On
June 12, 1963, Evers pulled into his driveway after returning from an integration meeting where he had conferred with
NAACP lawyers. Emerging from his car and carrying NAACP T-shirts that stated, "
Jim Crow Must Go", Evers was struck in the back with a bullet that ricocheted into his home. He staggered 30 feet before collapsing, dying at the local hospital 50 minutes later. Evers was murdered just hours after President
John F. Kennedy's speech on national television in support of
civil rights.
Mourned nationally, Evers was buried on
June 19 in
Arlington National Cemetery and received
full military honors in front of a crowd of more than 3,000 people, the largest funeral at Arlington since the interment of
John Foster Dulles, former U.S.
Secretary of State in 1959. The past chairman of the American Veterans' Committee,
Mickey Levine, said at the services, "No soldier in this field has fought more courageously, more heroically than Medgar Evers."
On
June 23, 1964, Byron De La Beckwith, a fertilizer salesman and member of the
White Citizens' Council and
Ku Klux Klan, was arrested for Evers' murder. During the course of his first 1964 trial, De La Beckwith was visited by former Mississippi governor
Ross Barnett and one time
Army Major General Edwin A. Walker.
All-white juries twice that year
deadlocked on De La Beckwith's guilt, thus allowing him to escape justice.
The murder and subsequent miscarriage of justice caused a social uproar, and musician
Bob Dylan wrote the song "
Only a Pawn in Their Game" about Evers and his assassin. The song's lyrics read: "The day that Medgar Evers was buried from the bullet that he caught, they lowered him down as a king."
Nina Simone took on the topic in her song "
Mississippi Goddam".
Eudora Welty's short story
Where is the Voice Coming From in which the speaker is the imagined assassin of Medgar Evers was printed in "The New Yorker."
Phil Ochs wrote the songs "Too Many Martyrs" and "Another Country" in response to the killing. Matthew Jones and the
Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee Freedom Singers paid tribute to Evers in the haunting "Ballad of Medgar Evers."
Malvina Reynolds mentioned "the shot in Evers' back" in her song "It isn't nice". More recently, rapper
Immortal Technique asks if a diamond is "worth the blood of
Malcolm and Medgar Evers?" in the song "Crossing the Boundary" and "Bury The Living", a left-leaning
hardcore punk band from
Memphis, Tennessee mentioned Evers along with
Emmett Till in the song "In the State of Mississippi" on their 2003 album, "Burn This Fucking Nightmare." The Rza sang on "I Can't Go to Sleep" by
Wu-Tang Clan, "Medgar took one to the skull for integrating college."
In 1994, thirty years after the two previous trials had failed to reach a
verdict, Beckwith was again brought to trial based on new evidence concerning statements he made to others. During the trial, the body of Evers was exhumed from his grave for
autopsy, and found to be in a surprisingly good state of preservation as a result of
embalming. Beckwith was finally convicted of murder on
February 5, 1994, after living as a free man for three decades after the killing. Beckwith appealed unsuccessfully, and died in prison in January 2001.
Before Medgar Evers' body was reburied, a new funeral was staged for Evers. This permitted his children, who were toddlers when he was assassinated and had very little memory of him, to have a chance to see him. The new funeral was covered on HBO's Autopsy series.