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  Evers-Williams, Myrlie
CANDIDATE DETAILS
AffiliationDemocratic  
 
NameMyrlie Evers-Williams
Address
, California , United States
EmailNone
WebsiteNone
Born March 17, 1933 (91 years)
Contributoreddy 9_99
Last ModifedJuan Croniqueur
Dec 18, 2023 06:24pm
Tags Black - NAACP -
InfoMyrlie Beasley was born March 17, 1933, in Vicksburg, Mississippi. In 1950, she enrolled at Alcorn A&M College, where she met Medgar Evers, an upperclassman and Army veteran. She left school before earning her degree, and they married on Christmas Eve, 1951.

After Medgar was named the Mississippi state field secretary for the NAACP in 1954, Myrlie became his secretary and together they worked to organize voter registration drives and civil rights demonstrations. As prominent civil rights leaders in Mississippi, the Everses became high-profile targets for pro-segregationist violence and terrorism. In 1962, their home in Jackson was firebombed in reaction to Medgar’s organized boycott of downtown Jackson’s white merchants.

The violence reached its worst point the following year, when Medgar was gunned down by a sniper in front of his home. On the evening of June 11, 1963, President John F. Kennedy in a televised speech had pleaded for racial harmony and had announced his plan to submit new civil rights legislation to Congress, a plan which infuriated many segregationists. At about 12:30 a.m. on June 12, Medgar had just pulled into the driveway after a long day of work, when a shot from a 30.06 military rifle hit him in the back.

The rifle was recovered about 150 feet from the scene of the shooting, and on its scope were found the fingerprints of its owner, Byron De La Beckwith, a 42-year-old fertilizer salesman and an outspoken opponent of integration. Though he publicly denied any involvement with the shooting, he made it clear that he was glad it had happened.

He was indicted for the murder, but in two separate trials, the all-white juries deadlocked and he was set free. Mrs. Evers and her three children moved to Claremont, California, where she enrolled at Pomona College and began working toward her bachelor’s degree in sociology. In 1967, she co-wrote a book about her husband, For Us, the Living, with William Peters, and she continued to make numerous personal appearances on behalf of the NAACP.

In 1968, she earned her degree from Pomona College, and in 1975 she married Walter Williams. In 1988, she was the first black woman to be named to the five-member Board of Public Works by Los Angeles mayor Tom Bradley, where she helped oversee a budget of nearly $1 billion.

She also kept up pressure to retry the case of her first husband’s assassin, and in the early 1990s, she convinced prosecutors in Mississippi to reopen the case. Aiding the prosecution were new witnesses willing to testify against Beckwith and Myrlie’s own copy of the original trial transcript, since the official one supposedly on record had been removed some time earlier by the Mississippi Sovereignty Commission, a secret organization that from 1956 to 1973 had been charged with maintaining the racial status quo. On February 4, 1994, Beckwith was found guilty by a jury consisting of eight African Americans and four whites. The 73-year-old man was sentenced to life in prison, where he died in 2001.

In 1995, the same year her second husband died of prostate cancer, Myrlie Evers-Williams became the first woman to chair the NAACP, a position she held until 1998. In 1999, she published her memoirs, Watch Me Fly: What I Learned on the Way to Becoming the Woman I Was Meant to Be, which charts her journey from being the wife of an activist to becoming a community leader in her own right.


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DISCUSSION
Importance? 6.00000 Average

FAMILY
Husband Medgar Evers Dec 24, 1951-Jun 12, 1963
Father In-Law James Evers 1882-1954

INFORMATION LINKS
RACES
  11/03/1970 CA District 24 Lost 32.39% (-32.66%)
  06/30/1970 CA District 24 - Special Runoff Lost 31.79% (-36.42%)
  06/02/1970 CA District 24 - Special Election Won 18.85% (-8.29%)
ENDORSEMENTS