Sunday, November 2, 2008

The Black McCains

The Wall Street Journal has an interesting article and accompanying video about the McCain families in Carroll County, Mississippi: the descendants of John McCain's ancestors who still remain in the area where those ancestors owned a cotton plantation (Teoc), and the descendants of the slaves who worked that plantation and took their owners' surname. The McCains have a biannual reunion where family members of both groups of descendants meet.

Charles McCain, grandson of a slave at Teoc, the white McCain plantation, was active in the Civil Rights Movement:

Charles McCain was a central figure in the local chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. When civil-rights workers swarmed Mississippi in 1964, the black McCains housed white activists and received bomb threats and harassing calls.

"Daddy didn't want us to roll over and play dead or live as if you are not a person," says Lillie McCain. Her sister Mary McCain Fluker, 53, says their father "would always tell us you are just as good as anybody. 'You are no better than anybody,' he'd tell us, 'but you're just as good as anybody.'"

Civil-rights organizers held secret meetings at the family's church just off the Teoc plantation. The Mississippi Sovereignty Commission, a state agency formed to thwart the civil-rights movement, kept tabs on Mr. McCain, according to commission records. "Daddy was one of the leaders, one of the people out front," says 60-year-old Charles McCain Jr., a retired brick mason and teacher who still lives on the family land.

As Senator John McCain himself has said, slavery was "a dark and tragic chapter in American history." This article is about one plantation-owning family whose descendants turned to military service and fought for freedom abroad and the slaves whose descendants fought for their freedom here at home. (However, four of Charles McCain's children also served in the military: the black McCains did double duty--fighting for freedom abroad and for Civil Rights at home.)

Hat tip to Scott Horton, blogging for Harper's Magazine.

See also, "The Complicated history of John McCain and MLK Day," at Jake Tapper's Political Punch blog at ABC News online.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Really a fascinating story. While an Obama supporter, I've always had admiration for John McCain. I've looked up and posted some of the Sovereignty Commission files on my website -- for those interested in learning more.