This summer, videos of Black people killed by police officers have sparked outrage and protests across the country. 65 years ago, it was a photograph that shocked the nation. The image of 14-year-old Emmett Till.
Till had traveled from Chicago to the Mississippi Delta to visit family, when he was kidnapped, horribly beaten and killed by white men after allegedly flirting with a white woman. His body was later found in the Tallahatchie river. Today, Emmett Till’s death is considered the spark that ignited the burgeoning Civil Rights movement.
But few people know there was another brazen murder of a Black man that happened just three months later, in a neighboring town in the Delta. Today on the Radio Diaries Podcast, we tell the forgotten story of Clinton Melton.
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Music by Blue Dot Sessions.
Friday Night Lights
The Ski Troops of WWII
From Prison to President
The Last Place
A Guitar, A Cello, And The Day That Changed Music
The Story of ‘Ballad for Americans’
Serving 9-5: Diaries from Prison Guards
The Man Who Put the ‘P’ in NPR
Crime Pays
Strange Fruit
Mandela’s Prison Years
A Visit to the Memory Palace
Matthew and the Judge
Seeing the Forrest Through the Little Trees
The Traveling Electric Chair
From Bullets to Balance Sheets
The Square Deal
Fly Girls
Claudette Colvin – A “Teenage Rosa Parks”
First Kiss
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It is Free
Criminal
Ear Hustle
Song Exploder
The Truth
the memory palace