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- cross-posted to:
- workingclasscalendar
Maceo Snipes Shot After Voting (1946)
Thu Jul 18, 1946
Image: Maceo Snipes [zinnedproject.org]
On this day in 1946, Maceo Snipes, the first black person to vote in Georgia’s Taylor County, was shot by white supremacists, dying after doctors refused to give him a blood transfusion due to segregation. The violence outraged a teenage MLK Jr.
Snipes was a World War II veteran who had returned to his hometown of Butler, Georgia. In 1946, a provocative campaign issue was whether or not black people should be allowed to vote in primary elections. Georgia’s Jim Crow government had been enforcing whites-only primary elections, but this had been struck down by the Supreme Court earlier that year.
Despite threats from the Ku Klux Klan, Snipes cast his vote in the primary election on July 17th that year, becoming the first black person to vote in Taylor County, according to the Georgia Civil Rights Cold Cases Project. The following day, four white supremacists showed up to Maceo’s house, interrupting dinner with his wife, and shot him in the back. The man who shot him, Edward Williamson, was also a World War II veteran.
Snipes was taken to the hospital, where he waited for several hours before the doctors would perform the surgery to remove the bullets. A white doctor told his family that Maceo needed a transfusion, but refused to give him one, citing a lack of “black blood” in the hospital. Without a transfusion, Snipes died two days later. Snipes’ funeral was held in the middle of the night due to death threats for anyone who dared attend.
In court, Maceo’s killers falsely pleaded self-defense, claiming that Snipes owed them money and attacked them with a knife. Both the coroner and jury determined their actions to be justified. Snipes was one of five black people lynched following the 1946 elections - two couples, Roger and Dorothy Malcom and George and Mae Murray Dorsey - were kidnapped, beaten, and shot. Mae was seven months pregnant at the time.
This outbreak of white supremacist violence, and the hypocrisy surrounding it, outraged a teenage Martin Luther King Jr., then a student at Morehouse College. He wrote a letter to the editor of “The Atlanta Constitution”, stating:
“I often find when decent treatment for the Negro is urged, a certain class of people hurry to raise the scarecrow of social mingling and intermarriage. These questions have nothing to do with the case. And most people who kick up this kind of dust know that it is simple dust to obscure the real question of rights and opportunities. It is fair to remember that almost the total of race mixture in America has come, not at Negro initiative, but by the acts of those very white men who talk loudest of race purity. We aren’t eager to marry white girls, and we would like to have our own girls left alone by both white toughs and white aristocrats.”
- Date: 1946-07-18
- Learn More: coldcases.emory.edu, calendar.eji.org, www.zinnedproject.org.
- Tags: #Terrorism, #Assassinations, #Civil Rights.
- Source: www.apeoplescalendar.org
The South still very much believes in this, think school voucher programs and anti-education.