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These newspapers gained audiences outside African American circles. Demographic changes continued with the Great Migration from southern states to northern states from 1910 to 1930 and during the Second Great Migration from 1941 to 1970. In the 21st century, papers (like newspapers of all sorts) have shut down, merged, or shrunk in response to ...
This is a list of African American newspapers and media outlets, which is sortable by publication name, city, state, founding date, and extant vs. defunct status. For more detail on a given newspaper, see the linked entries below. See also by state, below on this page, for entries on African American newspapers in each state.
African American News Organizations: National Association of Black Journalists www.nabj.org; Wikidata: This query plots Wikidata's items that are designated as "African-American newspapers" on a map. Only a handful of points are plotted; the query may need improvement, and we may need to mark more Wikidata items with this property as well. In ...
African-American News and Issues; Afro-American Sentinel; The Aliened American; The Anglo-African; Arizona Informant; Atlanta Black Star; Atlanta Daily World; Atlanta Inquirer; Atlanta Tribune; Atlanta Voice
The National Afro-American Press Association was founded in 1890 in Indianapolis with Timothy Thomas Fortune elected as chairman, in response to the large number of African American Newspapers entering circulation, and provided membership to newspapers and journalists who were publishing "in the interest of the Afro-American race."
This free publication was launched in 2016 by owner/publisher Jason Douglas Lewis. Before launching the Standard, Lewis worked at Our Weekly (2006-2008, 2013–2016) and the Los Angeles Sentinel Newspaper (2008-2013), which are also African-American owned newspapers. He worked as a writer, photographer, sports editor, and web and social media ...
List of African American newspapers in Washington (state) List of African American newspapers in Washington, D.C. List of African American newspapers in West Virginia; List of African American newspapers in Wisconsin
At its height, the Scott Newspaper Syndicate employed around 50 full-time workers and 500 part-time workers to prepare newspapers for publication, [6] including journalists Frank Marshall Davis, Robert E. Johnson, and Lerone Bennett Jr. [7] During and following World War II, many African Americans left the Southern United States for the American Southwest and Midwest (a period known as the ...