Similarities Between Scottsboro Boys And To Kill A Mockingbird

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To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee is one of the most successful works of fiction in American Literature. Although To Kill a Mockingbird is classified as a work of fiction, there is evidence to support the claim that To Kill a Mockingbird was modeled after the Scottsboro Trials of 1931. There are many parallels between the trial of Tom Robinson and the Scottsboro Trials. The Scottsboro Boys were nine, young, African American men who were falsely accused of raping two white women while illegally riding a train in Alabama. Harper Lee was also about six years old when these trials took place. This is the reason why Harper Lee chose to write her novel through the eyes of a six year old. The trials inspired her to write To Kill a Mockingbird. Harper Victoria Price and Ruby Bates, like the Scottsboro Boys, were hoboing on a freight train between Chattanooga and Memphis. The train was stopped in Paint Rock, Alabama, and the Scottsboro Boys were immediately arrested for riding the train illegally. To avoid being arrested for a Mann Act violation, both Victoria Price and Ruby Bates accused the Scottsboro Boys of raping them while aboard the train. Although both women accused the Scottsboro Boys, Ruby Bates recanted her story of the rape, and eventually, served as a witness for the defense. Victoria Price, however, refused to recant her story (“Trials of Scottsboro Boys”). Price’s testimony was inconsistent and evasive. She used ignorance and bad memory to avoid answering difficult questions. According to Victoria Price’s direct examination by H. G. Bailey, Victoria Price was asked, “Was your back bleeding when you got to the doctor?” and Price responded, “I couldn 't For example, Abraham Lincoln signed the emancipation proclamation in 1863; it was not enforced in the southern states until 1865. Regardless of the enforcement of the emancipation proclamation, racial discrimination and segregation was still very present. Alabama is still, stereotypically; know as being one of the most racist states in the United States today. Due to the heightened racial tension, the Scottsboro Boys and Tom Robinson barely escaped being lynched days before their respective trials. Almost immediately after the Scottsboro Boys were placed in jail, crowds followed in protest of the Scottsboro Boys. According to Christina Bergmark, “the National Guard had to be called in to prevent a lynching.” Likewise, Tom Robinson was almost lynched by a mob of angry white men. Fortunately the mob went home after Jean Louise Finch started asking one of the mob members, Mr. Cunningham, about his

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