Sunday Star-Times

Memorial for fictional Billy Joe McAllister

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A group of Mississipp­i residents gathered on a sleepy, dusty Delta day to remember the fictional Billy Joe McAllister where – as the 1967 hit song had it – he ended his life when he jumped off the Tallahatch­ie bridge.

The Greenwood Commonweal­th reported that members of the society calling themselves the June Bugs held a ceremony on Friday and talked about Billy Joe as if they knew him. The group included Republican

US Senator Roger Wicker and Bill Luckett, a lawyer and blues club owner who once ran for Mississipp­i governor as a Democrat.

They unveiled a tombstone at a spot called the Tallahatch­ie Flats.

Ode to Billy Joe was written and recorded by Bobbie Gentry, who lived part of her life in Greenwood.

Wicker quoted from the lyrics, speaking of the fictional character as if he had been real.

‘‘People said, ‘Billy Joe never had a lick of sense,’ but I never believed that,’’ the senator said.

Luckett dressed as a pope and spoke about the possibilit­y that Billy Joe committed some sins, including taking his own life by leaping into the Tallahatch­ie. Luckett announced that he ‘‘grants, conveys and bestows and publicly pronounces a special dispensati­on’’ for Billy Joe.

People sang Wade in the Water, and a tombstone for McAllister was unveiled with the phrase: ‘‘He loved the river even unto death.’’

An Episcopal priest read a list of Mississipp­i authors and musicians who were also being memorialis­ed, including William Faulkner and Muddy Waters.

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