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Bertha Green Coleman Photo Credit: Dr. Antoinette Harrell |
Bertha is one of nine children born to Aldophus and Ella Corean Jackson Green in St. Helena, Louisiana, in 1931. She recalled a specific event that happened to her brother in 1956 in Amite, Louisiana. Bertha was at her mother's house when she received the news about her brother Hammondee Green's death. The tragedy is encoded in her memory forever. Eighty-nine years old Bertha can't erase how her brother died in Amite, Louisiana.
"He was home on a furlough when it all started, " said Bertha. My brother wouldn't say yes'mam and no' mam. He went into the cleaners to get his clothes, and this is where it all started, she said. It wasn't until he came home from the services that things got worse.
For the first time sent, he was killed in 1956, his only living sister Bertha, his grandchildren, great-grandchildren, and nieces and nephews gathered to commemorate this death. They placed flowers on his grave and talked about some of the things they heard some of the older folks in the community said.
His family members were dressed in royal blue tee shirts with white carnation flowers to lay on his grave. Some with tears rolling their eyes and other faces that reflect the pain they feel just knowing that their ancestors were brutally murdered. His grandson said my grandfather put his life on the line for this county, only to come home and be killed.
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"I didn't get a chance to meet my grandfather," said Robert Jackson. He did a chance to meet his great-grandchildren. Robert and his nephew wrote a poem for their grandfather. Everyone was silent and listened to what was being said. Major Colman, Jr. noted that people in the community told him how they were told the story. We're here today because of what some of our family members had to go through said Coleman.