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Here are some really awesome Black journalist who’ve changed the world of journalism.

Amazing Black Journalist  was originally published on blackamericaweb.com

1. Gwen Ifill

Gwen Ifill

Born in New York on September 15, 1955, Gwen Ifil attended Simmons College in Boston in 1977. She began her career in journalism at the Boston Herald-American. She worked at teh Baltimore Evening Sun, The Washington Post, and New York Times before landing at PBS in 1999 as a moderator for the “Washington Week in Review.” This Peabody award-winning journalist along with co-anchor Judy Woodruff became TV’s first national female anchor team in 2013. Gwen Ifill died at the age of 61 in 2016 after losing her battle with cancer.

2. Ida B. Wells

Ida B. Wells was a journalist, newspaper editor, suffragist and feminist known for her work in the African American community. Born on July 16, 1862, Wells was one of the founders of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People in 1909. In the 1890’s Wells documented lynchings around the United States.

3. Jim Vance

Jim Vance began his career in journalism at the Philadelphia Independent as a reporter while teaching English for three years. He then moved to WRC-TV in 1969 to become a TV reporter. He became their main co-anchor in 1972 which made him the first African Americans to serve in this position at any American television station. Vance earned 19 local Emmy awards for his work receiving one specifically for his coverage of the 1982 crash of Air Florida Flight 90 in the Potomac River. Vance died from complications with cancer at the age of 75 on July 22, 2017.

4. Alice Allison Dunnigan

Alice Allison Dunnigan

Alice Allison Dunnigan was the first female African American White House Correspondent and the first black female member of the Senate and House of Representative’s press galleries. Born on April 24, 1906, in Kentucky Dunnigan seriously broke barriers in the world of journalism and in general for African Americans. At the age of 13, she got into journalism by writing one sentence news for the Owensboro Enterprise newspaper. She died on May 6, 1983, at the age 77.

5. Carl Rowan

Born August 11, 1925, in Tennesse during Jim Crow, Rowan grew up very poor. He earned money to attend college at Tennesse State College by scrubbing porches at a tuberculosis hospital. While there he passed a national competition that made him one of the first 15 African-Americans to be commissioned officers in the United States Navy during World War II. After that, he went onto the University of Minnesota where he earned a master’s in journalism. His first job in the field was at the Minneapolis Tribune were he covered civil rights trials in the South. His dedication to reporting on race relations made him a distinct character in the fight. This prompted President John F. Kennedy to appoint him deputy assistant secretary of state with the assignment to help integrate the State Department. He was 75 years old when died of various illnesses on September 24, 2000.