Samuel Worsham Beauchamp
As he tells the census taker, to whom he identifies himself by his real name, Samuel Worsham Beauchamp was "born in the country near Jefferson, Mississippi" (256). Like well over a million rural black southerners by the 1930s, he has relocated to the urban north. According to him, his "occupation" in Chicago before he shot and killed a policeman was "getting rich too fast" (256); according to Gavin Stevens, he was a criminal involved in the numbers racket. Gavin calls him "Butch Beauchamp" (258), and is the source for most of the other information the story provides about him: how he was raised by his grandmother after his mother died in childbirth and his father deserted him; how he was kicked off the McCaslin-Edmonds' place after being caught breaking into the plantation store; how he lived for a year in Jefferson "gambling and fighting" (258) before attacking the policeman who catches him breaking into a local store; how he broke out of jail and fled from the county. According to the narrator, in the brief firsthand account he provides of the character, Beauchamp is a flamboyant dresser (his "Hollywood clothes" are probably a zoot suit), with "treated" hair, eyes that "had seen too much" and a voice that was "deliberately and consistently not Southern" (257). The narrator presents him as hardened and indifferent to his imminent execution. Stevens blames "some seed" he inherited from "the father who begot him," "not only violent but bad" (258). His grandmother, Mollie, explains his life with a scriptural parallel, blaming his misfortune on Roth Edmonds, the white landowner who, she says, "sold him into Egypt" when he chased him off the plantation (258).
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