By Roscoe Barnes III,
Ph.D.
Chairman, Anne Moody History Project
Copyright© 2017
(Updated 6/30/17)
I recently shared this document on a couple of my academic
web pages, including Figshare.com (https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.5165725.v1 )
#AnneMoody
Anne Moody was a civil rights pioneer
and the noted author of
Coming of Age
in Mississippi
Note: In
presenting this timeline, it is important to note that in the telling of her
story, Anne Moody changed the actual names of many people mentioned in the
book. These changes included the names of some of her family members.
#AnneMoody
1940 – Anne
Moody is born as Essie Mae Moody on September 15 to Fred and Elmira “Too
Sweet” Williams Moody near the small town of Centreville, Mississippi, in
Wilkinson County.
1952 – She
is 12 and in the 6th grade when she and her family move into a house
in Ash Quarters near Highway 24 in Centreville. The house is built by her
stepdad, Leroy Jefferson. (In her book, Coming
of Age in Mississippi, her stepdad is called Raymond.)
1953 – She
is 13 when she is baptized in September by Reverend Tyson of Mount Pleasant
church, located off of Highway 24 between Centreville and Woodville. She begins
working for Linda Jean Jenkins.
1954 – She
is 14 and in the 8th grade when she is crowned the homecoming queen
of Willis High School (historically black school) in November. Her name is officially
changed from “Essie Mae Moody” to “Annie Moody” because of an error on her
birth certificate. Her stepdad rents land on the former military camp site,
Camp Van Dorm, where he digs up grenades and bombs while plowing with a mule.
1955 – She
is 14 (soon to be 15) when she learns of the death of Emmett Till, who is
lynched in Mississippi on August 28 at the age of 14. This horrific event
becomes a turning point in her life. She is filled with shock and anger.
1956 – She
is shaken by the murders of the Taplin family. Eight to nine people were reportedly
all burned to death in a house fire on the northwest corner of East Highland
Street and South Gordon Street in Centreville. She is 15 when she goes to Baton
Rouge, La., for the summer, leaving home for the first time, and stays with her
Uncle Ed. She returns to Centreville and becomes a Math tutor for several white
teenagers in the home of Mrs. Burke, the mother of Linda Jean Jenkins. She
stops working for Mrs. Burke and soon starts working for Mrs. Marcia Hunt, one
of the owners of Hunt and Taylor Ladies Shop in Centreville.
1957 – She
goes to New Orleans, La., for the summer and works for a month in a chicken
factory, which she hates. She returns home to Centreville. She is 17 when she
leaves home following a conflict with her stepdad and moves to Woodville,
Miss., to live with her dad and his wife, Emma. She attends Johnson High School
(historically black school) in Woodville.
1959 – She
is awarded a basketball scholarship to attend Natchez Junior College in
Natchez, Miss. She graduates from Johnson High School and returns to New
Orleans for the summer two days later. On August 14, Samuel O’Quinn, a graduate
of Tuskegee Institute, successful businessman and dad of 11, is murdered near
Centreville reportedly because of his interest in the NAACP and civil rights. She
begins freshman year at Natchez Junior College On August 27, the Rev. Harrison
D. Dupree and his family flee their home in Fort Adams (located 19 miles west
of Woodville) to escape being lynched by a white mob.
1960 – She is
attending Natchez Junior College when she experiences her first kiss.
1961 – She
returns to New Orleans after leaving Natchez Junior College. She receives full
scholarship to attend Tougaloo College. She starts attending Tougaloo College
where she decides to become a member of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People
(NAACP). Medgar Evers, NAACP
leader, speaks at the college.
1962 – During
the summer, she meets Joan Trumpauer, a white student at Tougaloo, who is also
secretary for the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC). Anne Moody and a
friend stage a sit-in on a Trailways bus without approval of any organization.
They are threatened and rescued.
1963 – On
May 28, she participates in sit-in at the Woolworth’s lunch counter in Jackson.
Civil rights activist Medgar Evers is assassinated on June 12. On June 13, she
visits Jackson State College to recruit students for the movement and is later
arrested. She attends Evers’ funeral on June 15. She participates in the
historic March on Washington where Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. delivers his
famous “I Have a Dream” speech on August
28.
On September 15 – her 23rd
birthday – she learns of four girls being killed at the 16th Street
Baptist Church, Birmingham, Ala., when the church is bombed. This event becomes
another turning point for Anne that results in her questioning her faith and
the nonviolent movement.
On Friday, November 22,
she is working in a restaurant in New Orleans when she learns of President
Kennedy being shot and killed.
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Author’s Note:
Questions about the Anne
Moody History Project may be directed to Roscoe Barnes III via email at doctorbarnes3@gmail.com or roscoebarnes3@yahoo.com For updates on Anne Moody history and the on-going
work of this community service project, please follow AMHP on Twitter
(@AnneMoodyHP). Ideas and suggestions are also welcomed.
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