Twenty-first century attempts to commemorate the 1955 lynching of Emmett Till have been met with persistent vandalism. Born in direct response to that vandalism, the Emmett Till Memory Project is a website and mobile application that preserves the sites and stories of the Till lynching. The ETMP uses GPS technology to take users to the most important sites in the Till story. At each site, the project provides expert-vetted narratives, access to archival documents, and historic photographs. The ETMP teaches users what happened at each site in 1955 and how the sites have been commemorated. By telling Till’s story from the perspective of each site, the project encourages users to wrestle with different versions of Till’s story and think critically about how it has been passed on.
The project has the express endorsement of the Till family. Although Professor Tell continues to maintain the project, he has handed control and ownership of the project to the Emmett Till Memorial Commission, a biracial nonprofit in the Mississippi Delta. 100% of donations generated by the ETMP go to the nonprofit.
Project News
Marvar, Alexandra. “Remembering Slain Teen Emmett Till in His Hometown of Chicago via Civil Rights Tourism and a Mobile App.” Chicago Tribune, August 27, 2020. .
Remembering Emmett Till: From Chicago to Mississippi, Connecting Visitors with Location-Based History (n.d.). Institute of Museum and Library Services. Retrieved March 5, 2021, from
The Emmett Till Memory Project. (n.d.). Retrieved March 3, 2021, from
Tell, D. (n.d.). Commentary: Protecting the memory of Emmett Till from the scourge of vandals. Chicagotribune.Com. Retrieved March 3, 2021, from