CHAPTER ONE
I donât want any trouble,â said the white man, Barnette Hester.
He stood on one side of the dirt road, and his two black tenants, Roger and Dorothy Malcom, stood on the other side. They were shouting and cursing, their voices echoing through the Sunday-evening quiet. The noise had reached Barnette Hester in the barn. Heâd stopped in the middle of milking, run out to the road, and issued his warning.
At twenty-nine, Barnette Hester was tall and thin, so thin he appeared boyish, as though his body hadnât yet filled out. His three older brothers were broad-shouldered men who spoke in booming voices, but he, the youngest, was shy to the point of silenceâexcept on Saturday nights, when he drank liquor and talked and laughed a little. Heâd been born in the modest house across the road. When the other men his age went off to the war, he stayed home to help his parents, and his father made him overseer of the family farm. They owned one hundred acres: a few behind the house, and the rest beyond the barn. That afternoon, after returning from church, Barnette had walked through the rows of cotton and corn and reached the same conclusion as many of Walton Countyâs farmers: it was the beginning of lay-by time. The crops were nearly full grown, and fieldwork would be light for the next month or so, until the harvest.
When it was harvesttime, Barnette would work in the fields from sunup to sundown, snatching the cotton from the bolls and stuffing it into burlap croker sacks. And Roger and Dorothy Malcom would work alongside him. As children, Barnette and Roger had been playmates. But in January, when Roger and Dorothy moved onto the Hester farm, theyâd become Barnetteâs tenants. Once, earlier in the spring, heâd found them fighting in the road in front of his familyâs house and told them to go homeâand theyâd obeyed. Theyâd walked to the fork in the road, taken the path down a small hill, and disappeared inside their tenant house. Barnette issued the same warning this evening, and he expected the same reaction.
Instead, across the road Roger Malcom charged at Dorothy. She dodged him, then ran down the road, into the front yard of the Hestersâ house. As she passed, Barnette heard her say, âRogerâs gonna kill me.â
Roger went after Dorothy. He followed her into the Hestersâ yard, and to the big fig tree, where he lunged at her again. Just then, Barnetteâs wife, Margaret, stepped out the front door of the house onto the porch. She watched Roger and Dorothy in the yard for a moment. Then she looked up and called to Barnette, âHeâs got a knife, and heâs going to cut her.â
Barnette crossed the road and entered the front yard. When he neared the fig tree, Dorothy darted onto the porch and she and Margaret rushed inside, leaving only Barnetteâs seventy-year-old father on the porch. Roger started up the porch stairs, and Barnette hurried to catch up with him. He stepped close, smelling the liquor on Rogerâs breath. He put his hand on Rogerâs arm and tried to turn him back toward the road. âGet out of the yard,â Barnette said. And then, for the second time: âI donât want any trouble.â
Roger Malcom shrugged off Barnetteâs hand and hunched over. Then he spun around and charged, his arm outstretched.
The blade of the pocketknife entered the left side of Barnetteâs chest, just below his heart.
After Roger Malcom pulled out his knife, he threw his hat on the ground. From the porch, Barnetteâs father heard him say, âCall me Mister Roger Malcom after this.â Then he ran away.
â˘Â  â˘Â  â˘
When Barnette clutched his side and began stumbling toward the house, his father, Bob, assumed Roger Malcom had hit him hard in the stomach. Neither he, nor anyone else in the Hester family, realized that Roger Malcom had cut Barnetteânot until Barnette collapsed onto the porch. Then Margaret saw the blood and cried out, âTake my husband to the hospital. Heâs bleeding to death.â
With the help of Barnetteâs eldest brother, who was visiting from next door, Bob Hester carried Barnette out to the car and laid him across the backseat. Pulling out of the driveway, they turned toward the hospital, located nine miles away in the Walton County seat of Monroe.
