NATCHEZ, Miss. -- When I met with Willie Carter in his
barbershop back in January 2024, he surprised me with a piece of important
history. He showed me a barber chair and said, “This is the chair that was
owned by James ‘Big Jack’ Jackson. Yes, this is his chair. I saved it.”
Jackson was the president of the Natchez Deacons for
Defense and Justice, a paramilitary organization that provided armed protection
for civil rights workers and the Black community against the Ku Klux Klan and
other hate groups. The Natchez Deacons are featured in the documentary, “Black
Natchez” (1967).
Carter wants to use the chair in some way to share the history of Jackson and the Deacons. In the meantime, he’s planning to join the Natchez community in commemorating the Deacons with a Mississippi Freedom Trail marker. An unveiling ceremony will be held at 2:30 p.m., Saturday, November 9, at Zion Chapel A.M.E. Church at 228 North Dr. M.L. King Jr. St.
After the ceremony, the unveiling of the marker will occur at 319 North Dr. M.L. King Jr. St., which is the site of the two-story building that was home to Donnan's Barbershop. The barbershop was the meeting place for the Deacons. Carter is the current owner of the historic building which was owned earlier by the late Leon Donnan. In the early 1960s, Carter worked in the building as a shoe-shiner.
In addition to being a meeting place for the Deacons, the
building was the site of the first meeting held by the Council of Federated
Organizations or COFO. The group met in 319C, Carter said.
According to Ser Seshsh Ab Heter-Clifford M. Boxley, an
upstairs room in the building became the office of Judge Willie Scott, “the
first African American judge in modern time.” The second floor also housed a
library for the black community, Boxley said.
The Freedom Trail markers honor the people and places in Mississippi
that played a pivotal role in the American Civil Rights Movement. The markers are
approved by Visit Mississippi and the Mississippi Humanities Council.
For more information on the November 9 unveiling
ceremony, visit this link:
https://roscoereporting.blogspot.com/2024/09/honoring-natchez-deacons-for-defense.html
Carter wants to use the chair in some way to share the history of Jackson and the Deacons. In the meantime, he’s planning to join the Natchez community in commemorating the Deacons with a Mississippi Freedom Trail marker. An unveiling ceremony will be held at 2:30 p.m., Saturday, November 9, at Zion Chapel A.M.E. Church at 228 North Dr. M.L. King Jr. St.
After the ceremony, the unveiling of the marker will occur at 319 North Dr. M.L. King Jr. St., which is the site of the two-story building that was home to Donnan's Barbershop. The barbershop was the meeting place for the Deacons. Carter is the current owner of the historic building which was owned earlier by the late Leon Donnan. In the early 1960s, Carter worked in the building as a shoe-shiner.
https://roscoereporting.blogspot.com/2024/09/honoring-natchez-deacons-for-defense.html
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