Home / Full timeline / Racial tensions renew in Mississippi when Jo Etha Collier, a Black 18-year-old girl, is shot dead. The three white men arrested and charged with the killing plead innocent.
Racial tensions renew in Mississippi when Jo Etha Collier, a Black 18-year-old girl, is shot dead. The three white men arrested and charged with the killing plead innocent.
1971 (May 25)
Racial tension was sparked anew in Mississippi as Jo Etha Collier, an eighteen-year- old Black girl, was shot dead in Drew, Mississippi. Collier was felled by a bullet from a passing car as she stood with other young Blacks on a street corner in her hometown. The incident occurred less than an hour after the girl graduated from desegregated Drew High School and was designated the student with the best school spirit. Three white men were arrested and charged with the killing on May 26. On June 14, Wayne and Wesley Parks of Drew, Mississippi, and Allen Wilkerson of Memphis, Tennessee, were arraigned on charges of murder before Circuit Court Judge Arthur B. Clark in Indianola, Mississippi. The three pleaded innocent. The swift arrests, arraignments, and the sympathetic attitude of local white officials served to help calm tensions in the community.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.