By then, the white people who lived near the Hesters had heard the commotion. These neighborsâwhose surnames were Peters, Adcock, Malcom, and also Hesterâwere related to Barnetteâs family and each other by blood or marriage, or both. Their ancestors had claimed farms in this section of the county during the land lottery of 1820, and theyâd set their modest frame houses close to each other and to the road, preserving every inch of dirt for cotton and corn. The settlement had been dubbed Hestertown in the early days, and the name stuck because the families stayed. In 1946, roughly thirty Peters, Malcom, Adcock, and Hester families still lived along Hestertown Road. Some of the young men drove fifty miles each day to work at factories in Atlanta, and other men and women worked at the cotton mills in Monroeâbut they remained in Hestertown and remained tied to the land and the community. On this July evening, some had been gathering vegetables in their gardens, preparing for the evening meal, when they heard the disturbance at the Hester house. Now they walked out from their farms to see if they could help.
Barnetteâs cousin Grady Malcom had already reached the road when the Hestersâ car passed by. âGet Roger,â Bob Hester called out the car window, âbecause Roger stabbed Barnette.â
Grady Malcom, in turn, called to his brother, and together the two men, both in their fifties, ran toward the Hestersâ house. When they saw Roger Malcom dart into a nearby cornfield, they followed him to the edge and yelled, âThrow down your knife and come out.â
From deep in the cornstalks came the muffled sound of Roger Malcomâs voice: âWho are you?â
When the brothers shouted their names, Roger Malcom said he wouldnât come out. But then, after a few minutes, he stood, tossed his knife to them, and surrendered.
By the time the brothers took Roger back to the Hestersâ front yard, a crowd of neighbors had gathered. One man drove to the closest store to telephone the sheriff. Another man held Roger down while several others bound his hands and feet. Like Barnette, theyâd known Roger Malcom for years, and they knew he was a fast runnerâfast as a rabbit, everybody said.
It was nearly dark when Walton County deputy sheriffs Lewis Howard and Doc Sorrells pulled into the yard. They untied Roger Malcom, handcuffed him, put him in the backseat of their patrol car, and drove off in a cloud of dust.
â˘Â  â˘Â  â˘
The sheriffs retraced the route Barnette Hesterâs father had taken one hour earlier, driving roughly a mile to the end of Hestertown Road, and turning onto Pannell Road. Heading northeast, they traveled through the heart of Blasingame district, which lay near the southern point of diamond-shaped Walton County and contained the countyâs richest farmland. In Blasingame, as in the rest of the county, farmers planted corn, small grains, and timberâbut their livelihood depended almost entirely on cotton. Since the beginning of agriculture in Walton County, cotton had been the major cash crop, comprising roughly 85 percent of the countyâs total agricultural profits each year. Under the guidance of the local extension agent, farmers planted only certain varieties of cottonseed and used only certain fertilizers, and their care paid off. Year after year, Walton County ranked at the top of Georgiaâs cotton-producing counties. In 1945, the countyâs farmers had averaged more than a bale per acre, shattering every cotton record in state history.
By 1946, farmers farther south and west had begun to employ mechanical cotton pickers, which did the work of forty farmhands, more quickly and more cheaply. But the rolling hills of Walton County, which was perched on the midland slope between the flat fields of middle Georgia and the mountains of north Georgia, made mechanical cotton pickers unusable. And so, despite the innovationsâelectricity, automobiles, radiosâthat had modernized much of rural life in Walton and its surrounding counties, farmers still depended on human labor to pick their cotton. In that respect, the harvest of 1946 would be no different from the harvest of 1846.
Within fifteen minutes of leaving the Hester house, the sheriffs had left the fields of Blasingame behind, passed a small forest known as Towlerâs Woods, and were entering the outskirts of town. They crossed over the railroad tracksâwhere several trains daily made the roughly forty-mile trip between Monroe and Atlantaâand drove by the townâs two cotton mills, hulking brick structures that employed eight hundred white people. At times the mills ran day and night, but it was Sunday evening, and they were still.
