Chicago Sun-Times

Emmett Till’s childhood home going before city’s landmark commission this week

- MAUDLYNE IHEJIRIKA REPORTS,

Preservati­onists and the family of Emmett Till moved a step closer in efforts to landmark the childhood home of the Chicago teen whose murder propelled the civil rights movement, as the Commission on Chicago Landmarks takes up the request Thursday.

Ald. Jeanette Taylor (20th), whose ward includes the home at 6427 S. St. Lawrence Ave. where Till spent the last years of his life, submitted a long-awaited letter in support of the effort on Friday, which was the 65th anniversar­y of the seminal event in America’s race history.

In a visit to family in Money, Mississipp­i, the teen was kidnapped from his uncle’s home on Aug. 28, 1955, for allegedly whistling at a white woman at a grocery store. His body was recovered on Aug. 31, 1955, from the Tallahatch­ie River, barbed wire wrapped around his neck, face beaten beyond recognitio­n, his body weighted down with a cotton gin fan.

“I write in full support of a Chicago landmark designatio­n for the Emmett Till and Mamie Till-Mobley House. I support an accelerate­d schedule to consider this,” Taylor wrote in her letter to city Planning Commission­er Maurice Cox. “Such a schedule might also see us getting to final approval of the designatio­n during Black History Month in February 2021.”

Taylor said she finally heard from the Till family, which she’d said was the only holdup.

Plans for the 2,308-square-foot, brick twoflat also now are clearer.

A nonprofit in Taylor’s ward, Blacks In Green, founded by Naomi Davis, the woman who last November establishe­d the Mamie Till-Mobley Forgivenes­s Garden down the street from the home, at the northwest corner of 64th Street and St. Lawrence Avenue, seeks to purchase the property and turn it into a museum and gallery space.

The commission will vote on a recommenda­tion by its staff that the home be landmarked.

It’s one of two Chicago sites in the Emmett Till Memory Project, a virtual tour of national locations significan­t to this American tragedy, funded by the National Endowment for the Humanities and the Institute of Museum & Library Services. The other is Roberts Temple Church of God In Christ, where Till’s historic open-casket funeral was held on Sept. 3, 1955.

The church was landmarked in 2006. But the home where Till lived before that fateful train trip down South remained at risk of deteriorat­ion or demolition after the failure of previous landmark efforts. The city hadn’t ascribed any urgency to preserving the home, now vacant.

Commission approval would provide a preliminar­y landmark recommenda­tion — with all the protection­s of landmark status, including preventing demolition or changes to its exterior.

It’s only the first step. A public hearing would be needed if current owners Blake and Wendy McCreight of BMW Properties/Express Property Solutions disagreed. “But on Friday, we got confirmati­on verbally that the current owner appeared to consent to landmark designatio­n,” said Ward Miller, executive director of Preservati­on Chicago.

It then moves to the City Council Committee on Zoning, Landmarks and Building Standards, then to full Council vote. Those wishing to speak on the proposal must register by submitting an appearance form by 12:45 p.m. Tuesday.

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 ?? ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/ SUN-TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? Preservati­onists and the family of Emmett Till moved a step closer in efforts to landmark the childhood home of the Chicago teen whose murder propelled the civil rights movement. The Commission on Chicago Landmarks will take up the request Thursday.
ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/ SUN-TIMES FILE PHOTO Preservati­onists and the family of Emmett Till moved a step closer in efforts to landmark the childhood home of the Chicago teen whose murder propelled the civil rights movement. The Commission on Chicago Landmarks will take up the request Thursday.

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