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Sons of Mississippi: A Story of Race and Its Legacy
 
 
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Sons of Mississippi: A Story of Race and Its Legacy [Hardcover]

Paul Hendrickson (Author)
3.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (23 customer reviews)


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Book Description

March 18, 2003
Sons of Mississippi recounts the story of seven white Mississippi lawmen depicted in a horrifically telling 1962 Life magazine photograph—and of the racial intolerance that is their legacy.

In that photograph, which appears on the front of this jacket, the lawmen (six sheriffs and a deputy sheriff) admire a billy club with obvious pleasure, preparing for the unrest they anticipate—and to which they clearly intend to contribute—in the wake of James Meredith’s planned attempt to integrate the University of Mississippi. In finding the stories of these men, Paul Hendrickson gives us an extraordinarily revealing picture of racism in America at that moment. But his ultimate focus is on the part this legacy has played in the lives of their children and grandchildren.

One of them is a grandson—a high school dropout and many times married—who achieves an elegant poignancy in his struggle against the racism to which he sometimes succumbs. One son is a sheriff, as his father was—and in the same town. Another grandson patrols the U.S. border with Mexico—a law enforcement officer like the two generations before him—driven by the beliefs and deeds of his forebears. In all the portraits, we see how the prejudice bequeathed by the fathers has been transformed, or remained untouched, in the sons.

For its sense of fragile hope, Sons of Mississippi is a profoundly important, revelatory work of still-evolving history. A stunning book by a masterful writer.



Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

"Nothing is ever escaped," is the woeful reminder Hendrickson imparts in this magisterial group biography-cum-social history, a powerful, unsettling, and beautifully told account of Mississippi's still painful past. Hendrickson, author of the searching Robert McNamara chronicle The Living and the Dead (an NBA finalist), sets out to profile seven Mississippi sheriffs photographed while one of their number postures with a billy club just before the 1962 riots against the integration of the University of Mississippi at Oxford ("Ole Miss"). The picture, shot by freelance photographer Charlie Moore, was published in Life magazine soon after, and it captured Hendrickson's imagination when he came upon it decades later. Chapter by chapter, Hendrickson reconstructs the everyday existences of the seven sheriffs, concentrating on the time of the photo, but taking his subjects through to their deaths. None are now living, but Hendrickson interviewed former Natchez sheriff John Ed Cothram in the early '90s, and the Cothram chapters comprise a paradigmatically subtle and eerie portrait of the intelligence and banality of evil, and how it destroys individuals. The number of telling quotes, interviews with friends and family, primary and secondary sources, allusions to art and history, and gut reactions Hendrickson offers are what really make the book. He begins with a wrenching retelling of the Emmett Till lynching-seven years before James Meredith fought for and finally won admission to Ole Miss, a bloody story Hendrickson also recounts (in addition to a fascinating recent interview with Meredith himself). The book's final third tries to get at the legacy of Mississippi's particular brand of segregation-the whites and blacks Hendrickson interviews throughout articulate it masterfully-by profiling the children of the men in the photo and of Meredith, with sad and inconclusive results. While Hendrickson can be intrusive in telling readers how to interpret his subjects, he repeatedly comes up with electric interview material, and deftly places these men within the defining events of their times, when "a 100-year-old way of life was cracking beneath them."
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal

To help us understand racism in America, former Washington Post journalist Hendrickson tells the story of the seven white Mississippi sheriffs shown admiring a billy club in a famed 1962 photograph.
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 368 pages
  • Publisher: Knopf; 1 edition (March 18, 2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0375404619
  • ISBN-13: 978-0375404610
  • Product Dimensions: 9.4 x 6.3 x 1.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.6 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (23 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #489,728 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

23 Reviews
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 (12)
4 star:
 (3)
3 star:
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Average Customer Review
3.9 out of 5 stars (23 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A journey into the past and the present, April 29, 2003
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Sons of Mississippi: A Story of Race and Its Legacy (Hardcover)
The genesis of Sons of Mississippi is a photograph taken in 1962 on the campus of Ole Miss. A group of sheriffs gathered below a tree. They came to stop the registration of James Meredith, the first black student at the university. The sheriff in the middle of the photograph is swinging a bat. The others are standing in support. One sheriff on the left side of the photo is smiling in glee. He looks like the archetype redneck.

Hendricks seeks out the men in the photos and their descendants in order to find out "what has come down" from what that photograph represents. What is the legacy of race in Mississippi and for these men and their families? Is their any redemption, any guilt, or are has nothing changed?

Only two men in the photograph were still alive for Hendrickson to talk with, and despite hours of interviews they didn't say much about the big questions. No sign of regret. Too, polite he doesn't ask these men if they are still the people in the photograph - or their children for that matter. We are told that they weren't in the Klan. But then maybe they were.

