Mississippi State Sovereignty Commission

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The Mississippi State Sovereignty Commission was a state agency, directed by the governor of Mississippi, that existed from 1956 to 1977. The commission's stated objective was to "[...] protect the sovereignty of the state of Mississippi, and her sister states" from "federal encroachment." Initially it was formed to coordinate activities to portray the state and segregation in a more positive light. The "sovereignty" the state was trying to protect was against federal enforcement of the US Supreme Court ruling on integrating schools, and laws that protected citizens against state encroachment on suffrage and basic civil rights. The state also opposed the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and Voting Rights Act of 1965.

As the state's public relations campaign failed to dampen rising civil rights activism, the commission put people to work as a de facto intelligence organization trying to identify those citizens in Mississippi who might be working for civil rights, be allied with communists, or just tipped state surveillance if their associations, activities, and travels did not seem to conform to segregationist norms. Swept up on lists of people under suspicion by such broad criteria were tens of thousands of African-American and white professionals, teachers, and government workers in agricultural and other agencies, churches and community organizations.

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[edit] Formal structure

The Mississippi Legislature created the commission in 1956, in reaction to federally ordered school integration following the Supreme Court ruling in Brown v. Board of Education (1954). The membership was composed of 12 appointed and legislatively elected members, and the Governor of Mississippi, Lieutenant governor of Mississippi, the Speaker of the House of Representatives of Mississippi and the Attorney General of Mississippi ex officio; the governor sat as the chairman. Its initial budget was $250,000 a year.

[edit] Activities

The commission's activities included attempting to preserve the state's segregation and Jim Crow laws, opposing school integration, and ensuring portrayal of the state "in a positive light". Among its first employees were a former FBI agent and a transfer from the state highway patrol. "The agency outwardly extolled racial harmony, but it secretly paid investigators and spies to gather both information and misinformation."[1]

Staff of the commission worked closely with, and in some cases funded, the notorious White Citizens' Councils. From 1960 to 1964, it secretly funded the White Citizens Council, a private organization, with $190,000 of state funds.[2]

The commission officially closed in 1977, four years after Governor Bill Waller vetoed funding. After the agency was disbanded, state lawmakers ordered the files sealed until 2027 (50 years later).

After a lawsuit, in 1989 a federal judge ordered the records opened, with some exceptions for still-living people. Legal challenges delayed the records' availability to the public until March 1998. Once unsealed, records revealed more than 87,000 names of people about whom the state had collected information, or included as "suspects." Today, the records of the commission are available online for search by computer. (See link below.)[3]|

The records also revealed the state's deep complicity in the murders of three civil rights workers at Philadelphia, Mississippi, because its investigator A.L. Hopkins passed on information about the workers, including the car license number of a new civil rights worker, to the commission. Records showed the commission passed the information to the Sheriff of Neshoba County, who was implicated in the murders.[4]

[edit] Notes

[edit] Readings

W. Ralph Eubanks, Ever Is a Long Time: A Journey into Mississippi's Dark Past, New York: Basic Books, 2003

[edit] External links