1938 100 members of the Ku Klux Klan surrounded a black-owned ranch in the Mississippi Delta with rifles, rope, and a written promise from the sheriff that no one would interfere. Their target was Elijah Mercer, a fat, limping landowner they mocked as too slow to run and too scared to resist.
They counted their numbers aloud, argued over who would light the fire at dawn, and accepted his offer to sign away the land. Certain greed had won. By the next morning, the county had a different problem. Some clansmen were dead. Others were missing. Several swore they’d been shot by their own men. Hoods came off.
Names were spoken. Careers ended. The mob’s confidence collapsed into silence, and no one could explain how a man they’d come to erase was still standing. Before we go any further, comment where in the world you are watching from, and make sure to subscribe because tomorrow’s story is one you don’t want to miss. The last rays of sunlight painted long shadows across Elijah Mercer’s cotton fields.