Published in 1960, To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee is seen as a book embedded into the American public school education system with good reasons. To Kill a Mockingbird symbolizes innocence, classism, and racism. We look through all of these statements from an 8 year old girl nicknamed Scout as she grows up during the Great Deppression, When Scout was around 7 years old, a trial shook the little town of Maycomb when a 19 year old girl accused a black man named Tom Robinson of raping her. Being set in the 1930’s when segregation was a prominent factor in America, With little evidence and witnesses Tom Robinson was still found guilty and was sentenced to death by electrocution. Although To Kill a Mockingbird is set in a fictional town with fictional characters, The trial of Tom Robison is not just a fictional story from the books. The unjust trial of …show more content…
We can first start with the people of the trial, Walter Lett is the inspiration of Tom Robinson. Like Walter Lett, Tom was accused of rape by a poor white girl named Mayella Ewell; or Naomi Lowery. One of the main similarities is the actions that happened in the trial, especially with Naomi/Mayella. Like Naomi, In To Kill a Mockingbird, When Mayella was being questioned over and over by Atticus and Judge Taylor she started having bouts of rage and would never give clear evidence and sassed them out. Another example is the unstable evidence given to the court about what happened the “no hard evidence” in to To Kill a Mockingbird was the bruises and scars from the “rape” on Mayella. Mayella states that Tom beat her almost to fainting and left scars on the right side of her face when that couldn't have been possible, Tom Robinson’s left hand was severed in a cotton gin accident years ago meaning that the scars would have been made by someone