Standing in the shadows: African American informants and allies of the Mississippi State Sovereignty Commission
by Sadler, Cynthia Jones, Ph.D., THE UNIVERSITY OF MEMPHIS, 2011, 230 pages; 3485901

Abstract:

This dissertation addressed the use of African American informants and allies of the Mississippi State Sovereignty Commission during the Civil Rights Movement. Following the Brown v Board of Education decision in 1954, Mississippi initiated various measures to maintain segregated schools and uphold its southern traditions. Among them was the Mississippi State Sovereignty Commission, a state-funded agency created in 1956 whose primary purpose was to uphold state's rights and maintain segregation. Dubbed the "segregation watchdog," the agency had an investigative division that used political and civic leaders, law enforcement entities, private detective agencies, and informants which constituted an informal network of spies located in every county in Mississippi.

Using the Sovereignty Commission records and varied primary and secondary sources, this research revealed that the typical African American informant was a middle-class male in a professional or highly regarded occupation such as an educator, minister or newspaper publisher. Further, it found that informants used the same educational, civic, fraternal and religious institutions to gain and disseminate information as those utilized by civil rights activists to advance the Movement. As informants, they spied on individuals, infiltrated civil rights organizations, and promoted segregation. Collectively, they used their positions and influence within the black community to alter or repress the direction of the Movement. While their motives may never be fully understood, it is arguable that some entered into alliances with the Sovereignty Commission due to existing systems of patronage and paternalism. Though they held positions in which they could lead and inspire, they chose to stand in the shadows of one of the most pivotal periods in American history.

The Commission ceased operations in 1973 and expended more than $1.5 million. While the agency symbolized Mississippi's primary state-funded mechanism to maintain the "closed society," it was not an isolated entity but an archetype for southern resistance. Other southern states including Arkansas, Alabama and Louisiana used Mississippi as a model to establish similar commissions. As a whole, these commissions were a southern phenomenon that circumvented the principles of a democratic society to serve the needs of the elite while subjugating and co-opting the majority-black population.

 
AdviserJanann Sherman
SchoolTHE UNIVERSITY OF MEMPHIS
SourceDAI/A 73-03, p. , Dec 2011
Source TypeDissertation
SubjectsAfrican American studies; Black history; American history; Modern history
Publication Number3485901
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