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Heading South

I’ll be in Mississippi and environs the week after Memorial Day, with campaign stops in Oxford, Greenwood, Jackson, and New Orleans. I’m also trying to set up an event in Laurel itself, but that’s been tricky. The McGee case, obviously, is still a sore subject there.

Full schedule to follow, but I’ll be starting out in Jackson on Tuesday, June 1st. At noon, I’ll do an event at the Mississippi Department of Archives and History in downtown Jackson. That night, I’ll be at Lemuria Books, a great bookstore on Jackson’s north side. At both places, I’ll be bloviating and presenting a slide show of archival images from the case. At MDAH, I’ll be joined (I hope) by Dr. Luke Lampton, a Mississippi physician who taped interviews with several principals in the McGee case back in the late 1980s, and who was kind enough to share these.

Looking forward to being in Mississippi again!

Art Taylor Blog on McGee

Review and Q & A on Art Taylor’s book blog. Great questions. As you’ll see, we soon get into my thoughts about the weird way this case has been factually mangled over the years. I’ve never seen anything quite like it.

Purple State on Willie McGee

Review of and Q & A about The Eyes of Willie McGee today on Purple State of Mind, a great Web site devoted to finding “common ground” in political and social discussions. Smart questions from Purple State’s John H. Marks. Go here.

The Gaffe and the Fury

As I write about at length in The Eyes of Willie McGee, William Faulkner signed off on a public statement about McGee in 1951, in which he said he thought McGee was innocent of the rape charge leveled against him and should be freed. That caused a few problems—the D.A. in the case, Paul Swartzfager, called the comments “so untrue as to make the blood of any red-blooded American boil”—so Faulkner retreated a bit and said no more.

There were other times when Faulkner opined about race, politics, or current events—and soon wished he hadn’t. The most famous happened in 1956, when he gave an interview to a newsmagazine called The Reporter. Asked about then-current attempts to integrate the University of Alabama, Faulkner said the federal government needed to keep a foot off the pedal on this issue or somebody would wind up getting killed. He wanted integration to happen, but at a slower pace set by the South. Moving too fast would lead to violence, he said, adding, “[I]f it came to fighting I’d fight for Mississippi against the United States, even it meant going into the street and shooting Negroes.” As if that weren’t enough to get the shouting started, he continued like so: “I will go on saying that the Southerners are wrong and that their position is untenable, but if I have to make the same choice that Robert E. Lee made then I’ll make it.”

The uproar over that—which Faulkner tried to dodge by insisting he’d been “grossly misquoted”—drowned out other aspects of this interview that were quite fascinating. Faulkner offered a tart analysis of Mississippi’s education crisis (he said all the schools were lousy), opined that the average black workingman was fundamentally smarter than his white counterpart, said racism was a management-labor tool (designed by upper-class whites to keep lower-class whites panting and huffing about something other than their own economic exploitation), and predicted that white and black would merge into a single mocha-colored race within 300 years.

As for his allegation that he’d been misquoted . . . probably not. The interviewer—a New York-based correspondent for the London Sunday Times named Russell Warren Howe—responded in print and sounded convincing. “All the statements attributed to Mr. Faulkner were transcribed by me from verbatim shorthand notes of the interview,” he wrote in The Reporter. “If the more Dixiecratic remarks misconstrue his thoughts, I, as an admirer or Mr. Faulkner’s, am glad to know it. But what I set down is what he said.”

For more on this turbulent period in the life of Mr. Bill, check out this excellent paper by Louis Daniel Brodsky, which makes use of 43 unpublished letters addressed to Faulkner during these months, some of them touching on the Howe interview. Not shockingly, Brodsky believes that the root cause of Faulkner’s foot-in-mouth problem with Howe was simple: He was drunk.

Harrying Harry

Like any president, Harry Truman took a few licks from voters during his years in office, often on the subject of civil rights, where he caught it from every direction. Many white southerners hated him because—as I explore in-depth in my account of the Willie McGee story—he actually did something about the fundamental rights due to African-Americans, getting behind a push for legislation on then-controversial measures such as a federal anti-lynching law and abolition of the poll tax. (These failed, but he tried, and of course he did successfully desegregate the armed forces.) Communists weren’t especially thrilled with him, either, arguing that the federal government singled them out for abuse during the early years of the Cold War.

