Former Shelby County sheriff and mayor William Noel "Bill" Morris discusses his new book, "Bill Morris: A Legendary Life," at Novel Memphis. (Photo by Wiley Henry) |
Jim
McCarter sat quietly in a packed room thumbing through a recently published
book that he’d purchased at Novel Memphis minutes before the author’s 6 p.m.
book talk and signing Thursday, March 28.
While
waiting on the former Shelby County sheriff and mayor William Noel “Bill”
Morris to address the capacity crowd, an age-old photograph on page 181 in the
book, “Bill Morris: A Legendary Life,” caught McCarter’s attention.
“That’s my picture. I had to look at it closely,” said McCarter, who’d granted Morris permission to use the
vintage photograph. “I showed the picture to Bill and he said he wanted to use
it in the book.”
Morris is seen interviewing the owner of Canipe's Amusement Company in 1968 minutes after Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was killed. (Courtesy photo) |
McCarter
was pleasantly surprised that Morris had actually used the photograph.
The black and white photograph captures the moment in time when a
bundle – wrapped in a bedspread and containing an overnight bag, binoculars,
suitcase, and the rifle that James Earl Ray had reportedly used to kill Dr.
Martin Luther King Jr. – was discovered at the entryway of Canipe’s Amusement
Company at 424 South Main St.
Morris can be seen through the plate-glass window questioning the
owner of the amusement company, Mr. Guy Canipe, which was next door to the
boarding house and one street over from The Lorraine Motel on Mulberry where
the shot rang out.
McCarter said he was around 17 or so when the photograph was snapped
in 1968, minutes after a young sheriff Morris made the scene. McCarter would
eventually become Canipe’s son-in-law after marrying his daughter.
The aforementioned photograph, along with the widely published
photograph of Morris escorting the accused handcuffed assassin to jail, catapulted
the young sheriff into the national spotlight.
Even so, Morris encouraged the audience to read the book rather
than provide them with too many details.
The book was published by Legacies in Print on Jan. 1. It is loaded
with historical accounts and information on Morris’ exploits in government – as
sheriff when pandemonium erupted after Dr. King’s death, and when he was the four-term
Shelby County mayor.
The book also includes Morris and community stakeholders, decision
makers, pioneers and legends, including his friend Elvis Presley. Add to that Morris’
affiliations, civic involvement, and his role as an unofficial ambassador for
the city of Memphis.
“The last 60 years…there
has been a lot of history,” said Morris, explaining his reasons for penning his
autobiography. “Some of the history should be recorded differently than [what
was covered in] the media.”
Morris pointed out that the arduous writing project began several
years ago in his mind before meeting his co-writer, Darrell B. Uselton, who
transcribed 268 recordings before working with Morris on his 400-plus-page
autobiography.
“It was a little over two years in the process and sometime before
that,” Uselton said matter-of-factly. In addition to the writing, the book is
punctuated with more era photographs than the ones with Ray that made Morris a
household name.
Just to give the audience even more of a peep into the book,
Morris dropped a few names, including the infamous mayor Edward Hull “Boss”
Crump. Crump – “not Trump,” he joked – built a political machine that dominated
Memphis and Tennessee politics for decades.
“Mr. Boss Crump was one of the most marvelous persons I ever met,”
he said. “He was good to me.”
The name Richard C. “Dick” Hackett kept coming up in Morris’
discussion about his work in government. He said he and Hackett had often
traveled together to bring business to Memphis and Shelby County.
“We were successful, because we worked hard,” said Morris. “We
believed Memphis could be better.”
As a result of their
efforts, he added, “I think the community is working better than we ever had
compared to Washington.”
“Bill
Morris: A Legendary Life” is an important read for those with an appetite for
history and compassion for one man’s journey from Itawamba County, Mississippi,
to Memphis, where his enduring legacy is anchored.
He
eventually raised himself up from the depths of adverse poverty to become an
important figure in the political and historic annals of Memphis and Shelby
County.
“It’s
the best I can do to tell the truth,” Morris said. “You can’t write an
autobiography unless you tell the truth.”
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