Fearing the Worst
A church is bombed. A daughter is missing. A rediscovered photograph recalls one of the most heart-wrenching episodes of the civil rights era.
- By Diane McWhorter
- Smithsonian magazine, May 2006, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
This photograph was not published until last February, nearly 43 years after it was taken. Alex Cohn, a journalism student interning at the News, found the image among thousands of negatives stashed in the paper’s photography equipment room. Some had been put in envelopes labeled “Keep: Do not Sell”—a measure to keep out of national circulation material that might stoke Birmingham’s reputation as the Johannesburg of America.
Juanita Jones, now 75, said that seeing the photograph four decades after the fact made “the anger boil up in me again, that anyone could be that evil and that lowdown.” Her daughter, Lynn (the 10-year-old girl with her back to the camera), was supposed to have gone to Sunday school that day with her inseparable cousin Denise. “No, ma’am, I don’t remember all that stuff,” she told me from her home in Southern California. “I tried to block it out.”
Maxine McNair, 77, has two grown daughters, both born after Denise died. Of the church bombers, she says, “I don’t hate them. I feel sorry for them.” Her husband, Chris McNair, the owner of a photography studio, became the city’s first black representative in the state legislature and was a longtime Jefferson County commissioner. Until he retired from politics in 2001, he avoided public discussion of Denise “because people would say—and did say—I was using it to advance my own cause.” As this issue of Smithsonian went to press, McNair, 80, was facing trial on charges that he accepted bribes from a sewer contractor while in office.
His lawyer, Doug Jones, is the former U.S. attorney who won convictions in 2001 and 2002 against the last two surviving Klansmen who bombed the Sixteenth Street Baptist Church. A third man, Robert Chambliss, had been convicted in 1977, and he died in prison in 1985. Last October, the city finally commemorated the four Sixteenth Street dead with plaques in City Hall. Denise’s childhood friend Condoleezza Rice presided over the unveiling.
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Comments (3)
I went to the Art Center School in LA and was friends with fellow student, Vernon Merritt III, who I thought was one of the gentlest people I'd met there. He was a sweetheart, and as a photography student at Art Center, struggled a bit with doing life drawing....we used to talk a lot. I am so proud to have
These young people will live forever in history.
This story is related to a website which has a story about President Obama putting a painting done in 1961 by Norman Rockwell up in the White House...
http://www.alternet.org/newsandviews/article/655852/sign_america_has_moved_too_far_to_the_right%3A_norman_rockwell_is_considered_a_%22radical%22/#paragraph3
Posted by Judith Wood on August 25,2011 | 05:09 PM
Why do I not see the photo though? My heart breaks as I remember it. My two youngest adopted children are African American, in High School now, and looking at the Civil Rights Movement - the bombiing in particular interest to my daughter. They were her and she is them - and she will overcome and travel onward for them. They are Not forgotten.
Posted by Diane Page on October 6,2008 | 02:46 PM
that is so sad i cnt believe that bomber would do dat 2 denise mcnair ,carol roberson, chynthia wesley,and addie mae collins let them rest in peace[RIP]
Posted by on July 20,2008 | 07:59 PM