Dynamite Nashville: The Fbi, the Kkk, and the Bombers Beyond Their Control

Betsy Phillips

Book cover for Dynamite Nashville: The Fbi, the Kkk, and the Bombers Beyond Their Control
Book cover for Dynamite Nashville: The Fbi, the Kkk, and the Bombers Beyond Their Control

Dynamite Nashville: The Fbi, the Kkk, and the Bombers Beyond Their Control

Dynamite Nashville: The Fbi, the Kkk, and the Bombers Beyond Their Control

Betsy Phillips

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Description

On September 10, 1957, Hattie Cotton Elementary School in Nashville, Tennessee, blew up. On March 16, 1958, the Jewish Community Center was bombed. On April 19, 1960, the home of Civil Rights attorney and Nashville city councilman, Z. Alexander Looby was dynamited. He and his wife were lucky to escape with their lives. These bombings have never been solved. In fact, many in Nashville don't even know they're connected. In Dynamite Nashville, Betsy Phillips pieces together what really happened in Nashville at the dawn of the Civil Rights Movement. It has national implications for how we understand the violent white response to desegregation efforts and white supremacist actions now. Just as Nashville was where Civil Rights icons like John Lewis, James Lawson, and Diane Nash got their start, it turns out that Nashville is also where a network of racial terrorists began experimenting with using dynamite against integrationists and the Civil Rights Movement. Worse, in Nashville, we see how the differing agendas of local police and the FBI allowed these bombers to escape prosecution until decades later, if at all. J.B. Stoner, perhaps best known as one of James Earl Ray's attorneys, brought together Klansmen disillusioned with the Klan's unwillingness to sanction violence and racists unaffiliated with any particular group and provided them the training and support they'd need to commit acts of terrorism throughout the South. Members of this network committed at least twenty bombings between 1957 and 1963, when the bombing of the 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, Alabama, which killed four little girls (a bombing for which Stoner allegedly provided the dynamite), forced tighter dynamite regulations, making it hard for the network to get their hands on the stuff. Dynamite Nashville, then, is a prequel to the racist violence of the 1960s, the story of how these bombers came together to learn how to terrorize communities, to blow up homes, schools, and religious buildings, and to escape any meaningful justice.

About the Author

Betsy Phillips has written for the Nashville Scene and the Washington Post. Her fiction has appeared in the Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction and Apex Magazine, among others. She was named 2019 Best Historian in the Best of Nashville edition of the Nashville Scene and serves on the board of Historic Nashville, Inc. She lives in Whites Creek, Tennessee.

Critical Reviews

"This book astonished me. Dynamite Nashville is rigorously researched and reported, and its findings are scrupulously documented....The relentless facts combined with an almost confessional narrative strategy brings history into the present moment in a visceral way."

-- Margaret Renkl, New York Times

"You don't know the South, or America's dark soul--until you've read Dynamite Nashville. Betsy Phillips' true stories tell us who we are. Her unique voice--personal, funny and tragic--should be listened to and savored."

--Former U.S. Representative Jim Cooper

"Phillips' patience, attention to detail, and dogged determination have provided us with a work that not only describes these events in sharp detail but names the villains responsible for these cowardly actions and in many instances the villains who allowed them to fade into obscurity."

--Dr. Learotha Williams, Jr., Editor of I'll Take You There

"New book sparks investigation into unsolved bombings from Nashville's desegregation years. Nashville police are reopening the investigations into three unsolved Civil Rights era bombings a local author believes were perpetrated by a network of racist terrorists in the South while the FBI turned a blind eye. Mayor Freddie O'Connell announced July 13 that he asked the Metro Nashville Police Department to assign an investigator in the department's cold case unit to lead investigations into the bombings of Hattie Cotton Elementary School, the Jewish Community Center and the home of city council member and prominent civil rights attorney Z. Alexander Looby between 1957 and 1960."

--The Tennessean

Publishing Information

Publisher: Third Man Books
Pub date: 2024-07-16
Length: 360 pages

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