Down In Mississippi
The shooting of protester James Meredith 38 years ago, searingly documented by a rookie photographer, galvanized the civil rights movement
- By Carolyn Kleiner Butler
- Smithsonian magazine, February 2005, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
Meredith would graduate from Columbia law school, run (unsuccessfully) for Congress in New York and Mississippi, and work as a stockbroker, professor and writer. Then, in the late 1980s, the former civil rights icon shocked many admirers when he joined the staff of the ultraconservative North Carolina senator Jesse Helms and endorsed former Ku Klux Klan leader David Duke's campaign to become governor of Louisiana. Meredith, still fiery at 71, defends those choices, saying he was "monitoring the enemy." Married with five children and five grandchildren, Meredith lives in Jackson and still occasionally addresses groups on civil rights issues.
"He helped make significant strides in the overall struggle for civil and human rights, and none of that is diminished by what happened later," says Horace Huntley, director of the Oral History Project at the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute, in Alabama. "Those accomplishments are etched in stone."
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Comments (2)
I was eleven years old and witnessed Martin Ling, Stokley Kwame Toure Cleveland Sellers and others were been pushed of the pavement.
Posted by Ernest ,Andrew/A Withers Photo & Gallery on January 30,2012 | 10:43 AM
a photographer once took a photo of me in Jackson Square doing a portrait sitting on my spare tire. Oct '78 I believe. It was picked up bu the AP or UPI and appeared in newspapers all over America. Someone once told me the photographer was the same one that took the picture of James Meridith. Is there a place I can see more of his work?
Posted by Daniel Rueffert on September 22,2008 | 07:28 PM