The article illustrates the apogee of white supremacy as well as racial discrimination against the blacks in Mississippi between the 1930s and 1950s. The author dwells on the extrajudicial killings of the blacks which were prevalent in the state. The author illustrates the lynching acts against the blacks that took place between the end of the reconstruction period and 1950. According to statistics, Mississippi was the leading southern state in the execution of blacks. Between 1930 and 1950, Mississippi had lynched 539 more African Americans than any other state in the US.
Davis Harris was the first African American that was a victim of extrajudicial killing in the state. Harris was lynched in 1930 by a mob of white supremacists who alleged that he had killed a young man. Holly Hite and Lockett Pig were the second and third victims to be executed by the crowd of the white supremacist in the state. The police officers arrested the two blacks in connection with the robbery. However, the group took them from the law enforcement officers and hung them. Wiley Steve was shot three times by a white woman who argued that the black was trying to assault her. In the same year, a crowd of whites killed Eli Johnson who was accused of assaulting a white woman. In 1934, Isaac was seized from the police officers and killed by a group of whites. Thomas was charged with attacking a white woman. In 1936, Grant was shot and then dragged on a rough road before being disposed along the railroad.
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However, as the blacks began to agitate against racial discrimination, the incidences of lynching reduced. Blacks were allowed to gain citizenship, and even some African Americans in the state were cleared by the government to run for political office. In the 1950s, some interracial groups advocated for change and condemned racial discrimination and the concept of white supremacy.