Saturday, October 12, 2019
Emmett Till and The Civil Rights Movement Essay -- Racism, Civil Right
Emmett Till and The Civil Rights Movement         The murder of a fourteen year-old Chicago boy named Emmett Till     sparked the fire that was the Civil Rights Movement. Prejudice still     exists in the world today; but because of his death , many people that     have heard about or know of it, have changed the way that they think,     the way they live their lives, and what their outlook is on other     races.       Born in 1941 on the rough streets of Chicago, Illinois, Emmett Till     had never experienced the extremes of racism or violence, his mother     tried to keep him away from bad things. Mammie Till had told him     stories and life experiences of racism. When Emmett decided to travel     to Mississippi with his cousin, Wheeler, to visit his uncle Moses     Wright in the summer of 1955, he thought that it was just going to be     a regular trip, and that he would stay the summer helping out Moses on     his farm. While waiting at the train station to leave for Mississippi,     Emmett's mother Mammie gave him a stern warning about most people in     the South, and that things were very different there then how they     were in Chicago. Emmett's father past away years before, but he left     behind a gold ring; Mammie gave this ring to Emmett just as he left,     she was worried but thought that he would take care of himself while     in the southern city of Money. After a sixteen hour train ride Emmett     and his cousin arrived in Money.       Wheeler about his trip to Money with Emmett: We went to the South,     near the beginning of cotton-picking time, late August and we picked     cotton for a half a day and we would go swimming, run the snakes out     the river. We had a lot of fun.       Money was a little town ...              ... acquittal, Roy Bryant and J.W. Milam sold their     story of how they kidnapped and killed Emmett Till to "Look" magazine,     and since they were acquitted, they couldn't be tried for the murder     again.       Exactly 100 days after the murder of Emmett Till, Rosa Parks wouldn't     give up her seat, and the Montgomery Bus Boycott began. This murder     has impacted blacks in America greatly and the way that we are treated     by others.       Works Cited       "The Lynching of Emmett Till." nd. Heroism.org. February 4, 2003   <http://       www.heroism.org/class/1950/heros/till.htm>       "The Murder of Emmett Till." nd. PBS. February 4, 2003   <http://www.pbs.org/       wgbh/amex/till/fillmore/index.html>       3, Dylan, Bob. "The Death of Emmett Till." nd. Special Rider Music.     February 4,       2003 <http://www.bobdylan.com/songs/emmetttill.html>                        
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.