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Ghosts of Mississippi

Maryanne Vollers
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Plot Summary

Ghosts of Mississippi

Nonfiction | Book | Adult | Published in 2011

Plot Summary

Ghosts of Mississippi: The Murder of Medgar Evers, the Trials of Byron De La Beckwith, and the Haunting of the New South is Maryanne Vollers’s nonfiction account of a true crime story with far-reaching social, legal, and political ramifications for Mississippi and the country at large. Published in 1995, the book traces the case from its beginnings in 1963 through three long trials and a conclusion over 30 years in the making. Vollers is an author, journalist, and ghostwriter. Ghosts of Mississippi was her first novel.

Vollers opens the book with Beckwith in 1994. He has been convicted for Evers’s murder and is in a jail cell, awaiting his third trial for the crime. The first two trials ended in mistrial, without declaring Beckwith innocent or guilty. Now, Vollers shows him bandying racist jokes and telling stories to friends and family visiting him in jail. He is animated and happy at 73 years old, and he seems confident rather than fearful about the trial ahead.

Then, Vollers goes back in time to long before the crime was committed, when the victim, civil rights leader Medgar Evers, was a young man. She describes his youth in the segregated South. He was raised in a family that prided itself on self-reliance: Evers’s father once said he would sooner kill himself and his family rather than let a single one of them take a handout from a bread line. Later, Evers came to understand the significance of racial equality while fighting in Europe, sowing the seeds for his future as a political activist and advocate for civil rights. Evers married and had a loving family of his own—and then he was murdered, shot in front of his home on June 12, 1963. At the time of his death, he was the Field Secretary for the Mississippi chapter of the NAACP.



Vollers traces Evers’s life alongside Beckwith’s, contrasting the two men’s experiences. Beckwith was born to a dysfunctional couple in California. When he was five years old, his father died of pneumonia, and he spent the rest of his childhood in Mississippi with his mother, until her death of lung cancer when Beckwith was only 12. After that, Beckwith was raised by his uncle. He found a sense of pride serving in the Marine Corps, but after that his life was less stable. He married, divorced, and married again while holding down a series of short-lived jobs.

At the same time, Beckwith became radicalized. After the Supreme Court’s 1954 Brown vs. Board of Education ruling declared segregation unconstitutional, Beckwith was inspired to join the White Citizens Council, a newly-formed Mississippi group intended to resist integration and continue to exclude blacks from positions of power.

Finally, his activities and militant white supremacy escalated to murder. He shot Evers in the back when the civil rights leader arrived home. One hour later, Evers was pronounced dead. Beckwith was tried twice in 1964, but both trials ended in a hung jury. Each time, the jury was all-male and all-white. Mississippi’s long history of disenfranchising black voters meant that black people were not even eligible to serve on juries: citizens were called for duty based on voter rolls. In later years, Beckwith, allowed to go free, openly boasted of Evers’s murder at Klan rallies.



Vollers explores the ramifications of the first two trials and their outcome. Beckwith’s crime had a significant impact on the NAACP, the Ku Klux Klan, and the state of Mississippi itself. She also demonstrates the flaws inherent in the criminal justice system, so dependent on the good faith of prosecutors, judges, and defense attorneys.

The third trial came about due to the efforts of Evers’s widow, Myrlie, to reopen the investigation, and a changing political reality in the state. She fought to persuade authorities to reopen the case after documents released in the 1980s showed evidence that the previous juries had been screened illegally. Finally, after the Jackson Clarion Ledger reported on the previous trials, the state of Mississippi reopened the investigation and allowed a third trial to proceed. Beckwith attempted to have the case dismissed on the grounds of double jeopardy, a violation of due process, and his right to a speedy trial, but the court denied his motion.

The trial presented new evidence and new testimony, including the evidence that Beckwith had bragged of his guilt. The jury, composed of eight black people and four white people, convicted Beckwith at last and sentenced him to life in prison. He was 73 by the time he was finally found guilty for his crime.



Vollers closes with the notion that though the case was resolved, Mississippi’s ghosts remain, describing the state as “a place at war with its own history and destined to repeat its past.”

Ghosts of Mississippi became a finalist for the National Book Award, and a winner of the Robert F. Kennedy Book Award and the Helen Bernstein Award for Excellence in Journalism. In 1996, the feature film Ghosts of Mississippi was released about the case, starring James Woods and directed by Robert Reiner. However, the film did not base its contents on the book, and instead pursued its own retelling of the story.

 
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