Bryant's Grocery & Meat Market

Historical landmark · Leflore County

Bryant's Grocery & Meat Market

Historical landmark · Leflore County

2

Money Rd, Greenwood, MS 38930

Photos

Bryant's Grocery & Meat Market by null
Bryant's Grocery & Meat Market by WhisperToMe/Public Domain
Bryant's Grocery & Meat Market by magda8 (Atlas Obscura User)
Bryant's Grocery & Meat Market by leslipeterson (Atlas Obscura User)
Bryant's Grocery & Meat Market by Eames Heard/CC BY 4.0
Bryant's Grocery & Meat Market by Eames Heard/CC BY 4.0
Bryant's Grocery & Meat Market by magda8 (Atlas Obscura User)
Bryant's Grocery & Meat Market by WhisperToMe/Public Domain
Bryant's Grocery & Meat Market by Eames Heard/CC BY 4.0
Bryant's Grocery & Meat Market by Eames Heard/CC BY 4.0
Bryant's Grocery & Meat Market by leslipeterson (Atlas Obscura User)
Bryant's Grocery & Meat Market by null
Bryant's Grocery & Meat Market by null
Bryant's Grocery & Meat Market by null
Bryant's Grocery & Meat Market by null
Bryant's Grocery & Meat Market by null
Bryant's Grocery & Meat Market by null
Bryant's Grocery & Meat Market by null
Bryant's Grocery & Meat Market by null
Bryant's Grocery & Meat Market by null
Bryant's Grocery & Meat Market by null
Bryant's Grocery & Meat Market by null
Bryant's Grocery & Meat Market by null
Bryant's Grocery & Meat Market by null
Bryant's Grocery & Meat Market by null
Bryant's Grocery & Meat Market by null
Bryant's Grocery & Meat Market by null
Bryant's Grocery & Meat Market by null
Bryant's Grocery & Meat Market by null
Bryant's Grocery & Meat Market by null

Highlights

Bryant’s Grocery, a crumbling relic steeped in civil rights history, serves as a poignant reminder of the past and the violence that ignited change.  

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Money Rd, Greenwood, MS 38930 Get directions

emmett-till.org

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Money Rd, Greenwood, MS 38930 Get directions

+1 662 483 0048
emmett-till.org

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Last updated

Mar 5, 2025

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@atlasobscura

"Bryant’s Grocery and Meat Market is far from a monument. Slim, moldering, and open to the elements, the structure looks ripe for demolition. At one time, the building was a general store, selling dime candy and basic provisions. Today, a plaque outside the decaying structure explains its history: In August 1955, a white shopkeeper accused 14-year-old Emmett Till, who was black, of flirting with her. In response to the accusation, he was kidnapped, tortured, and murdered. It was a sickening act of violence that helped spark the civil rights movement. The sign outside the store was erected in 2011, to mark the 50th anniversary of the 1961 Freedom Rides. It’s part of the Mississippi Freedom trail, 25 historical sites commemorated by the State of Mississippi for their importance to the civil rights movement. Some of these spaces, such as the Mississippi State Penitentiary, where wardens subjected imprisoned Freedom Riders to abuse, are as unsettling as Bryant’s Grocery, their legacies of human misery and cruelty far removed from the grandiosity of a monument. Some, like the University of Mississippi—where in 1962, James Meredith challenged segregation to become the college’s first black student—are vibrant and living. All challenge us to face pivotal moments in history, including those we may rather forget.  This is in line with what Emmett Till’s mother requested after her son’s death. Till had been visiting Mississippi from Chicago at the time of his murder. Afterward, his mother requested that his body be returned to her for his funeral. The white assailants had mutilated the 14 year old beyond recognition, but Mamie Elizabeth Till-Mobley asked for an open casket. “I think everybody needed to know what had happened to Emmett Till,” she was later quoted as saying. There were 50,000 attendees at Till’s funeral; thousands more saw the picture of his body in the national press. Till’s killers had been acquitted of all charges, but Mamie Till-Mobley’s courage made the country pay attention. Today, the abandoned grocery reminds visitors not to forget. Its ugliness and dilapidation refuse to sanitize history; its persistent mark on the landscape refuses to erase it. It forces us to look." - ATLAS_OBSCURA

10 Places to Remember the Impact of the Civil Rights Movement
View Postcard for Bryant's Grocery & Meat Market
@atlasobscura

"Bryant’s Grocery and Meat Market is far from a monument. Slim, moldering, and open to the elements, the structure looks ripe for demolition. At one time, the building was a general store, selling dime candy and basic provisions. Today, a plaque outside the decaying structure explains its history: In August 1955, a white shopkeeper accused 14-year-old Emmett Till, who was black, of flirting with her. In response to the accusation, he was kidnapped, tortured, and murdered. It was a sickening act of violence that helped spark the civil rights movement. The sign outside the store was erected in 2011, to mark the 50th anniversary of the 1961 Freedom Rides. It’s part of the Mississippi Freedom trail, 25 historical sites commemorated by the State of Mississippi for their importance to the civil rights movement. Some of these spaces, such as the Mississippi State Penitentiary, where wardens subjected imprisoned Freedom Riders to abuse, are as unsettling as Bryant’s Grocery, their legacies of human misery and cruelty far removed from the grandiosity of a monument. Some, like the University of Mississippi—where in 1962, James Meredith challenged segregation to become the college’s first black student—are vibrant and living. All challenge us to face pivotal moments in history, including those we may rather forget.  This is in line with what Emmett Till’s mother requested after her son’s death. Till had been visiting Mississippi from Chicago at the time of his murder. Afterward, his mother requested that his body be returned to her for his funeral. The white assailants had mutilated the 14 year old beyond recognition, but Mamie Elizabeth Till-Mobley asked for an open casket. “I think everybody needed to know what had happened to Emmett Till,” she was later quoted as saying. There were 50,000 attendees at Till’s funeral; thousands more saw the picture of his body in the national press. Till’s killers had been acquitted of all charges, but Mamie Till-Mobley’s courage made the country pay attention. Today, the abandoned grocery reminds visitors not to forget. Its ugliness and dilapidation refuse to sanitize history; its persistent mark on the landscape refuses to erase it. It forces us to look." - ATLAS_OBSCURA

