There is a deep brooding in Arkansas The rape trials that sustained Jim Crow, and the people who fought it, from Thurgood Marshall to Maya Angelou

Scott W. Stern, 1993-

Book - 2025

"A study of sexual assault trials in the Jim Crow South, detailing the racial and economic inequities of rape law and the resistance of ordinary women. In the early years of the twentieth century, Mississippi County, Arkansas, was a brutal and profitable place. Home to starving, landless farmers, the county produced almost two percent of the entire world's cotton. It was also the site of two rape trials that made national headlines: an accusation that sent two Black men, almost certainly innocent, to death row; and the case of two white men, almost certainly guilty, who were likewise sentenced to death but who would ultimately face a very different fate. Braiding together these stories, Scott W. Stern examines how the Jim Crow leg...al system relied on selectively prosecuting rape to uphold the racial, gender, and economic hierarchies of the segregated, unequal South. But as much as rape law was a site of oppression, it was also, Stern shows, an arena of fierce resistance. Based on deep archival research, this kaleidoscopic narrative includes new information about the early career of Thurgood Marshall, who called one of the Mississippi County trials 'worse than any we have had as yet,' and the anti-rape activism of Maya Angelou, who came of age in Arkansas and whose decision to write about her own sexual assault helped shape a burgeoning movement" -- From publisher's website.

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  • The making of a Cotton County, 1541-1927
  • The law of rape, 1820-1920s
  • Vigilantism and resistance, 1899-1930s
  • A Jim Crow childhood, 1930s
  • Bethel and Wallace, 1928
  • Class War, 1929-1935
  • Clayton and Carruthers, 1935
  • Mr. Freeman, mid-1930s
  • The trial begins, 1929
  • The trial begins, 1935
  • Pearl testifies, 1929
  • Virgie testifies, 1935
  • Marguerite testifies, mid-1930s
  • The origins of an advocate, 1908-1933
  • The witnesses testify, 1929
  • The witnesses testify, 1935
  • The recovery, 1930s-1953
  • The rape docket, 1930s
  • Bethel and Wallace testify, 1929
  • Clayton and Carruthers testify, 1935
  • The ascent, 1954-1968
  • The anti-rape docket, 1930s
  • The trial ends, 1929
  • The trial ends, 1935
  • Taking flight, 1968-1969
  • The appeal, 1935-1936
  • Seeking mercy, seeking clemency, 1929-1936
  • The appeal, 1937-1939
  • The end, 1939
  • Maya Angelou, 1970s
  • Frank Bethel, 1931-1952
  • Mike Wallace, 1931-1983
  • Pearl, 1929-
  • Virgie, 1936-2005
  • Bubbles Clayton, 1939-
  • Jim X. Carruthers, 1939-
  • Thurgood Marshall, 1977.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A historical examination of rape trials in the Mississippi Delta during Jim Crow, with Maya Angelou as an important witness. "The very first reported case heard in the Territory of Arkansas was a rape case," writes legal historian Stern. That took place in 1820, occasioning a sentence of castration, commutation by the territorial governor, and an inconclusive series of laws that started with the death penalty for any convicted rapist and quickly devolved into two laws: a Black man would be put to death, but a white man would be sentenced for "not less than one year." Fast-forward a century, and Jim Crow laws saw to it that Black people indeed died if convicted of rape--assuming they weren't lynched first, lynching having been an important instrument of "keeping the Black population under control." Stern looks closely at two contemporaneous cases, the one with Black defendants and the other with whites; the outcome was predictable, and even if the whites were imprisoned, it was in a comparative country club. Within this discussion emerges, both in testimonial and as moral compass, the writer Angelou, born Marguerite Johnson and raised in southwestern Arkansas in a town, as Stern writes, that "was an exceedingly dangerous place for Black people, especially Black men accused of rape." Marguerite, raped as a young girl, knew sexual violence firsthand, yet she labored under a double shadow, since "Black activists"--men, mostly--"understandably shied from highlighting cases of Black men raping Black women or girls." Even so, as Stern notes, Black women opened up that discussion, becoming agents for social change that would motivate Marguerite, now Maya, to become a pioneering feminist and to record her experiences in her writings, creating "something new, and newly vulnerable." A welcome study of racial justice and injustice. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.