revolutionary Action Movement (RAM), 235

  Revolutionary War, 39

  and black soldiers, 36–37, 64

  rhetoric of racism

  and “constitutional liberties,” 133

  and “states’ rights,” 133

  Richardson, Gloria, 215

  Richardson, Harry, 165, 166

  Richmond (Virginia), 36

  Roberts, Oran, 47

  Robinson, Jackie, 91

  Robinson, Reginald “Reggie,” 170, 174

  Robinson, Ruby Doris Smith, 230

  Rogers, Creed, 212

  Rogers, LaPelzia, 218

  Rogers, T. Y., 216, 217–220, 222–223

  Roosevelt, Eleanor

  and “Eleanorites,” 66

  Roosevelt, Franklin Delano, 60

  and Executive Order 8802, 82

  and the Four Freedoms, 61–62

  and the New Deal, 61–62

  Rowan, Carl, 63–64

  Ruleville (Mississippi), 19–20, 22, 115–116, 128

  Jerusalem Quarters in, 23, 121

  Mount Galilee Missionary Baptist Church in, 120–121

  organizers in, 117–118, 120, 122–123, 141

  Sanctified Quarters in, 22

  Russell, Richard B., 60, 101

  Rustin, Bayard, 4, 7, 150

  Sacramento (California), 240

  Sales, Ruby, 183

  Salter, John R. “Hunter Bear,” 6, 15

  sanitation workers strike (1968), 16

  Saturday Evening Post, 228

  Savannah (Georgia), 48

  Scott, Dred, 34

  Schuyler, George, 81

  Schwerner, Michael “Mickey,” 142, 176, 184–185, 198, 214

  Seamons, Theodore, 229

  Searles, A. C., 248

  Second Amendment, 6, 24, 45, 116

  Secret Information Concerning Black American Troops, 67

  Sellers, Cleveland, 225, 232–233, 237

  Selma (Alabama), 147, 241

  Selma-to-Montgomery march, 182–183, 224, 240, 241

  Shaw College/University, 157, 159–160, 162

  Shelton, Ike, 135

  Sherrod, Charles, 93, 159–160, 163, 168–169

  and nonviolence, 181

  on organizing, 119, 120, 179–180

  and SNCC, 167

  Sherrod, Shirley Miller, 180

  Shorter, George, 44

  Shuttlesworth, Fred, 154

  Simkins, C. O., 164

  Simms, James, 47–48

  Simpson, David “Fuzzy,” 112

  Sims, Charles, 187, 211, 212, 213, 225

  Sisson, Herman & Hattie, 22

  slave revolts, 11, 14, 37

  in Caribbean, 32–33

  in Virginia Colony, 28, 31–32

  Smiley, Glenn, 7

  Smith, Ellison Durant “Cotton Ed,” 60

  Smith, Lamar, 96

  Smith, Kelly Miller, 149

  Smith, Willis, 104

  Sneider, J. D., 99

  Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC), 4, 8, 15, 79, 87, 222–223, 234, 240

  nonviolence of, 130, 152, 202, 213–215, 217

  Southern Negro Youth Congress (SNYC), 61

  Southern Tenant Farmers Union (STFU), 103

  Southern University, 164, 166, 195

  Southwest Georgian, 248

  Soviet Union, 89, 100

  Sowell, Thomas, 244

  Sparks, Lee, 74–75

  Spelman College, 161, 164, 165

  Spingarn, Joel, 72

  Spotswood, Alexander, 32

  St. Augustine (Florida), 15
4, 163, 215–216

  Stand Your Ground, 70, 245

  Stanton, Edwin M., 45

  States’ Rights Party, 60

  Stennis, John, 101

  Stephenson, Gladys, 55–58, 63, 66

  Stephenson, James, 55–58, 63, 66, 91

  Stephenson, John Robert, 56

  Steptoe, Eldridge Willie “E. W.,” 170–172, 173, 177, 184, 191, 204, 208

  Steptoe, Sing, 171

  Steptoe Jr., E. W., 177

  Stillman College, 217

  Stoper, Emily, 189

  Stowe, Harriet Beecher (Uncle Tom’s Cabin), 50

  Strickland, R. L., 149, 183

  Strider, H. C., 132

  Stringer, Emmett J., 134–135

  Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), 3, 16, 23, 79, 224, 237

  and Atlanta meeting, 177–179

  and armed defense, 138–139, 175–176, 178–180, 189, 202, 204, 213, 229–230, 233–235

