St. Petersburg Times
Special report
Video report
  • For their own good
    Fifty years ago, they were screwed-up kids sent to the Florida School for Boys to be straightened out. But now they are screwed-up men, scarred by the whippings they endured. Read the story and see a video and portrait gallery.
  • More video reports
Multimedia report
Print Email this storyEmail story Comment Email editor
Fill out this form to email this article to a friend
Your name Your email
Friend's name Friend's email
Your message
 

Pioneering publisher dies at 87

Associated Press
Published August 9, 2005


CHICAGO - Publisher John H. Johnson, whose Ebony and Jet magazines countered stereotypical coverage of blacks after World War II and turned him into one of the most influential black leaders in America, died Monday (Aug. 8, 2005), his company said. He was 87.

Mr. Johnson died of heart failure at Northwestern Memorial Hospital after a long illness, said LaTrina Blair, promotions manager with Chicago-based Johnson Publishing Co.

Mr. Johnson broke new ground by bringing positive portrayals of blacks into a mass-market publication and encouraging corporations to use black models in advertising aimed at black consumers.

"We have lost a legend, a pioneer, a visionary," said Earl G. Graves, publisher of Black Enterprise magazine. "As an American, he was ahead of his time. Ebony is part of Americana now."

Born into an impoverished family in Arkansas, Mr. Johnson went into business with a $500 loan secured by his mother's furniture and built a publishing and cosmetics empire.

Mr. Johnson built Ebony from a circulation of 25,000 on its first press run in November 1945 to a monthly circulation of 1.9-million in 1997. Jet magazine, a newsweekly, was founded in 1951 and has a circulation of more than 954,000. A third magazine, Ebony Man , a monthly men's magazine, was started in 1985.

Mr. Johnson launched Ebony just after World War II, as black soldiers were returning home. At the time there were no black players in major league baseball and little black political representation.

With blacks' incomes far below white Americans, the idea of a black publishing company was widely dismissed. Civil rights leader Roy Wilkins advised Mr. Johnson to forget the publishing business and save himself a lot of disappointment; Wilkins later acknowledged he gave Mr. Johnson bad advice.

Ebony - named by Mr. Johnson's wife, Eunice - was created to counter stereotypical portrayals of blacks in white-owned newspapers, magazines and broadcast media. The monthly magazine highlights the positive in black life.

"We try to seek out good things, even when everything seems bad," Mr. Johnson once said in explaining the magazine's purpose. "We look for breakthroughs, we look for people who have made it, who have succeeded against the odds, who have proven somehow that long shots do come in."

Chicago Sun-Times columnist Laura Washington said it became a point of pride for blacks to display the magazines on their coffee tables.

"It was a symbol of the emergence of the black middle class and the ability to strive for financial success, not just in our community but on an even playing field," she said.

Besides his wife, Mr. Johnson is survived by a daughter, Linda Johnson Rice, president of Johnson Publishing.

[Last modified August 9, 2005, 01:24:12]


Share your thoughts on this story

Comments on this article
Subscribe to the Times
Click here for daily delivery
of the St. Petersburg Times.

Email Newsletters

ADVERTISEMENT