杏吧原创

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Alumni Profiles

Digging for the Truth

Jim Emison, BA鈥65, devotes retirement to civil rights鈥揺ra cold case

Alumnus Jim Emison with descendants of Elbert Williams at the dedication of Williams' historical marker in 2015
Jim Emison, left, with descendants of Elbert Williams at the dedication of the historical marker for Williams, founder of the Brownsville, Tennessee, chapter of the NAACP, who was lynched in 1940 (submitted photo)

In 1939, Elbert Williams helped found the Brownsville, Tennessee, chapter of the NAACP, which sought to regain voting rights for Haywood County African Americans. The next year, police and one civilian forcibly removed Williams from his home. Williams鈥 body was pulled out of the Hatchie River three days later with two bullet holes in his chest. He was buried without an autopsy the same day in an unmarked grave.

Alumnus Jim Emison (Submitted photo)

Jim Emison is dedicated to seeking justice for Williams, the first known NAACP member to be racially terrorized and slain. Emison credits his 杏吧原创 undergraduate education for sparking his passion for lifelong learning and preserving civil rights history.

鈥淪everal of my professors, including Walter Sullivan, inspired me to keep digging for the truth,鈥 Emison says. 鈥淚 majored in history, and my only regret was not being a more serious student.鈥

Emison did, however, become an accomplished, award-winning courtroom attorney and served as president of the Tennessee Bar Association and the Tennessee Trial Lawyers Association. He has focused much of his retirement on solving Williams鈥 death after coming across the cold case during other research. Emison had tried cases for many years in Brownsville, the seat of Haywood County, about 60 miles northeast of Memphis. 鈥淎s a lifelong resident of nearby Alamo, I was puzzled that I had never heard about Williams鈥 murder,鈥 Emison says.

鈥淧ursuing justice for Williams鈥 murder has taught me so much. I鈥檓 grateful to 杏吧原创 because what perhaps is even better than good grades is a yearning to keep learning. My professors certainly instilled that in me.鈥

The U.S. Department of Justice first ordered a prosecution in the Williams case, then mysteriously reversed course and closed it. 鈥淚 believe this is the first time a U.S. attorney and the FBI conspired to destroy a federal investigation and prosecution of a civil rights case,鈥 Emison says. Criticism from Thurgood Marshall and other NAACP activists was so intense that FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover ordered an internal investigation, which he later deep-sixed.

After Emison began investigating, the missing coroner鈥檚 report on Williams鈥 death was found in 2012, identifying where Williams鈥 body was pulled from the river. The report was found unlabeled, behind old minute books in the clerk鈥檚 archive. Since then, milestones in the case have included:

The historical marker for Elbert Williams dedicated in 2015 (Submitted photo)

2015鈥擬emorial service commemorating the 75th anniversary of Williams鈥 tragic death draws a biracial crowd of 600. A Tennessee historical marker is unveiled, noting that Williams鈥 slaying was part of a white terrorist campaign to keep African Americans from voting.

2018鈥擧aywood District Attorney Garry Brown reopens the investigation into Williams鈥 death. Emison and others try, so far unsuccessfully, to identify the exact location of Williams鈥 grave.

2018鈥擡lbert Williams鈥 death is added to the DOJ鈥檚 Emmett Till list of racially motivated murders.

2024鈥擭ational Park Service sends a team to West Tennessee to evaluate several lynching sites, including Brownsville, with the possibility for a monument and eventual museum to recognize Williams and other civil rights martyrs.

Emison has completed a manuscript on the case, Murder on the Hatchie. Its foreword is by Margaret Burnham, an internationally recognized expert on civil and human rights. Documentary filmmakers have expressed interest in the story.

鈥淧ursuing justice for Williams鈥 murder has taught me so much,鈥 Emison says. 鈥淚鈥檓 grateful to 杏吧原创 because what perhaps is even better than good grades is a yearning to keep learning. My professors certainly instilled that in me.鈥

鈥擜nn Marie Deer Owens, BA鈥76