Tri-State Defender
Type | Weekly newspaper |
---|---|
Owner(s) | Best Media Inc. |
Publisher | Bernal E. Smith II |
Editor | Karanja A. Ajanaku |
Founded | November 3, 1951 |
Headquarters | 203 Beale Street, Suite 200, Memphis, Tennessee 38103, United States |
Circulation | 4,373 weekly in 2011[1] |
Website |
The Tri-State Defender is a weekly newspaper published in Memphis, Tennessee, serving the African-American communities in Memphis and nearby areas of Arkansas, Mississippi and Tennessee. It bills itself as "The Mid-South's Best Alternative Newspaper".
The Defender was founded in 1951 by John H. Sengstacke, owner of the Chicago Defender. In 2013, the paper was locally purchased from Real Times Media by Best Media Inc.
History
Sengstacke's Chicago Defender circulated widely across the Southern United States, but Sengstacke in the early 1950s identified Memphis as a particularly attractive market, where several African-American newspapers had failed to take root and a startup would face only one competitor, The Memphis World, which had begun in 1931 (and would continue publishing until 1961).[2]
In November 1951, Sengstacke and editor Lewis O. Swingler, the former editor of the World,[3] published the first edition of the Tri-State Defender, adopting the slogan "The South's Independent Weekly". The 20-page inaugural edition included "The Tri-State Defender Ten Point Program", consisting of vows "to broadcast to the world the achievements of all the citizens it serves", "to join hands with all citizens regardless of creed or color who wish to develop better human relations and to advance the principals of American Democracy", and "to uphold those Christian principles which under gird our republic", among others.[2] Swingler served as editor in chief until 1955.[4]
Tri-State Defender journalists led coverage of the 1955 murder of Emmett Till, an African-American teen from Illinois who was killed in Mississippi after allegedly flirting with a white woman. Their stories and photographs dominated both their own paper and the Chicago Defender for weeks,[5] and the trial became a media sensation and landmark event in the Civil Rights movement.[2] In the 1960s, L. Alex Wilson, served as the editor of the Tri-State Defender, and with his coverage of the enveloping Civil Rights Movement had a more powerful editorial influence than its competitor, The Memphis World, on the Memphis black community.[6]
The Tri-State Defender in its first 50 years was part of Sengstacke Enterprises Inc., a chain of prominent African-American publications, which in the 1990s included the flagship Chicago Daily Defender, the Michigan Chronicle and the New Pittsburgh Courier. Following Sengstacke's death in 1997, the four-paper chain was held in a family trust until 2003, when it was sold for nearly $12 million to Real Times, a group of investors with several business and family ties to Sengstacke.[7]
References
- ↑ "Annual Audit Report, June 2011". Larkspur, Calif.: Verified Audit Circulation. Retrieved April 30, 2012.
- 1 2 3 Webb, Arthur L. (January 4, 2006). "Celebrating 55 Years: Tri-State Defender, Then and Now". Tri-State Defender. via HighBeam Research. Retrieved May 3, 2012. (subscription required)
- ↑ Marina Pacini; Memphis Brooks Museum of Art (15 September 2008). Photographs from the Memphis World, 1949-1964. Univ. Press of Mississippi. p. 17. ISBN 978-0-915525-10-2. Retrieved 27 August 2012.
- ↑ Earnestine Lovelle Jenkins (27 May 2009). African Americans in Memphis. Arcadia Publishing. p. 84. ISBN 978-0-7385-6750-1. Retrieved 27 August 2012.
- ↑ Robert H. Giles; Robert W. Snyder; Lisa DeLisle (1 November 2001). Profiles in Journalistic Courage. Transaction Publishers. pp. 72–. ISBN 978-0-7658-0796-0. Retrieved 27 August 2012.
- ↑ The Invisible Press , The Jackson Sun, Dylan T. Lovan, 2003, retrieved June 7, 2016
- ↑ "Chicago Defender, Black-Owned Newspaper, is Finally Sold". Jet. via HighBeam Research. February 10, 2003. Retrieved May 2, 2012. (subscription required)