Newsweek Atlanta Bureau Records

Newsweek: A Reflection

Memo to Joe Cumming, Newsweek Editor

Memo to Joe Cumming Requesting Coverage of Civil Rights in Atlanta,
Newsweek Atlanta Bureau Records


 Share Share

Related Links: 

Newsweek Atlanta Bureau Records

Civil Rights Research Guide

 Join the discussion

In October 2012, Newsweek announced that it would be ending its print publication and transitioning to an all-digital format by year's end. The announcement occasioned yet another round of hand-wringing by media watchers, but little real surprise. Once a fixture in American households, the venerable newsweekly had struggled to find its footing in the digital era and had been losing money for the better part of the last decade. Its purchase by audio magnate Sidney Harman for a dollar in 2010 bought the publication additional time, but its subsequent merger with the online Daily Beast failed to reverse its course. Ever the businessman, Harman gave the magazine three years to balance its books, but as it turned out, neither he nor the publication would last that long. His death the following year signaled the beginning of the end, and when his family announced they would no longer support the venture, odds-makers correctly predicted that its days were numbered.

Julian Bond Paragraph
H. Julian Bond talks about civil rights coverage in reporter's notes
which did not make it to the final article, "The Race Beat," published in July, 1964

An arbiter of public opinion in its heyday, Newsweek ran its last issue on December 31, 2012 before joining the likes of U.S. News and World Report as a casualty of rising costs, declining subscriptions and online competition. As a titan of the publishing world for more than seven decades, Newsweek naturally made its headquarters in New York, but when surveying the southern scene in the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s, its reporters filed their stories from the magazine's Atlanta bureau, the records of which are kept here at MARBL.

Dan Rather Quote from Newsweek Notes
Hand-written reporter's notes from "The Race Beat"
include a quote from an interview with a young Dan Rather

Established in 1953 when the Civil Rights Movement was gathering steam, the bureau reflected Newsweek's commitment to covering "the race beat" at a time when only the New York Times maintained a southern bureau. To serve as the bureau's chief, editors tapped veteran newsman and Atlanta resident Bill Emerson who recruited a stable of gifted journalists including Karl Fleming, Joe Cumming and, later, Marshall Frady; the papers of each, save for Fleming, are also held at MARBL. As Gene Roberts and Emory professor Hank Klibanoff explain in their Pulitzer-winning book, The Race Beat, Newsweek's journalists were among the finest of the "race reporters" then fanning out across the region to cover civil rights stories in the national press.  They did not limit their focus to civil rights, however. From football to Faulkner, the Newsweek collection provides a narration of events large and small during a pivotal period in the South's history. And with reporter's hand-written notes, background material, draft copies and correspondence all included, the subject files provide a more richly-detailed record than the published articles themselves.

Authored By: 

Ed Hatfield, PhD Candidate in History. Hatfield works with Randy Gue, Curator of Modern Political and Historical Collections, providing archival instruction to Emory undergraduates.

Newsweek Atlanta Bureau Records available

By Laura Carroll, Manuscript Archivist. 

The Manuscript, Archives and Rare Book Library (MARBL) is pleased to announce the Newsweek Atlanta Bureau records have been processed and are once again available to our researchers. 

The Atlanta Bureau of Newsweek, inc., was the hub of Newsweek magazine's Southern network.  It was established in 1953, with William (Bill) Emerson serving as its chief until 1961.  Joe Cumming, Jr. was the Bureau chief from 1961-1979.  Beginning with the Brown v. Board of Education Supreme Court case in 1953, which called for the desegregation of public schools, the Atlanta Bureau mostly reported on civil rights issues in the South.  MARBL received the Newsweek Atlanta Bureau records in 1979.  The collection was accessible and served as a rich resource for scholars interested in a variety of subjects affecting the South in the late 20th century; however, the material was unorganized and at times difficult to use because of inconsistent naming conventions and misfiled material. 

Syndicate content

Site design by: Sharpdot