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==History== The heavily wooded swamp along the Tallahatchie River was historically part of the [[Choctaw]] Nation, one of the [[Five Civilized Tribes]] of the Southeast. Ceding large amounts of territory to the United States, they were forced to remove to [[Indian Territory]] in the 1830s under the [[Indian Removal Act]]. Afterward the US government sold the lands to European-American families. Among the early settlers were the Sumner family. The bottomland was covered by trees, vines, and underbrush when the pioneers started clearing the land for agriculture. The wealthiest men developed their property through the labor of enslaved African Americans. Their work on cotton plantations produced the commodity crop that was the basis of the economy for decades. Sumner was not incorporated until 1900; it was named after its founder and first mayor, [[Joseph Burton Sumner]]. In 1902 the county was divided into two districts, on either side of the Tallahatchie River, which was a barrier to cross-county transportation. [[Charleston, Mississippi|Charleston]] was the original county seat, located east of the river in the first area of European-American settlement. Sumner was designated as the seat of the western district. The [[Tallahatchie County Courthouse]] in Sumner was built in 1902 on a lot donated by Joseph B. Sumner, who also donated the lot for the jail. The courthouse burned in 1908 and was rebuilt in 1909. Cotton continued to be the major commodity crop of the area well into the 20th century. The county seat also served as the market town for that district. This courthouse was the site of the September 1955 murder trial of two white men, [[J.W. Milam]] and [[Roy Bryant]], charged in the [[lynching]] and murder of [[Emmett Till]] that year in adjoining Leflore County. (His beaten and mutilated body was found on the bank of the river in Tallahatchie County, so the trial was held here.) The two men were acquitted by an all-male, [[all-white jury]] of the murder of Till, a teenage [[African-American]] boy from [[Chicago]]. The brutality of his murder and the acquittal of the men generated outrage and activism in the nation. He became an icon of the Civil Rights Movement and a symbol of the violent persecution suffered by blacks in the South.{{citation needed|date=November 2024}} In 1990, the courthouse was designated as a state landmark by the [[Mississippi Department of Archives and History]]. In 2007 the Tallahatchie Board of Supervisors appointed the Emmett Till Memorial Commission to explore commemoration of Till and reconciliation in the area. It made a formal apology to the Till family for their son's lynching. In addition, it undertook to restore the Sumner County Courthouse and adapt it as the site of an interpretive center to commemorate Emmett Till. The center opened in 2012 and is sponsoring a variety of art and historical workshops and events.<ref name="commission">[http://www.jacksonfreepress.com/news/2015/aug/26/till-interpretive-center-seeks-rewrite-civil-right/ Maya Miller, "Till Interpretive Center Seeks to Rewrite Civil Rights Narrative"], ''Jackson Free Press'', August 26, 2015; accessed February 27, 2017</ref>
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