From 1950 to 1955, Huie was a popular speaker, traveling back and forth across the country on the professional lecture circuit. During the same period, he became well known through his appearances on the weekly television current events program
Longines Chronoscope, produced in New York City. As a co-editor of the hour-long talk show, he interviewed newsmakers
John F. Kennedy,
Joseph McCarthy, and
Clare Boothe Luce as well as international figures, politicians, scientists, and economists. His program co-editors included figures such as
Henry Hazlitt and
Max Eastman. Domestic issues, Congressional activity, military defense, the
Olympics, and
foreign policy were all topics discussed on the program. In the late 1950s, Huie and his wife resettled permanently in their native Hartselle. Ruth worked as a first grade schoolteacher. Huie continued to write full-time at home as freelance journalist and novelist. During this period, activism in the
Civil Rights Movement increased, and Huie was commissioned by periodicals such as the
New York Herald Tribune and
Look to cover breaking events in the South. In 1954, the U.S. Supreme Court
ruled that segregated public schools were unconstitutional, but most southern jurisdictions made no changes to their schools. Huie attended the appeal and second trial in 1954 of
Ruby McCollum, a wealthy, married black woman in Florida who had shot and killed her white paramour, physician and state senator-elect Dr. Leroy Adams. She testified that he had forced her to have sex and bear his child when she got pregnant. The popular married doctor was being groomed to run for governor of Florida. Huie had been contacted about the case by writer
Zora Neale Hurston, who had worked with him earlier at
The American Mercury and had covered the first McCollum trial in Live Oak, Florida for the
Pittsburgh Courier. The judge had prohibited McCollum from talking to the press. Huie attended the appeal and second trial, and conducted background investigations of the figures and events. He was arrested on contempt of court charges; the judge cited him for "meddling" in a trial that "could embarrass the community". Huie was freed from jail, and he was pardoned years later.
Ruby McCollum: Woman in the Suwannee Jail (1956), his book on the sensational case, became a bestseller; it was banned in Florida.
Ebony, Time, and other journals publicized McCollum's story worldwide. Huie also reported on the
lynching of African-American Chicago teenager
Emmett Till in
Money, Mississippi in 1955. After an
all-white jury found the two defendants not guilty, Huie paid the men $4,000 for an interview. They described how and why they committed the murder, and were protected by
double jeopardy from being tried again for the crime. Huie published his account in
Look in January 1956. Some mainstream journalists criticized what they called his "
checkbook journalism". Huie also published
Wolf Whistle (1959), a full-length book on the case. Simeon Wright, Till's cousin and an eyewitness to the events at the store and to Till's abduction, refuted the killers' version in ''Simeon's Story: An Eyewitness Account of the Kidnapping of Emmett Till'', his 2010 memoir, written with Herb Boyd. Huie also reported on various
Ku Klux Klan activities, including the 1964 killing of "
Freedom Summer" workers
James Chaney,
Andrew Goodman, and
Michael Schwerner. His books on the latter included
The Klansman (1965) and
Three Lives for Mississippi (1965). The KKK
burned a cross on his front lawn in 1967 to try to intimidate him. Dr.
Martin Luther King Jr., president of the
Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC), wrote the Introduction for the second edition of Huie's
Three Lives for Mississippi. He said that it "is a part of the arsenal decent Americans can employ to make democracy for all truly a birthright and not a distant dream. It relates the story of an atrocity committed on our doorstep." Subsequent editions of the work include an "Afterword" by
Juan Williams. In 1970, Huie published
He Slew the Dreamer, an account of the assassination of King, for which he had interviewed assassin
James Earl Ray. Huie's book
The Execution of Private Slovik (1954) related the historic account of World War II
G.I. Eddie Slovik, the only soldier since the
American Civil War to be executed for desertion. The government had kept this quiet, not telling his widow how he died. After the book revealed Slovik's story, Huie and others tried for years to get the government to pay his widow a pension, but had no success. He had discussions with
Frank Sinatra about adapting the work as a movie. Sinatra dropped it in 1960 due to objections to his choice of screenwriter, a man who was one of the
Hollywood Ten blacklisted after refusing to testify to
HUAC. The singer was campaigning at the time for
John F. Kennedy as president. The book was adapted as a television movie, titled as
The Execution of Private Slovik (1974). ==Later years==