A few blocks west, the sheriffs entered Monroeâs downtown, a grid of paved streets containing banks, a department store, a hardware store, a pharmacy, and several restaurants. These were the standard establishments found in every county seat or trading center of the day, but Monroe had more to offer than most. It had two public libraries and two public swimming poolsâone for Coloredâas well as a city-owned ice plant, meat locker, and power and light system. Though a small town, with a population just under five thousand, Monroe boasted ten lawyers, fifteen doctors, and more than one hundred teachers. It was known throughout Georgia as a wealthy and progressive community, the first in the state to offer a groundbreaking public health-care program for both white and black citizens. And, as the birthplace of no fewer than six of the stateâs former chief executives, it had earned the nickname Mother of Governors.
Monroeâs prosperity was partly due to the continued success of Walton Countyâs farmers, who drove into town weekly to do their banking and buying. But it was also a result of its location as a midpoint on the highway that connected Atlanta, to the west, with Athens, to the northeast. Since its completion in 1939, the AtlantaâAthens highway had funneled tourists and businessmen through downtown Monroe, where they mingled with locals in the shadow of the town leadersâ pride and joy: a stately brick courthouse topped by an elegant four-sided clock tower. Recently, Monroe had also earned bragging rights with its new electric streetlamps, which were aglow as the sheriffs drove through town with Roger Malcom.
Earlier in the day, men, women, and children dressed in their Sunday best had filled the pews of Monroeâs thirty-six churches; the town fathers were proud to report that 95 percent of their citizens belonged to a church. After morning services, the streets emptied, and Sunday evenings, as a rule, were quiet. But on this Sunday evening, downtown was bustling. Groups of white men stood on the street corners and clustered around the Confederate memorial on the courthouse square. Some passed out pamphlets, signs, and bumper stickers; others gave impromptu speeches in support of Eugene Talmadge or James Carmichael. These were the two names on most Georgiansâ tongues that summer, the two lead candidates in the most hotly contested governorâs race in state history. It was July 14. The election would take place in just three days.
The sheriffs turned onto Washington Street, drove two blocks north of the courthouse, and parked in back of the two-story cinder-block jail. Deputy Sheriff Lewis Howard, who served as the county jailer, took Roger Malcom from the car and led him into the group cell on the jailâs first floor. After locking him in with two white prisonersâthe county jail wasnât segregated by raceâhe walked down the hallway leading to the adjoining brick house where he lived with his family and secured the heavy metal door behind him.
Across town late that Sunday night, two doctors left the operating room and met Barnette Hesterâs father and brothers in a corridor of the Walton County Hospital. They didnât have good news. The blade of Roger Malcomâs pocketknife had sliced through the upper region of Barnetteâs stomach, lacerating his intestine and puncturing his lung. The doctors had washed the protruding section of intestine and reconnected it. Then theyâd inserted a tube to drain the fluid in the lung.
The risk of infection was grave, the doctors said. They werenât sure Barnette would live out the week.
CHAPTER TWO
Earlier that Sunday, Roger Malcom had set off with Dorothy and his seventy-four-year-old grandmother, Dora Malcom, for the trip from their tenant house on the Hester farm to Brownâs Hill Baptist Church. The tiny frame church sat in a ravine at the edge of Hestertown, down from Union Chapel Methodist Church, where many of Hestertownâs white families worshiped. On their way to Brownâs Hill, the black people had to pass Union Chapel. As they did, their white landlords often yelled at them, saying they ought to be working in the fields instead of going to church. But it was just talk. No one, white or black, worked on Sunday.
Roger, Dorothy, and Dora Malcomâwhom Roger called Mama Doraâhad only been walking for a few minutes that morning when Mama Doraâs feet began to ache. She continued on along the path that led up the hill from the tenant house, but when she reached Hestertown Road, she stopped and said she couldnât go any farther.
