Wharlest jackson death teen
Case Histories | Cold Case Justice Initiative
- Wharlest Jackson (December 7, – February 27, ) was an American civil rights activist who was murdered by a car bomb, with evidence of involvement by a white supremacy organization; it has been an unsolved murder since the s.
Wharlest Jackson Murder (FBI Sidebar) - WAFB Channel 9
- Newly declassified FBI documents detailing the investigation into the Feb. 18, , race-related murder of Wharlest Jackson in Natchez, Mississippi, reveal that Raleigh J. (Red) Glover, leader.
The legacy of racist killings through the story of Wharlest ...
- At approximately p.m., on February 27, , Wharlest Jackson’s pick-up truck exploded as he was driving it home from Armstrong Tire & Rubber Company where he worked in Natchez, Mississippi.
Murder of Wharlest Jackson - Wikipedia
American Reckoning | FRONTLINE - PBS
CIVIL RIGHTS DIVISION Notice to Close File Wharlest Jackson ...
Feb. 27, 1967: NAACP Treasurer Wharlest Jackson Murdered in ...
| The type of explosive material was never identified. | |
| The fact that a number of men knew violence was planned against Jackson seems to point to a conspiracy... | |
| Findings. |
A 1967 Murder and a ‘Reckoning’ with the Truth - Transcript
An Unsolved Civil Rights Era Murder and an ‘American Reckoning’
- NATCHEZ -- When the sounds of an explosion reached the Natchez, Miss., home of Wharlest and Exerlena Jackson, an 11-year-old boy tore out the back door, grabbed his bicycle and peddled the 150.
Murder of Wharlest Jackson
Wharlest Jackson (December 7, 1929 – February 27, 1967) was an American civil rights activist who was murdered by a car bomb, with evidence of involvement by a white supremacy organization; it has been an unsolved murder since the 1960s. Jackson served as treasurer of the Natchez, Mississippi branch of the NAACP (National Association for the Advancement of Colored People) until his assassination by a car bomb, which was placed on the frame of his truck under the driver-side seat.[1] The bomb exploded at approximate 8 p.m. on February 27, 1967. The explosion occurred when he switched on his turn signal on his way home.[2] The explosion caused serious damage to Wharlest's lower torso and he died at the scene. The scene of his death was six blocks away from the site where he was employed,[1] at Armstrong Rubber and Tire Company.
The culprit was never found, and while the FBI suspected the involvement of the Silver Dollar G