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Medgar Evers — Part 3
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Page 1
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FU-350 (Rev. 5.8.81 )
Few aware of.
neighbor’s li
to Evers slaying
By Bill Nichols
USA TODAY
SIGNAL MOUNTAIN, Tenn. — Thel-
ma Neff says this of her once-again-in-
the-headlines husband, Byron De La
Beckwith: “If men were a fourth as good
-.. We Wouldn't have any problems in
America.”
But to most of his neighbors in this fog-
shrouded Chattanooga suburb, the man
accused of killing civil rights activist
Medgar Evers Is little more than a quiet
eccentric who hung a Confederate flag
outside his front door — and who now is
bringing a bad name to their town.
Says Joseph Wagner, a Signal Moun-
tain lawyer who's lived here 73 years:
“He's just a poor old fellow who’s out of
' kilter, out of
4 date. You can't
_help but feel
sorry for some-
body like that.
It's kind of pa-
thetic.”
An admitted:
white suprema-
cist, the 70-year-
old Beckwith —
middie
name is pro-
nounced dee-
UPI (1983 photo)
EVERS: Slain activ-
ists’ case wil be ree LAY. . and
tried after 28 years friends call him
“Delay” — is in
isolation in the Hamilton County jail.
‘He is being held without bond, await-
ing hearings next week on his extradi-
tion to Jackson, Miss., where he’s
charged with murdering Evers on June
12, 1963. Beckwith’s Chattanooga law-
yer, Russell Bean, says his client is a “po-
litical prisoner.” :
Twice he’s' been tried for the crime,
and In both trials, conducted in 1964, all.
white: juries failed to reach verdicts:
Beckwith, whose fingerprints were
found on the 30.06-caliber ‘rifle that
killed Evers, says the gun was stolen
fromhim and that he's innocent. .
(Mount Clipping in Space Below)
A: town-stunning
history
Y ) a
le here knew nothing o1
Beciwitl’s role in the Evers case. Nor
did they know of his 1877 conviction in |
Louisiana for possessing explosives. -
—" Soa Mississippi grand.fury s
December to re-indict Beckwit
shocked many in this community of
7,200 — a mix of longtime residents and
“new money’ Chattanooga professionals
who can peer down some 1,000 feet at
the downtown skyline below.
Beckwith moved to the area eight
years ago when he married Neff, a regis-
tered nurse whose family has lived on
in for genera’
ne Tmmean.E Beckwith — whois he?” says
Lew Porter, a building inspector. I
think he kept his mouth shut and his
sheets clean while he was up here.
GZ. “Bome” Patten, publisher of the
monthly Signal Mountain Newsletter,
remembers when Neff told friends she d
met “this wonderful man sada Mississi
i they were going married.
p Patten, ‘hile stressing that Beckwith
was “no trouble at all,” also remembers
Beckwith tried to sell subscriptions to
right-wing publications at the loca] bar-
Oe ecbeith also pushed him to publish
an article saying “the Jews are destroy-
country.”
i ey Beckwith was always well-
dressed, polite — “not what we would
cali a typical Southern redneck, Patten
says. “I like him. J still do. He's a nice
Nett, 80, says she’s worried sick that
decision in .. .
a a a -
(Indicate page, name of
newspaper, city and state.)
USA TODAY
bate Wednesday, 1/9/91
Edition:
'|Page: 3A
Title:
Character:
or
Classification:
Submitting Office:
her husband, who suffers from a heart
condition, won't survive.
“None of it’s fair. He’s such a wonder-
ful Christian,” she says. Mississippi offi-
cials, she says, are “giving in to the
blacks too much.”
Beckwith, through his lawyer, de-
clined to be interviewed unless he was
paid $5,000.
Neff, pointing to a brimming basket of
majl in her wood-paneled living room,
says Beckwith is getting support from
across the nation.
She says the people of Signal Moun-
tain stand behind her husband as well.
In fact, Signal Mountain — a place so
safe and quiet that, as developer Tim
Downey puts it, “the police will still get,
your cat down out of the tree” — wag
once called “paradise” by Beckwith, be-
cause of its racial makeup. ;
Mayor Bernard Wolfe*says there are
only two or three black families here,
and concedes some have been Subjected
to racial slurs.
Ku Klux Kian activity was reported on
the mountain in the
Some “good ol’ boys” remain, Wolfe
says, in the mountain's rural outback.
But residents deeply resent implica-
tions that they share Beckwith's outlook.
“He would be a real rarity,” says Dow-
hey. “If he’s a white supremacist, he's
the first I've ever met up here.”
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