  author’s involvement in, 20–21, 116, 120, 250

  in Mississippi, 87, 124, 146, 173–174, 179

  nonviolence of, 130, 156–157, 159–160, 181–182, 183–184, 240

  origins of, 157–158

  and voting rights, 20, 86, 89, 167–168

  student sit-in movement (1960– ), 3, 88, 115, 162–163, 240

  black opposition to, 165–166

  nonviolence of, 154–157

  origins of, 154–156

  Suarez, Mateo “Flukie,” 8, 188, 190, 213

  Sullivan, Herchelle, 163

  Sumner (Mississippi), 132, 181

  Sunflower County (Mississippi), 17, 19, 93, 97, 118, 121, 123, 124, 128

  Swedenborg, Emanuel, 34

  Sweet Honey in the Rock, 163

  Tallahatchie County (Mississippi), 132, 177, 181, 191

  Taney, Roger Brooke, 34

  Tennessee

  National Guard of, 59

  ratification of Fourteenth Amendment, 45

  sanitation workers strike (1968) in, 16

  Thomas, Ernest “Chilly Willy,” 195, 196–197, 198–201

  and Deacons for Defense and Justice, 203, 205, 207, 211–213

  Thomas, George, 40

  Thomas, Henry “Hank,” 163

  Thompson, James Hanover, 112

  Thurman, Howard, 149–150

  Thurman, Sue Baily, 149–150

  Thurmond, Strom, 60

  Till, Emmett, 20, 23, 24, 88, 132, 136

  Till-Mobley, Mamie Elizabeth, 132

  Tingle, Willie, 93

  “To Fulfill These Rights” conference, 229–230

  Toccoa, Georgia, 106

  Tougaloo Southern Christian College, 21, 232

  armed defense of, 6

  Townsend, Lou Ella, 93–95, 137

  Travers, Sara, 74–75

  Travis, Brenda, 146–147

  Travis, Jimmy, 176

  Trotter, Monroe, 72

  on enlistment, 73

  Truman, Harry S., 60

  Turnbow, Hartman, 7, 10, 15, 114, 138, 142, 145, 154, 208

  Turner, Henry McNeal, 47

  Turner, Nat, 37

  Tuscaloosa (Alabama), 15, 133, 216–222, 225

  Tuscaloosa Citizens for Action Committee (TCAC), 15, 217–223

  Twelve Knights of Liberty/Order of Twelve. See fraternal associations

  Tylertown (Mississippi), 173

  Uncle Tom, 4, 102, 211

  Underwood, James J., 57, 58, 59

  Union County (North Carolina), 15, 109–110, 114, 129–130

  Union Leagues, 44

  United Auto Workers, 232

  United Papermakers and Paperworkers Union, 209

  Universal Negro Improvement Association (UNIA), 72, 79, 90

  University of Alabama, 216–217

  University of Mississippi, 21, 97, 223

  University of Southern California, 228

  Urban League, 79

  U.S. Department of Justice

  Civil Rights Division of, 96–97

  Vanguard League, 151

  Varela, Maria, 243

  Vesey, Denmark, 37

  Vicksburg (Mississippi), 54

  Virginia Colony

  and slavery, 28–30, 32

  Virginia Council and General Court, 29

  Virginia General Assembly, 31

  voter registration, 20, 22, 174

  and armed defense, 140

  and Kennedy administration, 88–89

  Voting Rights Act (1965), 1, 2, 224, 234, 240, 242

  Walker, Corey D. B., 38

  Walters, Alexander, 70

  Ward, William, 51–53

  Warmouth, Henry Clay, 50, 51

  Washington, Booker T., 72, 165–166

  Washington County (Mississippi), 126

  Washington, D.C.

  segregation of, 68, 81

  Washington Parish (Louisiana), 208

  Watkins, Hollis, 124–125, 139, 140, 145, 226

  Wells-Barnett, Ida B., 47

  Wesley, John, 34

  West, Benjamin, 156

  West Feliciana Parish (Louisiana), 192

  Wexler, Laura, 104

  Wheeler, Jean, 163

  White, Annette Jones, 163–164

  White, Edwin, 125

  White, Walter, 69–70, 72, 81, 101, 239

  White League, 54

  Wilkins, Roy, 113, 153, 224–225, 227

  Williams, Hosea, 234

  Williams, John Sharp, 68

  Williams, Juan, 59

  Williams, Robert, 12, 107–112, 151, 202

  and NAACP, 15, 110, 113, 114, 129–130, 152–153

  Williams, Samuel W., 161

  Wilson, Woodrow, 68, 76

  Woodson, Carter G., 42

  World War I

  black soldiers in, 66–67, 73–76

  black veterans of, 64

  and change, 64–65, 81

  World War II, 59

  black veterans of, 15, 58, 64, 85–86, 149, 166, 220

  and change, 61, 64–65, 81–82, 107

  white veterans of, 63

  Worthy, William, 7

  Wright, Marian, 164

  Wright, Richard (Native Son), 99

  Yazoo City (Mississippi), 134

  Young, Andrew, 154, 215, 223

  Young, A. Z., 209

  Young, Whitney, 224–225

 

 

 


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