Even at the height of the civil rights movement in the 1960s, when the clarion call for equality and justice echoed around the country, few volunteers ventured into Clarke County, Mississippi. Fewer still remained. Located just south of Neshoba County, where three civil rights workers had been murdered during 1964's Freedom Summer, Clarke lay squarely in what many considered Mississippi's, and thus America's, meanest corner. Local African Americans knew why the movement failed there. Some spoke of a bottomless hole in the snaking Chickasawhay River in the town of Shubuta, where white vigilantes had for decades dumped the bodies of murdered African Americans. Others more spoke of a "hanging bridge" that spanned that same muddy creek. Spanning three generations, Hanging Bridge reveals what happened in Clarke County in 1919 and 1942, when two horrific lynchings took place: the first, of four young people, including a pregnant woman; the second, of two teenaged boys accused of harassing a white girl.Jason Ward's painstaking and haunting reconstruction of these events traces a legacy of violence that reflects the American experience of race, from the depths of Jim Crow through to the growing power of the NAACP and national awareness of what was taking places even in the country's bleakest racial landscapes. Connecting the lynchings to each other and then to the civil rights struggles in the 1960s, when the threat of violence hung heavy over Clarke County, Ward creates a narrative that links living memory and verifiable fact, illuminating one of the darkest places in American history and revealing the resiliency of the human spirit.
This book includes some suspension bridge history along with engineering considerations, then explains and illustrates with diagrams and full-color photos the step by step process that was used to complete the project.
The perennially popular poet's newest collection combines lyrics of love and romance with a multilayered mystical perspective on life, the land, and personal history and includes nearly a dozen sonnets
Tadaki Kawada traces the modern suspension bridge from its earliest appearance in Western civilization only 200 years ago to the enormous Akashi Kaikyo and Storebælt bridges completed at the end of the twentieth century.
James and Phyllis Johnston James and Phyllis Johnston live in the house where James was born , on Eucutta Street in Shubuta . It is diagonally across the street from the house in which Robert C. Weems and " Miss Suzie ” lived next door ...
Due to their attractiveness and visibility, they are well-known symbols of major cities and countries in the world. They are also essential form of transportation infrastructure built across large bodies of water. D
Deng Y, Liu Y, Feng DM, Li AQ. Investigation of fatigue performance of welded details in long-span steel bridges using long-term monitoring strain data. Struct Control Health Monit. 2015;22(11):1343–58. 3. Xiao ZG, Yamada K, Inoue J, ...
The novelty of this design lies in its differences to a typical hanging bridge. Introduced in the 1960s by British troops stationed in the area, a hanging bridge is the standard design for a more or less permanent bridge.
windows in circular openings , with on each side tall arcades of openings for offices etc. ... This is attached on the s side to the AQA ( Assessment and Qualifications Alliance ) building , formerly the Joint Examination Board ...