Elbert Williams Commemorative Memorial

Saturday, June 20, 2015 the Elbert Williams Memorial Committee will hold an event starting at 9 am to commemorate the life and legacy of Elbert Williams. Dr. Cornell William Brooks, National President of the NAACP will be the main speaker for this occasion.

Elbert Williams was first known member of the NAACP to be killed for his civil rights work. In her book, “Lift Every Voice: The NAACP and the Making of the Civil Rights Movement”, Professor Patricia Sullivan, University of South Carolina, list Elbert Williams as the first known official killed for his civil rights activities. In his eulogy at the funeral of Medgar Evers in June of 1963, Roy Wilkins referenced Elbert Williams as one of the early NAACP martyrs to lose his life.

For seventy-five years he has lain in an unmarked grave in Taylor Cemetery. The exact location has been lost to time.
In early 1939 a brave group of African Americans organized a chapter of the NAACP, in Brownsville, Tennessee for the purpose of securing access to the ballot box, which had been denied them since 1888. On Christmas Eve of 1939 a terror campaign to destroy the chapter began and by mid-June, 1940 all the officers had been run out of town.
On the afternoon of June 20, 1940, Elbert Williams was overheard planning a meeting of the remaining NAACP members in hishome. For this simple act, he was picked up that nightby members of the Brownsville police department and never seen alive again.
Three days later on Sunday morning June 23, his wife was summoned to the banks of the Hatchie River, six miles south of Brownsville. Prior to her arrival, the coroner had ordered the immediate burial of his remains. He was buried that day without a funeral or closure for his family.

Plans to hold a graveside memorial on the 1st Anniversary of his death in 1941 never materialized. After the bombing of Pearl Harbor inDecember of that year, the United States entered World War II and the memory and supreme sacrifice of this hero was lost to time, along with the location of his grave.
The Elbert Williams Memorial Committee will hold a memorial on the 75th Anniversary ofhis death on June 20, 2015 inBrownsville, Tennessee.
A state approved historical markerwill be unveiled during the days events.

See website for details of days events:

Activities on weekend of June 19th thru 20th, will include:

Friday, June 19, 2015 Activities

6:00-8:00pm Reception, Friday Night, June 19th

at West Tennessee Delta Heritage Center, Exit 56

Saturday, June 20, 2015 Activities

7:00-8:30am Breakfast, Carver School

709 East Jefferson Street

9:00-10:30am Memorial Service at Haywood High School,

1175 East College Street

11:00-11:30am Dedication of Historical Marker, Corner of

East Main & Jackson Street

1:00-1:30pm Procession to Taylor Cemetery for Dedication of Plaque

Taylor Cemetery Road