18-year-old Nolan Xavier Wells went missing on July 4 after boarding a boat with friends to Horn Island, Mississippi. His mother, Christine Wonsley, reported him missing to the police that same night after her son’s phone made it home, but he did not. Between Saturday night and Monday morning, multiple agencies came together to search for Wells. Meanwhile, Wonsley pleaded with social media to come forward with any information. She was the first to share the now-viral photos of Nolan on July 4th. In them, he was the sole Black teen among three, unidentified white males.
Nolan Xavier Wells’ Death Fires Up Black Community On Social Media
That was all it took to ignite the current conversation taking over timelines on X, Meta, Threads, Instagram and TikTok. What exactly is the conversation? Being the only Black friend, the “token” friend, in non-Black and predominantly white friend groups and spaces.
And the conversation only intensified on Monday after the United Cajun Navy called off their search and Nolan’s mother confirmed his death. Nolan went from missing for two days to his body being found by a park ranger at around 8:45 a.m. on Monday morning. Even the local coroner reportedly said, “There is no reason to believe it is not him.”
RELATED: Body Of 18-Year-Old Nolan Xavier Wells Found On Horn Island Two Days After Going Missing, Mother Confirms (UPDATE)
Needless to say, social media users, including ‘Black Twitter’ and ‘Black Threads’ are being loud about his death. Questions about his “friends” are swirling. Demands for accountability are going viral. Comparisons to fatal cases like Tamla Horsford‘s and Kendrick Johnson‘s are being made. And Black parents are sharing why they will never allow their Black children to be the only one. Keep scrolling for a preview of these social media conversations and more details about Wells’ case.