The truth is that the men in the photograph probably never wrestled with these questions - or the past - like Hendrickson does - and takes his readers do on the trip that he takes them. Most people are content to live the lives that they want to lead and if that means seeing other people suffer they learn to accept and live with that. That's just the way it is. When Hendrickson goes to the store that Emmit Till was murdered at he bumps into a man who says "the past is the pay and why stir it up and get folks thinking about things that can't be undone?"

That is the attitude that most white southerners have about the history of race relations. In the town that I live in there were Civil Rights demonstrations and marches that were akin to what happened in Birmingham. There was a day called "bloody Sunday" and Martin Luther King came to town. He left in defeat so the story isn't told in most narrative histories of the Civil Rights movement. We are approaching the 40th anniversary of that summer. There is no marker to the marches or the beatings. In a poll our newspaper did last week they asked what should the city do for the 40th anniversary of the local civil rights demonstrations. 63% of the respondents said nothing.

Hendrickon's book shows how in many ways attitudes have not changed since then. The times have changed. But the deep South isn't much different than anywhere else. There is always something somewhere that people find that they need to look away from. But by looking you learn something about the human condition. Suffering builds perseverance, perseverance character, and character hope. One person in the book makes the comment that the racists of Mississippi hated as a way to focus on something other than their own suffering. That meant turning away from their own humanity and becoming depraved. That is why this is a book worth reading.

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12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Past and the Present in One Book, May 30, 2003
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Sons of Mississippi: A Story of Race and Its Legacy (Hardcover)
Author Paul Hendrickson has written a very well researched book on racism in Mississippi while concentrating on seven Mississippi sheriffs photographed on the campus of the University of Mississippi during the fall of 1962 when James Meredith was to be enrolled at the University. The author spends Part One of the book painting very unflattering portraits of the bigoted men in the picture. Part Two emphasizes the past and present life of James Meredith who appears to be somewhat difficult to understand. As one of Meredith's sons says in Part Three, "My father has an overwhelming need to be famous and so will do whatever he thinks will provide that and get him attention--Jesse Helms, David Duke, you name it, even if it's only for a day...I'll call it his eccentric philosophy. This is my theory. He does these things--almost as a kind of offensive strike to throw you off...For instance, supporting David Duke. Why in hell would you even support a racist like David Duke if you're James Meredith? Well, maybe he knows he's going to get all these articles and letters about that, condemning him. And that somehow gives him the energy to do what he wants to do next."
In addition to speaking to Meredith's children in Part Three, the author also visits two of the sheriffs in the picture that were alive at the time (one died shortly after) in addition to some of their children and grandchildren. A number of these offspring are working in law enforcement or in other jobs in which they must relate with fellow workers who are African Americans.
The book is slightly more than 300 pages long. Part Three may have told me a little more than I cared to know about the lives of the descendants of the bigoted sheriffs pictured on the cover of the book. I guess we can say these men were a product of their time, and their descendants have become more enlightened through the passage of time. Bigotry is a learned behavior and through the passage of the generations progress can continue to be made.
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Not often someone absolutely nails the south, October 3, 2005
I am a fifth generation Mississippian, still residing in Mississippi. My grandfather was a klansman. I remember as a little boy sneaking into his study to read with fascination his books on holocaust denial, books linking Meredith et al. to Marxist subsersive groups, books decrying the destruction of Anglo-Saxon society by the mud peoples and the Jews. I was the first generation of my family to be educated in a public school, and the striking contrast between the familiarity I had with Americans of African origin and the images portrayed in these books touched me to the core. Unfortunately, in Mississippi, one does not gain this familiarity without reaching out. Mississippi is two distinct societies living side-by-side, in constant contact with each other, but seldom interacting socially, and never mixing.

This book strikes right into the heart of Mississippi, a land only one generation removed from the epic civil rights battles of the 1960's, a land of people who can tell you where their grandfathers were in 1860 but are quick to forget what their fathers were doing in 1960.

One chapter ends with two truths coalesced into one sentence, both of which may seem trite to someone who has never come to understand Mississippi:

"In Mississippi, nothing ever changes, and everything always changes, and sometimes it seems God put Mississippi on earth purely for our moral and confounding contemplation."

I don't consider this book a tale of Mississippi, I consider it a piece of Mississippi, and I consider the author a Mississippian. The book is a must-have for students of the struggle for civil rights, fans of Mississippi history, or people who love a riveting story artfully laid out in lyric prose.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
In his retirement, which wasn't kingly but pretty sweet, Billy Ferrell loved sitting on the dock of his lake house, watching Taco, his Labrador-blue heeler mix, splash around for bream and shad and the occasional white perch. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
head lawman, chief criminal deputy, gin fan, circuit clerk
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Ole Miss, James Meredith, Billy Ferrell, Adams County, Big Smitty, Santa Teresa, Port Gibson, John Ed Cothran, New Mexico, New Orleans, Ross Barnett, Sovereignty Commission, Leflore County, University of Mississippi, Claiborne County, Jackson County, Tommy Ferrell, New York, Emmett Till, Gulf Coast, James Ira Grimsley, John Henry, Air Force, Calhoun County, Mac Cotton
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