By Roscoe Barnes III, PhD
Chairman, Anne Moody History Project
Copyright (c) 2019
#AnneMoody
#ComingOfAgeinMississippi
Arthur Leon Walker (1944 -- 2004) |
Arthur Leon Walker, who was known simply as Leon, was the boy who witnessed the shooting of Emma in Anne Moody's Coming of Age in Mississippi. He also grew up to become a hard-working man who cared deeply about his family, according to his daughter, Karena McClain.
McClain, a licensed practical nurse in southwest Mississippi, spoke recently about the memories of her father.
Leon was born in 1944 in Woodville, Miss. He died of a heart attack on Moody’s birthday – September 15, 2004.
McClain said her father was born Arthur Leon Walker, and at some point, he changed his last name to Davis, the name that appears on his death certificate.
McClain said she grew up as a Davis. She remembers her father telling her and his other seven children about his name being mentioned in Moody’s book.
“That’s how I learned about the book,” McClain said. “He had
the book and he would show it to us. He would say he was in the book. He
specifically told us where he was mentioned and where Wilbert, the husband of Emma’s
sister, was trying to get inside the house. As Emma and her sister tried to hold the door shut from the inside, Wilbert shot through the door from the outside. He ended up shooting Emma’s toe off.”
In Chapter 17 of her book, Moody writes about Leon in the aftermath of the shooting:
“I walked up on Janie’s porch as
if I was treading on an earthquake. The door hanging on its bottom hinge made
the house look like it was collapsing and I got the feeling I was collapsing
with it. Inside the kitchen, all five of Janie’s children stood with their eyes
fixed on the pool of coagulating blood. I had never seen so much blood before;
I noticed fragments of flesh and shattered bone mixed with it. Leon, the oldest
boy, was crying. The younger ones appeared to be in a trance, “Let’s put them
to bed, Leon,” I said. After I helped him do that, we cleaned up the blood
together.
“Her whole foot, Essie Mae – her
whole foot is gone, shot to pieces,” Leon said, still crying.
Moody and Leon stayed up through the night drinking black
coffee and trying to make sense of everything. She left the house around 7 a.m.
the next day.
At seven that morning, I left
Leon sitting before a cup of black coffee. I still remember his trembling hands
as he motioned to thank me, his red swollen eyes, the tight lines across his
forehead, and his nervously shaking feet. He looked like an old worried man
with a twelve-year-old frame.
Karena McClain, L.P.N. Daughter of Leon in 'Coming of Age in Mississippi' |
As a child in the 1980s, McClain actually saw Emma’s foot. Emma was her great-aunt, she said, adding she was the sister of her dad’s mother. Although Emma had recovered from the shooting, she still seemed to carry some anger about it.
“She took her shoe off, and as she did, she said, ‘That
son of a bitch shot my toe off,’” McClain recalled. “She always looked at her foot. The gunshot
appeared to have damaged her heel too.”
Wilbert, the shooter, was Leon’s step-dad, according to
McClain. His full name was Wilbert Mealey Sr. He died, she said, in November 2004 and is buried in Cedar Rest Cemetery in Woodville.
McClain said Leon should be remembered as a provider for
his family. “That’s one of his main strengths,” she said, adding he also liked to
play sports. He loved softball and he was a “great basketball player” at
Wilkinson County High School, she said. “People said that had he graduated high
school, he could have gotten a scholarship and gone on to the NBA. He was that
good.”
McClain’s father worked for many years a saw operator in
the saw mills. As for her own career, he always wanted her to become a nurse.
“I want you to go to school and be a nurse,” he used to
say. But McClain initially wanted to be a police officer or state trooper.
However, things changed one day when she was at Emma’s house. It was when the
home health nurse came to see her. “That’s when I knew what I wanted to do,”
McClain said. “I had a passion to help people who can’t help themselves.”
When Leon became ill, she became his nurse. “I helped
him with his finances and cooked meals for him,” she said. “He was a big eater.”
On Sept. 15, 2015, McClain wrote about her father in a Facebook post:
“As I was sitting at the computer at work this morning, I
saw the date and said to myself… Sept. 15th that’s the day my daddy passed
away. Then I looked at the time 5:21 a.m. I said and it was around this time I
got the call. R.I.P. Daddy … We love you!!!! #MyDaddy #MyTwinLilLeon #TheReasonIamOneToughCookie
Arthur Leon Walker |
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about Anne Moody?
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For more information:
See the Anne Moody page here. Questions about the Anne Moody History Project may be directed to Roscoe Barnes III, Ph.D. 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, simply follow this blog or follow AMHP on Twitter (@AnneMoodyHP). #ComingOfAgeinMississippi
See the Anne Moody page here. Questions about the Anne Moody History Project may be directed to Roscoe Barnes III, Ph.D. 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, simply follow this blog or follow AMHP on Twitter (@AnneMoodyHP). #ComingOfAgeinMississippi