Research Catalog

Ted Poston tribute album

Title
Ted Poston tribute album, 1945.
Author
Poston, Ted, 1906-1974.
Supplementary Content
Finding aid

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StatusFormatAccessCall NumberItem Location
Mixed materialUse in library Sc MG 771Schomburg Center - Manuscripts & Archives

Details

Description
1 vol.
Summary
The Ted Poston tribute album contains letters of tribute presented to Poston on September 27, 1945 upon leaving his position as a member of President Franklin Roosevelt's "Black Cabinet" and also as head of the Negro News Desk. Accolades poured in from men in the military, the War Department and other government agencies and private organizations. Campbell C. Johnson wrote of Poston's "important part in interpreting the needs and reactions of the Negro group during the war period in top level circles, particularly those close to the White House..." And George M. Johnson of the President's Committee on Fair Employment Practice stated that Poston's "departure point[s] up graphically the need for a White House spokesman for the 13,000,000 American citizens who fall under the category of the term 'Negroes.'"
Subjects
Note
  • Photographs transferred to Photographs and Prints Division.
Source (note)
  • C. Apfelbaum
Biography (note)
  • Ted Poston was the first full-time African-American journalist for the "New York Post." There he covered many major black oriented news stories as well as mainstream items, working from 1936 until his retirement in 1972. Prior to this appointment, he wrote for the "Pittsburgh Courier," "Amsterdam News," and the "New York Contender." He was also on the staff of the Federal Writers' Project. From 1940-1945 Poston was a member of the "Black Cabinet," an informal network of African Americans serving in or advising the Roosevelt administration. During this period he was head of the Negro News Desk in the Office of War Information and was responsible for relations with the Negro press until the end of World War II, whereupon he returned to his position with the "New York Post." "The Dark Side of Hopkinsville," a book of his short stories, edited by Kathleen Hauke, was published posthumously in 1991.
Call Number
Sc MG 771
OCLC
664883119
Author
Poston, Ted, 1906-1974.
Title
Ted Poston tribute album, 1945.
Biography
Ted Poston was the first full-time African-American journalist for the "New York Post." There he covered many major black oriented news stories as well as mainstream items, working from 1936 until his retirement in 1972. Prior to this appointment, he wrote for the "Pittsburgh Courier," "Amsterdam News," and the "New York Contender." He was also on the staff of the Federal Writers' Project. From 1940-1945 Poston was a member of the "Black Cabinet," an informal network of African Americans serving in or advising the Roosevelt administration. During this period he was head of the Negro News Desk in the Office of War Information and was responsible for relations with the Negro press until the end of World War II, whereupon he returned to his position with the "New York Post." "The Dark Side of Hopkinsville," a book of his short stories, edited by Kathleen Hauke, was published posthumously in 1991.
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Finding aid
Local Subject
Black author.
Research Call Number
Sc MG 771
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