By natchezdemocrat.com
#CivilRights
NATCHEZ — In the 1960s, a
crucial time for civil rights, the two-story wood-frame building at 319 North
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. St. became a key meeting place for the Deacons for
Defense and Justice in Natchez, according to local historians.
It is the site where the
Deacons worked with President James “Big Jack” Jackson, a barber in Donnan’s
Barber Shop housed on the first floor, Ser Seshsh Ab Heter-Clifford M. Boxley,
said in a recent interview.
Boxley described the
building as a command post — “the hotbed workplace” of Jackson, the founder of
the Natchez Deacons and “an observation point” for keeping an eye on the Ku
Klux Klan.
“The building played a
pivotal role where militants gathered to talk and plan actions in the Natchez
civil rights movement and observe the KKK located in a store directly across
the street,” he said.
The building is one of
several sites being reviewed by the Natchez Civil Rights Site Committee as a
possible location for a Mississippi Freedom Trail marker. The other sites
include the Dr. John Bowman Banks Museum and Adams County Courthouse.
Boxley, a recognized
authority on African American history, said the building holds an important
place in the civil rights movement. It was through the fearless commitment of
the Deacons, he said, that African Americans found courage and a practical way
to survive and succeed in the struggle.
The late Jessie B.
Bernard-Williams, then-secretary to Charles Evers of the Mississippi State
NAACP, reportedly told him that “we felt safe with the Deacons protecting us in
the streets.”
The Deacons for Defense was an armed group of African Americans who provided protection for civil rights workers. The organization was first organized in 1964 in Jonesboro, La., in response to the terror and violent acts of the Ku Klux Klans against civil rights activists. The Deacons, many of whom were actual deacons in the church, carried firearms for the protection of the activists, as well as for themselves.
According to Jeremy Houston, local historian, the Deacons in Natchez were believed to be bolder and more radical than those in other places. The men were eager and always ready to take action, he said.
An upstairs room became the office of Judge Willie Scott, “the first African American judge in modern time,” said Boxley. The second floor also housed a library for the black community.
Bobby Dennis, executive director for the Natchez Museum of African American History and Culture, described Carter’s building as a safe haven for people who needed protection, especially those who faced threats by white supremacists.
Carter said the site needs to be recognized, whether by Freedom Trail marker or other type of historical designation.
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