Chicago Sun-Times

WHAT DID BRYANT’S WIFE SAY?

Author concedes quote about testimony in Emmett Till case wasn’t recorded

- BY JERRY MITCHELL

JACKSON, Miss. — Timothy Tyson’s book on Emmett Till became a best-seller thanks to the bombshell quote he attributed to Carolyn Bryant Donham — that she lied when she testified about Till accosting her.

Donham’s daughter-in-law, Marsha Bryant, who was present for the two tape-recorded interviews Tyson did with Donham, said her mother-in-law “never recanted.”

Adding to the intrigue: The quote Tyson attributed to Donham isn’t on the recordings.

Unfortunat­ely, people believe her 84-yearold mother-in-law played a role in Till’s murder when “she had nothing to do with it,” Bryant said. “They think she should die or go to jail forever. They think what happened to Emmett Till should happen to her.”

Donham’s then-husband, Roy Bryant, and his half-brother, J.W. Milam, grabbed Till from his great-uncle’s home Aug. 28, 1955, near Money, Mississipp­i, carried him away and killed him. Both men are now dead.

Till’s murder appalled Donham, and she never wanted it to happen, Marsha Bryant said. Donham was not available for an interview.

In his book “The Blood of Emmett Till,” Tyson wrote about Donham’s memoir recounting “the story she told at the trial using imagery from the classic Southern racist horror movie of the Black Beast rapist. But about her testimony that Till had grabbed her around the waist and uttered obscenitie­s, she now told me, ‘That part’s not true.’ ”

The recordings of Tyson’s interviews with Donham are now in the hands of the FBI, which is re-examining Till’s killing, the author said.

“It is true that that part is not on tape because I was setting up the tape recorder,” Tyson said.

When Donham began to mutter something about “they’re all dead now anyway,” he said he snatched his notebook and began taking notes, which the FBI since has subpoenaed.

He shared a photo of the notes with the Jackson (Miss.) Clarion Ledger. They read: “That pt wasn’t true . . . . 50 yrs ago. I just don’t remember . . . . Nothing that boy ever did could justify what happened to him.”

Marsha Bryant said she feels Tyson acted “unethicall­y” in dealing with the book she was writing with her mother-in-law, “More Than a Wolf Whistle: The Story of Carolyn Bryant Donham.”

“He had access to the book because he was my editor,” she said. “We allowed him to interview Carolyn, and he helped me edit.”

Tyson’s book, “The Blood of Emmett Till,” includes informatio­n from that memoir.

Tyson called Marsha Bryant’s claim that he was editor of the book “bull—-.”

The family handed him about 30 pages and “persuaded me to leaf through this short, very flimsy, utterly unpublisha­ble memoir,” he said. “They asked for advice on how to get a memoir published, and I gave them some garden-variety advice.”

The family knew nothing about Tyson’s book until it was released, Marsha Bryant said. But Tyson said he told the family years ago that he might do a book.

He promised the family to deliver the interviews and documents to the Southern Historical Collection at the University of North Carolina Chapel Hill library archives, he said.

When he first mentioned this, Donham “seemed queasy about that,” he said.

But once he explained that the materials would not be available until her death, “that did satisfy her,” he said.

Marsha Bryant said the family never agreed to put the memoir into the archives.

According to Carly Miller, a spokeswoma­n for the collection, Tyson gave them an unpublishe­d version of Donham’s memoirs as an addition to the Timothy Tyson Papers, which contain his research materials.

“Mr. Tyson specified access restrictio­ns to the papers: They were not to be released for 20 years or until the death of Ms. Donham,” she said.

Tyson said he contacted Marsha Bryant about five years ago, asking if he could conduct another interview with Donham.

“She told me Carolyn wasn’t doing well and couldn’t talk to me,” he said. He asked if she wanted his father, a pastor, to come by.

He quoted her as saying Donham became upset whenever she heard his name, explaining that “she’s afraid you’re going to write a book and ‘I’m going to be famous again.’ ”

When the book did come out, Tyson heard from Marsha Bryant.

“She told me there were people on their front porch and pictures of their house on internet,” Tyson said. “She was none too happy. She didn’t take exception to any of the facts.” Marsha Bryant disagreed.

“We told him the truth,” she said. “And he wrote she recanted.”

The idea that Donham would say those words to a stranger is ridiculous, Marsha Bryant said.

“Why would she recant to somebody she just met?” her daughter-in-law asked. Asked if the family is planning litigation, she would not comment.

In 2007 a majority-black grand jury in Greenwood, Mississipp­i, declined to indict Donham, considerin­g charges from manslaught­er to accessory after the fact. Despite the FBI’s re-examinatio­n, those familiar with the case doubt any prosecutio­n will come of it.

Marsha Bryant said Donham has never wavered from the story she has told since 1955 when she and her husband operated a general store in Money, about halfway between Jackson, Mississipp­i, and Memphis.

But Donham’s story has differed over the years.

In 1955, she shared with a defense lawyer for her husband and Milam that as soon as Roy Bryant, then her husband, returned from a work trip, she told him what happened in the store with Till.

But since then, she repeatedly has said someone else told Roy Bryant first.

Investigat­ions from civil rights leader Dr. T.R.M. Howard and author Devery Anderson each concluded that Roy Bryant learned of what happened at the store from someone other than his wife.

 ?? AP ?? The FBI is re-examining the 1955 killing of Emmett Till in Mississipp­i.
AP The FBI is re-examining the 1955 killing of Emmett Till in Mississipp­i.

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