How To Kill a Mockingbird Reflects the Real Civil
Rights Movement
With the news of the death of Harper Lee, LIFE Books has just released a new edition of The Enduring
Legacy of Harper Lee and To Kill a Mockingbird, a volume exploring the lasting influence of Harper’s
Lee’s Pulitzer-prize winning novel, the making of the classic film with Gregory Peck and the fascinating life
of the author—as well as the issue of civil rights at the time that she was writing Mockingbird.
Below is an excerpt from one of the chapters dealing with the subject of race in America:
In 1960, when To Kill a Mockingbird was published, much of white America viewed the coming
together of the races as immoral, dangerous, even ungodly. A white woman would never admit to
doing what the Mockingbird character Mayella Ewell does, breaking a “time-honored code” by kissing
Tom Robinson, a black man. And after being caught, she seeks to save herself from the scorn of
society by accusing Robinson of assaulting her.
Such an accusation was a death sentence for an African American man. “ Sexual assault was the
central drama of the white psyche,” says Diane McWhorter, author of the Pulitzer prize –
winning Carry Me Home: Birmingham, Alabama: The Climactic Battle of the Civil Rights Revolution. “A
black man assaulting a white woman justified the most draconian social control over black people.”
The vigilante punishment for such a sin was lynching, as would have been the case with the mob of
white men smelling of “whiskey and pigpen” who herd up to Maycomb’s jail to cart away Robinson.
While they are stopped in Mockingbird, many real-life incidents went unchecked. Between 1882 and
1951, 3,437 blacks in the United States died that way, 299 of them in Alabama. Harper Lee’s father, Amasa Coleman Lee, was a lot like Scout’s father Attic us Finch, and she clearly
sketched him and local events when creating the plot of Mockingbird. As with Atticus, A.C. Lee was a
lawyer, and, like Scout, the young Harper recalled earlier, “I did sit in the courtroom watching my
father argue cases and talk to juries.”
Mockingbird paralleled at least three cases that were objects of contention in the Monroeville of her
childhood, and Lee once commented how, in her novel, “the trial, and the rape charge that brings on
the trial, are made up out of a composite of such cases and charges.” Seven years before Harper’s birth
(in 1926), the senior Lee defended two blacks accused of murder. At the time, “the idea that someone
like Lee would represent a black is by no means abnormal or unusual, though not typical,” says Wayne
Flynt, distinguished university professor emeritus at Auburn University and a friend of Harper Lee.
“People like her father had grown up in churches. They were not threatened intellectually,
economically or politically by blacks.” A.C. Lee’s clients were executed, and he was so overcome that
he never took another criminal case.
Next: In March 1931, just before Harper turned 5 years old, a bold-headlines case gripped Alabama. A
group of blacks and whites got into a fight on a train. As the police arre sted the nine young blacks,
they came across two white prostitutes. The women falsely accused the men of rape. Tried in
Scottsboro, Alabama, eight of them received death sentences. Over the next few deca des the
Scottsboro Boys, as they were known, became causes célèbres of the civil rights movement —their case
twice advanced to the Supreme Court. It took until 2013 for the men to be exonerated.
Then, third: In November 1933, outside Monroeville, a poor whi te woman, Naomi Lowery, claimed
that a black man, Walter Lett, had sexually assaulted her. At the time A.C. Lee (Harper’s father) was
editing The Monroe Journal, and his paper covered Lett’s trial. There was fear that Lett would be
lynched. Many of the town’s citizens, including Lee, petitioned Alabama governor Benjamin Miller,
seeking clemency, and Miller commuted Lett’s death sentence to life in prison. To say that these
stories came home in the Lees’ house is to state the obvious.
Harper Lee shows signs of hoped-for change in her book. “Moral courage is really inconvenient and it
rarely goes unpunished,” says McWhorter. But A.C. Lee would not be punished. Characters like the
fictional Atticus Finch and real-life people throughout the South were suddenly agitating within the
strictures of society, and Harper Lee was ready to join the proud parade—a parade that was very happy
to have her. Reverend Martin Luther King Jr., no less, would write in his book Why We Can’t
Wait, about “the strength of moral force,” and how, “To the Negro in 1963 , as to Atticus Finch, it had
become obvious that nonviolence could symbolize the gold badge of heroism rather than the white
feather of cowardice.”
How TKAM Reflects Civil Rights Movement
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