Category Archives: journalists

Our nobler resolves

Ralph McGill (left) and Eugene Patterson (right)

A Sept. 16, 1963  column by Atlanta newspaper editor Eugene Patterson is still remembered as one of the finest responses to racial and religious hatred in history.   Along with fellow Atlanta editor Ralph McGill, Patterson won the Pulitzer Prize for editorial writing and was effective in turning the media away from hostility and  towards compassionate coverage of the civil rights movement in the 1950s and 60s.  The genius of their writing, the depth of their human feeling,  as evident in this column,  helped reach hearts that had been hardened by hate-spewing politicians.  Its a good lesson for the 21st century.   

A Negro mother wept in the street Sunday morning in front of a Baptist Church in Birmingham. In her hand she held a shoe, one shoe, from the foot of her dead child. We hold that shoe with her.

Every one of us in the white South holds that small shoe in his hand.   Continue reading

Remembering another champion of the people

A long-neglected champion of the people, Ida B. Wells, has been remembered by the Chicago City Council this summer as it  renamed a prominent downtown street for her.  Wells is remembered as a courageous journalist who exposed lawless lynch mobs in Memphis, TN, in the 1890s. She was also a  pioneering newspaper editor, and a women’s rights advocate.  Renaming Congress Parkway as Ida B. Wells Drive comes as Wells’s descendants are preparing to commemorate her with a monument, also in Chicago, says the New York Times in an article published July 31.  Wells was also remembered in another Oct. 15, 2018 article.   For more information about the history of minority media in America, see this feature article, Civil Rights and the Press,  at Revolutions in Communication.