Denise Jackson Ford attends Emmy Awards ceremony following nomination of ‘American Reckoning’ — the film about her father’s unsolved murder
By ROSCOE BARNES III
NATCHEZ, Miss. — Denise Jackson Ford, daughter of slain
civil rights leader, Wharlest Jackson Sr., recently travelled to New York to
participate in the 44th Annual News & Documentary Emmy Awards ceremony for
documentaries that included PBS Frontline’s “American Reckoning.”
The PBS program, which featured the story of Wharlest
Jackson’s murder, aired on Tuesday, Feb. 15, 2022. It did not win an Emmy, but
Ford said she was happy that it was nominated, and her participation was a good
experience.
“Back in July of 2023, notifications were received from
Brad Lichtenstein, president and producer of 371 Productions that our
documentary film, ‘American Reckoning’ had been nominated for a News and
Documentary Emmy in the category of ‘Outstanding Historical Documentary,’ Ford
said.
“I had the privilege to accompany the team in New York on
September 28 to be amongst the crowd of highly performed documentarians,
finalists, and writers as well as producers.”
The awards ceremony was held at the Palladium Times
Square in New York City. HBO Max’s “Hostages” won the Emmy in the “Outstanding
Historical Documentary” category. Others in the running were CNN’s “Watergate:
Blueprint for a Scandal,” Netflix’s “Meltdown: Three Mile Island,” and PBS’
“Waterman – Duke: Ambassador of Aloha.”
Ford said it was an honor to know that they made it to
the nomination list for “such a great, prestigious award.” “I commend Brad
Lichtenstein and Yoruba Richen, Stanley Nelson, along with the PBS Production
team for the work, time and efforts put into this documentary to make history
for our family,” Ford said.
“American Reckoning” was directed by Lichtenstein
and Richen. The film is a feature-length documentary that tells the story of
Wharlest Jackson Sr. and his murder in the Feb. 27, 1967, bombing of his truck
by the Ku Klux Klan on Minor Street in Natchez. Jackson was the treasurer for
the Natchez Branch of the NAACP. The Klan killed him, reportedly, because of
his promotion to a job at Armstrong Tire and Rubber Company that had
traditionally gone to white employees.
After multiple investigations, no one
was ever held accountable for Jackson’s murder. The film presents new research
as it chronicles the lives of Jackson’s family in their search for justice and
for answers.
As noted by Frontline, “American
Reckoning” presents “an extraordinary look at the civil rights era – the
violence and resistance – through rare footage filmed more than 50-years ago in
Natchez, Mississippi, and the still-unresolved killing of local NAACP leader
Wharlest Jackson.”
The film, Frontline notes, “examines Black opposition to
racist violence in Mississippi, spotlighting a little-known armed resistance
group called the Deacons for Defense and Justice, woven alongside the Jackson
family’s decades-long search for justice amid the ongoing federal effort to
investigate civil rights era cold cases.”
In addition to Ford and her brother, Wharlest Jackson
Jr., the film features Ser Seshsh Ab Heter-Clifford M. Boxley, and Stanley
Nelson, author of two books on the Klan. “American Reckoning” can be viewed for
free online.
The Emmy awards program honors programming content from
over 2,300 submissions that originally premiered in calendar-year 2022,
according to the program’s website. It noted the submissions are “judged by a
pool of over 1,000 peer professionals from across the television and
streaming/digital media news and documentary industry.”
Leave a Reply