An American Civil Rights Tour
View Postcard for Bryant's Grocery & Meat Market

Ariel King

Google
In my years studying history, nothing I learned was more profoundly disgusting or sad to me than what happened to Emmett Till. Like for most decent people at the time, it broke my heart and enraged me and made me want to learn more about this incident and the change this crime sparked in society that ultimately became the Civil Rights movement. I just want to go ahead and say that, as a white woman, I don’t think that my opinion on what happens to this building should hold any weight. It is for Emmett Till’s family and leaders in the black community in this area to decide what would best honor him and his legacy. I will say that for me, visiting the location and setting where this tragedy unfolded was enlightening. I obviously knew it was rural but being here and seeing the isolation of this place, it’s easy to see how this violent senseless murder was allowed to happen and that it very likely would have faded into obscurity if circumstances had been different for Emmett and Mamie Till. If they had been residents of this area and Mamie had to live amongst these people in this tiny town in the middle of nowhere governed by Jim Crow and not justice or logic, we may have never known about this heinous crime. In 1955, it would have been unlikely that the case would have made national headlines if it had involved a local individual. Seeing the area for myself, it made me wonder how many times this was allowed to happen to people here and in tiny rural communities like this all across the south. It is heartbreaking to think how many times something like this happened to children like Emmett for absolutely nothing and that we will never know their names and stories because they have been lost to history due to racism, corruption, and intimidation of victims’ families and witnesses. I think that the store, which is undeniably a historic location, being left to decay and crumble right next to another abandoned store that, according to the 1993 calendar hanging on the back wall, has been unused and unoccupied for almost 30 years is pretty eye opening. The sign marking the Bryant store’s location was only erected in 2011 and a statue for Emmett Till was just erected a week ago, October 2022, in nearby Greenwood, MS. (It is lovely by the way and a long overdue memorial, I highly recommend stopping to see it.) But prior to this, nobody cared to mark this location or honor Emmett in any way, much less preserve the building. Other historical markers related to Emmett Till’s murder and the trial in the area have been riddled with bullet holes and defaced repeatedly until they finally had to put up a bullet proof sign… to protect a historical marker for a 14-year-old victim of a violent hate crime from being shot and destroyed, which absolutely blows my mind. All of these signs were erected since 2008 and one is now a part of the Smithsonian’s collection. I think that, if nothing else, this dilapidated shell of a building just serves as another testament to the fact that when people act like the tragedy that occurred here is ancient history, they couldn’t be more wrong. The community hasn’t cared to do anything to honor the child that was tortured and killed as a result of what happened here in the last 67 years. They didn’t care enough to preserve it, they didn’t care enough to demolish it and put something beautiful in this spot in Emmett Till’s memory, they didn’t care enough to do anything at all. But several people within the last 15 years have cared enough to destroy historical markers and that store next door still is in good enough condition that we weren’t able to determine whether it was still in business or not. I would be happy to see whatever done to the site that the Till family and those working to honor Emmett’s legacy see fit, but this longwinded explanation is why I think visiting the location is worthwhile even in its current condition. Seeing this place and the area where it is located with my own two eyes provided context for me that my textbooks never could have accurately conveyed.

Andy Chandler

Google
I think it's sad that the descendants have been so upitty with trying to hold onto the place.

Jus wavvy

Google
A horrible tragedy that began right in this store should be restored and preserved. what exactly was said in this store will never be known and doesn’t justify what happened to Emmet till may he rest in paradise 👼🏾🪽your story makes me feel sadness and anger how could they be soo brutal to a 14 year old.

Kaidensean

Google
This will always be the most horrific murder of all time. i wish someone had the courage to give them the treatment they afforded Emmett a child!! they admitted to the world what they did and no one did anything. I hope they are in hell with all the jury who found them not guilty!! We don’t need this raggedy structure to know what happened. They don’t deserve no $ 4 million for it either. Dance in Heaven Mr. Emmett!!!

DAngelo Spencer

Google
To stand where the Emmitt Till murder started was so overwhelming.

Yusuf Johnson

Google
I highly disagree with people who say that this site should be torn down. If anything it should be restored and preserved. Those who don't remember the past are doomed to repeat it. We need the site of this tragedy to be remembered so that as people try to act as though this happened hundreds of years ago, they will remember that this took place within a lot of people's lifetime that is still alive today.

Juanita Razor

Google
These pictures shows what is left of this store. This is the place where Emmett Till encountered Mrs. Bryant (the white woman who accused him of being inappropriate).

Ramona Liggins

Google
Good afternoon everyone, I am from Greenville Mississippi and I never knew Money Mississippi was a real place until I heard and watch Mr. Emmett Till. Just so happened I was able to take my kids to see that place ( store) last weekend. We even cross the river where they throw him in. It was hard I was afraid but I knew I had to go for myself. I wish the store was burn to the ground but , then nobody else will get to see what they did to Emmett. How they stole a baby's life a mother's heart a family's soul away. So it was a good thing I went but also a hard thing. God Bless y'all and Mr. Emmett Till and Mama Till.