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The Clarion-Ledger

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Newspaper in Jackson, Mississippi, US

Clarion Ledger
TypeDailynewspaper
FormatBroadsheet
Owner(s)Gannett
Founded1837
LanguageEnglish (American dialect)
Headquarters201 South Congress Street
Jackson,MS 39201
Circulation15,500 Daily
16,422 Sunday[1]
ISSN0744-9526
OCLC number8674244
Websiteclarionledger.com

The Clarion Ledger is an American daily newspaper inJackson, Mississippi. It is the second-oldest company in the state ofMississippi, and is one of the few newspapers in the nation that continues to circulate statewide. It is an operating division of Gannett River States Publishing Corporation, owned byGannett.

History

[edit]

The paper traces its roots toThe Eastern Clarion, founded inJasper County, Mississippi, in 1837. Later that year, it was sold and moved toMeridian, Mississippi.[2]

After theAmerican Civil War, it was moved to Jackson, the capital, and merged withThe Standard. It soon became known asThe Clarion.

In 1888,The Clarion merged with theState Ledger and became known as theDaily Clarion-Ledger.

Four employees who were displaced by the merger founded their own newspaper,The Jackson Evening Post, in 1892. One of those four was Walter Giles Johnson, Sr. He survived the other three to grow the paper later known as the"Jackson Daily News". Johnson served as General Manager and Publisher alongside Editor Frederick Sullens until his death in October 1947. His son Walter Giles Johnson, Jr. assumed the duties of General Manager.

In 1907, Fred Sullens purchased an interest in the competingThe Jackson Evening Post. He soon changed the name to theJackson Daily News, keeping it as an evening newspaper.

Thomas and Robert Hederman bought theDaily Clarion-Ledger in 1920 and dropped "Daily" from its masthead.

On August 24, 1937,The Clarion-Ledger andJackson Daily News incorporated under a charter issued to Mississippi Publishers Corporation for the purpose of selling joint advertising.

On August 7, 1954, theJackson Daily News sold out to its rival,The Clarion-Ledger, for $2,250,000. This was despite a recent court ruling that blockedThe Clarion-Ledger owners from controlling both papers. The Hederman family consolidated the two newspaper plants.[3]

In 1982, the Hedermans sold theClarion-Ledger andDaily News to Gannett, ending 60 years of family ownership. Gannett merged the two papers into a single morning paper under theClarion-Ledger masthead, with theClarion-Ledger incorporating the best features of theDaily News. The purchase of both papers by Gannett essentially created a daily newspaper monopoly in Central Mississippi (Gannett also owns theHattiesburg American inHattiesburg, Mississippi), which still operates.

Starting Monday, Dec. 4, 2023, the newspaper switched from carrier to mail delivery through the U.S. Postal Service.[4]

Civil rights

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Historically, both newspapers,The Clarion-Ledger and theJackson Daily News, were openly and unashamedly racist, supportingwhite supremacy.

In 1890, after MississippiDemocrats adopted a newstate constitution designed todisenfranchise black voters by making voter registration and voting more difficult,The Clarion-Ledger applauded the move, stating:

"Do not object to negroes voting on account of ignorance, but on account of color. ... If every negro in Mississippi was a class graduate of Harvard, and had been elected class orator ... he would not be as well fitted to exercise the rights of suffrage as the Anglo-Saxon farm laborer."[5]

In August 1963, when 200,000 people joined theMarch on Washington for Jobs and Freedom, andMartin Luther King Jr. gave his now-famous "I Have A Dream" speech,The Clarion-Ledger made short note of the rally. It reported the litter-clearance effort the next day under the headline, "Washington is Clean Again with Negro Trash Removed".[6]

Earlier that year, when theMississippi State University basketball team was scheduled to play theLoyola University Chicago Ramblers in the NCAA tournament, they learned that its starting lineup featured fourAfrican-American players. TheJackson Daily News prominently featured pictures of the four black players in an effort to scare the Bulldogs from playing the Ramblers. At the time, longstanding state policy forbade state collegiate athletic teams from playing in integrated events. The ploy backfired, as the Bulldogs ignored the threat and defied an order from GovernorRoss Barnett to withdraw. Their competing with the Ramblers, the eventual national champion that year, is a significant, but often overlooked, milestone of progress in race relations in sports.

The paper often referred to civil rights activists as "communists" and "chimpanzees." The paper's racism was so virulent that some in the African-American community called it "The Klan-Ledger", after theKu Klux Klan.[7]

When violence, aided by such rabble-rousing, took place in Mississippi, the paper sought to put the blame somewhere else. WhenByron De La Beckwith was arrested for killingNAACP leaderMedgar Evers, the headline read, "Californian Is Charged With Murder Of Evers", overlooking the fact that Beckwith had lived in Mississippi almost his entire life.[7]

In the mid-1970s, Rea S. Hederman, the third generation of his family to run the paper, made a concerted effort to atone for its terrible civil rights record. Hederman expanded the staff and new budget. Editors began to pursue promising young reporters, including from other states. To help rehabilitate the paper's image among blacks, who gradually became a majority of Jackson's population, the paper increased coverage of blacks and increased the number of its black staff.

When Gannett bought the newspaper, the new leadership ramped up efforts to purge the paper's segregationist legacy. Gannett has long been well known for promoting diversity in the newsroom and covering events in communities of racial and ethnic minorities. By 1991, theClarion-Ledger's number of newsroom black professionals was three times the national average, and the paper had one of the few black managing editors in the U.S.[8]

Ronnie Agnew became the Managing Editor in February 2001. In October 2002, he became the paper's first black Executive Editor.

Awards and recognition

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In 1983,The Clarion-Ledger won the covetedPulitzer Prize for Public Service for a package of stories on Mississippi's education system.[6]

References

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  1. ^"AAM: Total Circ for US Newspapers". Archived fromthe original on March 6, 2013. RetrievedJune 30, 2013.
  2. ^"History".The Clarion-Ledger (Jackson, MS). Retrieved March 25, 2012.
  3. ^"Jackson News is Sold; Passes to Clarion-Ledger After Long Control Battle",The New York Times. August 7, 1954.
  4. ^Konradi, Mark M. (November 1, 2023)."Delivery changes coming to Clarion Ledger".The Clarion-Ledger. RetrievedNovember 2, 2023.
  5. ^McMillen, Neil R. (1990)."The Politics of the Disfranchised".Dark Journey: Black Mississippians in the Age of Jim Crow. University of Illinois Press. pp. 43–44.ISBN 9780252061561. RetrievedAugust 1, 2015.
  6. ^ab"New South at the Clarion-Ledger".Time (New York). May 2, 1983.
  7. ^abFrom reporter Jerry Mitchell's Zenger Award Acceptance Speech; he worked for theClarion-Ledger
  8. ^Dufresne, Marcel (October 1991)."Exposing the Secrets of Mississippi Racism".American Journalism Review. Retrieved March 26, 2012.

External links

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