The Westside Gazette

Two Little Angels History Tried to Forget

(AI generated photo)

The Story of Emma and Lillie Mike Still Cries Out From Georgia Soil

        There are some stories in American history so painful that time itself seems to try to bury them. Yet truth has a way of rising — even through ashes, silence, and generations of neglect.

Such is the story of Emma Mike and Lillie Mike, two little Black girls whose lives were stolen in Calhoun County, Georgia, in 1884 during one of America’s many acts of racial terror. One child was reportedly only six years old. The other was just four.

Children.

Not soldiers.

Not criminals.

Children.

According to historical research documented by the  Equal Justice Initiative, a white mob attacked the home of Calvin Mike near Edison, Georgia. Reports indicate the mob fired into the home before setting it ablaze. Calvin Mike and his wife escaped, but Emma and Lillie — along with an elderly relative — perished in the flames.

For decades, their names were nearly lost to history.

No known photographs of the little girls have surfaced. No treasured family portrait sits in a museum. No carefully preserved scrapbook tells their story. Like so many Black families of that era, poverty, racism, fear, and deliberate historical erasure combined to make their lives nearly invisible to the broader American narrative.

But invisible does not mean forgotten.

Today, their names are memorialized through the work of the  National Memorial for Peace and Justice in Montgomery — a sacred space honoring thousands of victims of racial terror lynchings throughout America.

What makes this story especially haunting is not simply the brutality. It is the age of the victims. In a nation that often speaks proudly about protecting innocence, history reminds us that Black innocence was too often denied recognition.

Researchers note there are conflicting historical accounts surrounding the attack. Some newspapers of the era attempted to justify the violence through accusations against the family, while other historians and researchers suggest Calvin Mike may have been targeted because of his political participation during Reconstruction-era racial tensions. Regardless of the excuses offered by history, nothing can justify the deaths of children.

The story of Emma and Lillie Mike forces America to confront uncomfortable truths:

How many stories were buried?

How many names were erased?

How many Black children disappeared into history without justice, memorials, or even photographs?

And perhaps most importantly:

What does remembrance require of us now?

At a time when conversations about race, history, education, and truth continue to divide America, stories like this remind us why historical memory matters. Not to create guilt — but to create understanding. Not to divide — but to ensure humanity is never again stripped from any people.

The Westside Gazette believes these stories deserve to be told because silence has never healed injustice. Truth telling matters.

Emma Mike.

Lillie Mike.

Two little girls.

Two little angels.

And a reminder that even forgotten history still speaks.

 

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