As Mama Dora started back home, Dorothy left Rogerâs side and ran to join her. Roger asked Dorothy to stay with him. When she said no, he yelled at her. When she still refused, he turned and continued walking. âIâm going on without you,â he said. âI was going to leave you in the fall anyway.â
Roger Malcom was twenty-four years old and had lived in Hestertown since the day in 1924 when he and his parents moved onto the Malcom farm, which lay roughly a mile from the Hestersâ place. Soon after they arrived, Rogerâs father ran off with another woman. A year after that, his mother died. Mama Dora took two-year-old Roger and his sister on as her own children, and the Malcom family gave them their surname. Roger Malcomâs name at birth had been Roger Patterson, but few people in Hestertownâblack or whiteâknew that.
As a child, Roger had been treated kindly by his white landlords. In fact, some white people in Hestertown said the landlordâs wife had spoiled him by treating him too much like her own son. Heâd had to work in the cotton fields as soon as he could hold a croker sack, but heâd been allowed to play with the other black and white children in Hestertown, including Barnette Hester. That changed in 1931, when Barnetteâs older brother, Weldon, became the overseer at the Malcom farm and introduced nine-year-old Roger to the beatings and floggings that would be a regular feature of his life for the next fifteen years. One particularly brutal beating occurred on a day in 1937 when Weldon Hester threatened to whip Mama Dora for slacking in the fields. After Roger picked up a hoe to protect her, Weldon Hester attacked him instead. That day Roger fled to the town of Mansfield, in the next county south, but Weldon Hester found him and forced him to return to the farm. A few years later, Weldon Hester threw Coca-Cola bottles at Roger in the Hestertown store after he refused to haul wheat on a Sunday. Heâd have beaten Roger further if a few white men hadnât restrained him.
In 1943, at the age of twenty-one, Roger married Mattie Louise Mack, a young black woman heâd met one Sunday at Brownâs Hill Church. She left the farm in Hestertown where sheâd been working and moved in with him and Mama Dora on the Malcom place. In January 1944, she gave birth to a son named Roger Jr. Eighteen months later, when she ran off to Atlanta, Roger had already met Dorothy Dorsey. She moved in with him and Mama Dora and, despite the fact that Roger and Mattie Louise were still legally married, began calling herself Mrs. Roger Malcom.
Then, in December 1945, Weldon Hester informed Roger and Dorothy that theyâd have to move off the Malcom place; heâd rented out the farmland and no longer required their labor in the fields. Luckily, Barnette Hester needed hands on the Hester family farm down the road. So Roger and Dorothy loaded up a wagon with furniture and moved into the tenant house that sat down the hill from Hestertown Road. Since January, Barnette Hester had paid Roger by the day for his fieldwork and paid Dorothy by the week for cleaning, cooking, and helping to care for his two young children. Roger and Dorothy also had a cotton patch on the Hester place. Theyâd planned to use the proceeds from the sale of that cottonâminus what they owed Barnette Hester for rent, seeds, and fertilizerâto get to Chicago, where Rogerâs sister had moved. But lately Roger had begun to consider going to Chicago alone. And after Dorothy turned back, he had one more reason to do so.
In fact, he was so angry after Dorothy left that morning that, instead of walking to Brownâs Hill, he walked to a nearby farm to buy a jar of bootleg liquor, then took the liquor to a friendâs house and started drinking and talking about his troubles. The more he drank, the angrier he got. Finally he told his friend that Dorothy was running around on him. âShe is going with a white man as sure as youâre born,â he said.
Roger Malcomâs friend wasnât surprised by this revelation. Earlier in the summer, heâd seen Dorothy curse at Weldon Hester on the road, and when Weldon Hester didnât retaliateâdidnât beat her, didnât even threaten to beat herâheâd immediately suspected they were having sexual relations. Other black people in Hestertown believed Dorothy was having sex with Barnette Hesterânot Weldon Hester. They claimed they had relations while sh...