One of my most pleasant days of research while working on The Eyes of Willie McGee took place at the Truman Library in Independence, Missouri, where they make it very easy to find what you’re looking for in the vast record related to Truman’s presidency. Among the artifacts I came across was a letter sent by an African-American woman from Kansas City on April 13, 1945, the day after FDR’s death put Truman in the Oval Office. Written by Mrs. Lora J. Haynes and addressed to FDR aid Stephen Early, it was basically a demand for intervention, because Haynes was convinced Truman was a hopeless racist.

“I am so hurt, I can hardly set hear a rite,” she said, “but I am speaking for 13 million negros . . . The thing I am riteing you for, is will you try to make clear to Mr. Truman what the negroes want and that is first class citizen ship. We know Mr. Roosevelt would have give us that.” As Haynes went on to indicate, she put more hope in FDR’s former Vice President, Henry Wallace, who would run against Truman from the left in the historic election of 1948. That same year, he faced a revolt on the right (from the Dixiecrats) and a formidable Republican opponent in Thomas Dewey. It’s a miracle he won.

When the McGee case reached its climax in the the early months of 1951, Truman heard a lot about it, from people all over the U.S. and the world who demanded that he step in and pardon McGee. He had no intention of doing so—the support McGee got from the Communist Party was, by itself, enough to make that a certainty. In this letter, he gets scorched by woman in Richmond, California, who had supported him in 1948.

Truman Letter

More on Richard Barrett

This just in: murder suspect claims he didn’t know about Barrett’s racist views.

The tawdriest of the theories about the murder of white supremacist Richard Barrett is trending upward this morning. Details here.

Couple of early reviews …

. . . in Mother Jones (see Blurbs & Reviews page for a PDF) and on a blogger site called Booklust.

These both happen to be favorable, but I promise to keep you similarly informed when I get drop-kicked. No false URLs or whining. Note to other book bloggers: If you don’t have the book, and you’re interested, let me know.

This Aggression Will Not Stand

Kitty Kelley, author of Oprah, has been playing hardball with Katharine Carr Esters, Oprah Winfrey’s second cousin and, as it happens, a person I interviewed and admired while researching The Eyes of Willie McGee. See what I have to say about it at The Daily Beast.

Mail Call!

Today, fresh off the presses and through the miracle of Fed Ex, I’m getting the first hardcover copy of my book, the culmination of several years of late nights and weekends, difficult reporting, and stressful work. I have only one thing I want to say about it: Weeeeee. Though I already know what the book looks like and what it says, it’s still exciting, like Christmas and a birthday rolled into the same 24 hours.

Traditionally, this is the part where I lie and pretend I was a voracious reader as a kid, and that the tactile sensations of the printed word are woven tightly into my being. (“What can it be, grandfather?” I said, eagerly removing string and brown paper from this newest of treasures. “It it called Little Men, lad, and I trust you will cherish it as much as I.”) But the truth is, I wasn’t like that at all. From grades 1 through 7, I didn’t read much of anything unless I was forced to, not counting Mad, Superman, and the epic novels starring boy scientist Danny Dunn. (Which still hold up, despite what this guy says.) I slowly came around to reading and writing, but it wasn’t by virtue of a self-determined work ethic or a throbbing mind, that’s for sure.

As for this book … Like anybody who’s tried to do something that was probably out of his league, I owe more than I can repay to friends, family, and teachers who encouraged me in a thousand different ways. I’ll be thinking of them today.

Thanks for stopping by

I just launched this blog, so there may be a few nails and splinters still, which I’ll work out as I go. Mostly, it’s devoted to my new book, The Eyes of Willie McGee, which will be published by HarperCollins on May 11th. But you’ll also notice a tab devoted to the Freedom of Information Act. I’m hoping this will become a discussion area for people who—for whatever reason—would like to learn more about using the federal act (and its many state-level counterparts) but find themselves bewildered as they try to figure it out.

That was my predicament when I started working on this book a few years ago, and I was fortunate to get help from many generous people. I’m no expert, but I’ve learned a few things, and I’m hoping the site attracts enough newcomers and experienced FOIA hands to start a useful forum.

Also, please note the site’s various tabs, where you can look at pictures associated with the case (and with my reporting on it), hear the radio broadcast that went out the night McGee was executed in Laurel, Mississippi, and find details about easy ways to contact me directly. I’ve been working on this project for a long time. Now I’m looking forward to talking about it with others.

Sincerely,

ALEX HEARD

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