'Viciously Racist' Coverage Prompts Hall of Fame Ouster
A regional press organization says it has removed a mid-20th century Maryland newsman from its Hall of Fame after a review of his work found writings that were racist and even promoted lynching.
BALTIMORE (AP) A regional press organization said it has removed a mid-20th century Maryland newsman from its Hall of Fame after a review of his work found writings that were racist and even promoted lynching.
Edward J. Clarke, the longtime owner and editor of the
Worcester Democrat newspaper on Marylands Eastern Shore, was inducted into the Maryland-D.C.-Delaware Press Associations Hall of Fame in 1954. But last week, the groups board of directors voted unanimously to terminate that honor after a University of Maryland journalism student uncovered Clarkes editorials,
The Baltimore Sun reported.
The MDDC Press Association board condemns in the strongest terms the ideas expressed in Clarkes writing and in his newspaper coverage, which also was racist, according to a statement the organization released Wednesday.
Gabriel Pietrorazio exposed writings by Clarke that likened the Black suspects in a 1940 homicide to a rabid dog, a disease-spreading germ and garbage. Clarke called for a good stout rope, a noose at one end, good stout arms at the other, a neck and a limb of a tree as the best way to deal with the fiends who violated the home of a white couple in Pocomoke City.
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https://www.usnews.com/news/best-states/maryland/articles/2021-11-12/viciously-racist-coverage-prompts-hall-of-fame-ouster