Prøv GOLD - Gratis
Mapping Mississippi's Violent Past - I wanted to understand the forces that shaped my state's dark history. I ended up in Spain, holding an object I'd never known existed.
The Atlantic
|October 2024
I'd come researching my new book, The Barn, a history of the 36 square miles of dirt around the place where Emmett Till was tortured and killed in 1955. The barn, which I first wrote about for this magazine, sits in the southwestern quarter of Section 2, Township 22 North, Range 4 West, measured from the Choctaw Meridian. The township has been home to the civil-rights activist Fannie Lou Hamer; to the family of the Confederate general and early Ku Klux Klan leader Nathan Bedford Forrest; to farmland owned by James R. Binford, an original legal architect of Jim Crow.
The city of Seville awoke early, the old streets alive with singing birds and distant bells.
The cobblestone alleys smelled faintly of hidden gardens. I'd flown here for a chance to hold a 480-year-old map in my hand. The archive's curators had given me no guarantees but said that I could come, in person, to make the request. For a century after Christopher Columbus, this town was the white-hot center of global exploration, teeming with sailors who'd been to the New World and returned to tell the tale. Now it was mellow and quaint.
I'd come researching my new book, The Barn, a history of the 36 square miles of dirt around the place where Emmett Till was tortured and killed in 1955. The barn, which I first wrote about for this magazine, sits in the southwestern quarter of Section 2, Township 22 North, Range 4 West, measured from the Choctaw Meridian. The township has been home to the civil-rights activist Fannie Lou Hamer; to the family of the Confederate general and early Ku Klux Klan leader Nathan Bedford Forrest; to farmland owned by James R. Binford, an original legal architect of Jim Crow.
It's borne witness to the creation of the blues at Dockery Plantation; to the erasure of a Native American community; and, of course, to the death of Till. With so much violent history in such proximity, this project almost inevitably became a mapping. That led me on a hunt for the very first map of this land, which was likely drawn in 1544 by a Spanish cartographer named Alonso de Santa Cruz. (There had been earlier maps of the North American shoreline, but none of the interior until this one.)
Denne historie er fra October 2024-udgaven af The Atlantic.
Abonner på Magzter GOLD for at få adgang til tusindvis af udvalgte premiumhistorier og 10.000+ magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Log ind
FLERE HISTORIER FRA The Atlantic
The Atlantic
The First 18 Months
A Cabinet meeting with my son, who is exactly as old as the current administration
2 mins
July 2026
The Atlantic
What Dogs See
To understand a painting, look for the canine.
10 mins
July 2026
The Atlantic
Boy George
Finally, an action movie about Washington’s French and Indian War years.
5 mins
July 2026
The Atlantic
Disneyland With No People
When I was 17, I worked at Fantasyland’s magic shop as a magician demonstrating Svengali decks, cups and balls, and the Incredible (their word) Shrinking Die.
4 mins
July 2026
The Atlantic
THE REBELLIOUS ORIGINS OF AMERICAN SPORTS
FROM THE BEGINNING, PATRIOTISM AND PLAY HAVE BEEN INEXTRICABLY LINKED.
12 mins
July 2026
The Atlantic
Queen of the Skies
The Boeing 747, the world’s first jumbo jet, has started its final descent.
18 mins
July 2026
The Atlantic
HOW TO TELL THE AMERICAN STORY
Finding a common history that’s both unsparing and unifying has proved all but impossible in recent years. It shouldn’t be.
17 mins
July 2026
The Atlantic
Nathaniel Hawthorne’s American Horror Story
The author wrote a tale that challenged the nation’s founding myths. Then it disappeared.
13 mins
July 2026
The Atlantic
The Surprising, Liberating History of Marriage
To find a future for the institution, Stephanie Coontz turns to its wildly varying past.
11 mins
July 2026
The Atlantic
USE IT OR LOSE IT
Freedom of speech, and of the press, can be guaranteed only if Americans exercise their rights.
8 mins
July 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
