lynched. and his body was dismembered, and it was thrown into the tal hatchy river, and eventually it was discovered and it was horrific. what was fished up was horrific. and it was designed to -- well, it was designed to make a statement. is and that statement was if you attempt to vote, you will lose your life. and so it seemed then that that was going to hold -- except by 1960, there's a new generation of people coming along, and they're going to try again. they're going to try to vote. and most of these folks were share croppers. again, ordinary people. but these were share croppers who said, we want the right to vote. and unfortunately, if you're a sharecropper and you try to vote in haywood county or fayette county, tennessee, the landowner can come in and say, you know, get off my land. if you want to try to vote, you're not going to work here. you're not going to be a sharecropper any longer. and at that point, about three black landowners, two in haywood county, one in fayette county, at considerable risk to themselves, allowed these share croppers who had been kicked off the various proper