Eddie Cook

Age 53

A Black grandfather who stopped for coffee

Detroit, Michigan

November 7, 1965

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Eddie Cook was killed in a drive-by shooting near his home in Detroit before dawn on Sunday, Nov. 7, 1965. The 53-year-old city sanitation worker had stopped in the area for coffee after spending the night with friends, according to a witness and one of Cook’s daughters. Cook, who was Black, was wounded in the chest by a shotgun blast from a passing car that carried four or five young white men, local newspapers and newswires reported at the time. 

The car, a two-tone blue Oldsmobile, sped from the scene. Cook died in the hospital within an hour.

Initial Investigation

In the days that followed Cook’s death, police combed Detroit for clues. Police Commissioner Ray Girardin theorized Cook may have been shot accidentally in a fight between gangs, one white and one Black, according to local newspapers. 

As community leaders urged calm, then-mayor Jerome Cavanagh condemned the crime as “reprehensible and terrible” and expressed confidence that police would catch Cook’s killers, the Detroit Free Press reported. Members of Cook’s union also offered a $500 reward. 

Yet more than 1,000 hours of investigation failed to produce “a single good lead,” homicide detectives told the press nearly three weeks after the killing. Police had interviewed 30 to 40 young people who claimed to have information about the murder, “but in each case we find they were simply shooting off their mouths,” one detective said. “Something about this case seems to lead young people to boast they know who did it.”

Till Act Status

Cook’s death first appeared on a list of civil rights era cases being investigated by the Department of Justice in 2019. 

According to a Department of Justice report made public after FRONTLINE’s publication, this case has been closed.

Case Status open**This case has been closed since FRONTLINE's original publication.

Themes

  • Men
  • Open Cases

About the Project

This multiplatform investigation draws upon more than two years of reporting, thousands of documents and dozens of first-hand interviews. FRONTLINE spoke to family and friends of the victims, and witnesses, some of whom had never been interviewed; current and former Justice Department officials and FBI agents, state and local law enforcement; lawmakers, civil-rights leaders and investigative journalists, to explore the Department of Justice’s reopening of civil rights-era cold cases under the 2008 Emmett Till Unsolved Civil Rights Crime Act.

In addition to an examination of the federal effort, the project features the first comprehensive, interactive list of all those whose cases were reopened by the Department of Justice. Today, the list stands at 151 names. Among the victims: voting rights advocates, veterans, Louisville’s first female prosecutor, business owners, mothers, fathers, and children.

The project consists of a web-based interactive experience, serialized podcast, a touring augmented-reality exhibit, documentary and companion education curriculum for high schools and universities.

A project like Un(re)solved would not be possible without the historic and contemporary contributions of universities, civil rights groups, and the press, particularly the Black press, who have ensured the ongoing public record of racist violence in the United States. To pay homage to these groups, the web interactive begins with a quote from journalist, activist and researcher Ida B. Wells, one of the first to document with precision the horrors of racial terror in America. “The way to right wrongs,” she wrote, “is to turn the light of truth upon them.”

At the outset of the project, FRONTLINE forged a relationship with Northeastern University’s Civil Rights and Restorative Justice Project (CRRJ), bringing them on as an academic partner. Launched in 2007 by Distinguished Law Professor Margaret Burnham, CRRJ is a mission-driven program of interdisciplinary teaching, research and policy analysis on race, history, and criminal justice. Their work has expanded beyond the names on the Justice Department’s list, archiving documents in over 1,000 cases of racially motivated homicides.

With support from the CRRJ, FRONTLINE reporters gathered what could be known about the individuals on the list, conducting interviews with family, friends and witnesses, delving into newspaper archives and gathering documentation including headstone applications, draft cards and archival photographs.

At the heart of the project has been a drive to center the voices of the families of those on the list. FRONTLINE partnered with StoryCorps to record nearly two dozen oral histories with victims’ next of kin, which are featured both in the web-based interactive and traveling AR exhibit. These oral histories will also be archived in the National Library of Congress.

To lead the creative vision for the web experience and installation, FRONTLINE partnered with Ado Ato Pictures, a premier mixed reality studio founded by artist, filmmaker, and technologist Tamara Shogaolu.

Shogaolu rooted the visuals in the powerful symbolism of trees. In the United States, trees evoke the ideal of liberty, but also speak to an oppressive history of racially motivated violence. In Persian myth, trees are humanity’s ancestors, while in Toraja, Indonesia, they serve as sacred burial sites.

“I was really inspired by looking at the role of the tree as a symbol in American history” Shogaolu said. “It’s been looked at as a symbol of freedom, we look at it as a connector between generations, and also there’s the association of trees with racial terror.” When designing the creative vision for Un(re)solved Shogaolu wondered whether she might be able to reclaim the symbol of the tree. “As a person of color, we’re often terrified of being in isolated places in the woods. And I thought it was kind of crazy that there are natural environments that instinctually give great fear because of this connection with racial terror and I wanted to reclaim that — to turn these into beautiful spaces.”

Un(re)solved weaves imagery of trees, which also recall family ties, into patterns and textures from the American tradition of quilting. Among enslaved African Americans forbidden to read or write, quilts provided an important space to document family stories. Today, quilting remains a creative outlet rich with story and tradition for many American communities.

We invite you to enter this forest of quilted memories — a testimony to the lives of these individuals, and the multi-generational impact of their untimely, unjust loss.

(Credits to come)