see end...
----- Original Message -----
From: "Marie O'Connell" <azile50@xxxxxxxxx>
 When working at the University of Southern Mississippi & the Mississippi
 Department of Archives and History on their oral history interviews re: the
 Civil Rights Era in MS, I did hear mention of lynchings, but very little.
 and especially from the dates enquired about.  However, there is a radio
 broadcast done in the early 1950's with the execution by mobile electric
 chair of Willie McGhee.  It is rather explicit with verbal description of
 the crowd assembled and the mobile truck containing the generator, which
 they hold the mic up to as the power is turned on 3 times to execute the
 man.  I found it rather disturbing.  This one is found at USM and Dr. Curtis
 Austin would be a good contact person.
 At MDAH they have recollections in the form of oral histories but also some
 film footage of KKK rallies and cross burnings.  I am not sure if there are
 any actual lynchings (I kind of hope there isn't).  Anyway, Elaine Owens
 would be good to get in touch with there.
Keep in mind that lynching...REGARDLESS of the race of the "lynchee(s)"...
was totally against the law, and thus hardly an event that would have been
recorded for posterity...!
Steven C. Barr