Much of downtown Rolling Fork remains destroyed following the deadly March 24 tornado.
Members of the Jackson-based Israel United in Christ Church march past a Smith County Sheriff's Deputy in Taylorsville, Mississippi.
Historian Lance Wheeler, one of the organizers of the bus tour that brought 50 pre-law students to civil rights sights across the Mississippi Delta, describes what remains of the Bryant family's grocery and meat market to the students.
Just a few blocks east of downtown Rolling Fork is now a large grass clearing strewn with family mementos and household appliances. Dozens of homes were destroyed during the March tornado, displacing nearly 200 families.
Dozens of residents gathered outside the Lexington Municipal Courthouse in protest of what they call a culture of abusive policing.
A white board directory in Rolling Fork's temporary mobile hospital.
Mississippi Gov. Tate Reeves announcing his re-election bid to a crowd of supporters at Stribling Equipment.
Two students from Jackson discuss Emmitt Till’s legacy among the ruins of the Bryant grocery store in Money, Mississippi.
Nearly 200 members of the Israel United in Christ Church marched on Taylorsville, Mississippi May 1 in support of Rasheem Carter's family.
A resident of nearby Mayersville, Daryl drives 15-minutes to Rolling Fork's mobile hospital once a week for cancer treatment.
The tornado destroyed neighborhoods and much of Rolling Fork's businesses, including here, where a demolition crew is clearing what used to be the town florist to it's foundation.
(From left) Betty Cameron, Damien’s grandmother, Chloe Cheyenne, founder of COMMUNITYx, Monica Lee Cameron, Damien’s mother, and Cornelius Cameron, Damien’s brother, speak at a press conference in West Jackson June 22 demanding more transparency into his death.
Rolling Fork's downtown district, once defined by local businesses housed in historic brick buildings, is now all but abandoned.