August 16, 1922 Louis E. Lomax, author and the first African American television journalist, was born in Valdosta, Georgia. Lomax earned his bachelor’s degree from Paine College in 1942, his Master of Arts degree from American University in 1944, and his Ph.D. from Yale University in 1947. He began his journalism career at the Baltimore Afro-American and the Chicago Defender newspapers. In 1958, he became the first black television journalist when he joined WNTA-TV in New 1818 Bridget “Biddy” Mason, nurse, real estate entrepreneur and philanthropist, was born enslaved in Hancock County, Georgia. York. In 1959, Lomax and his colleague, Mike Wallace (60 Minutes), produced “The Hate That Hate Produced,” a five-part documentary on the Nation of Islam. Lomax died on July 30, 1970 in a car accident when the brakes failed on his car near Santa Rosa, New Mexico. At the time of his death, Lomax was working on a documentary concerning the role of the FBI in the death of Malcolm X and he had a 141 page FBI file. Lomax authored five books, including “The Reluctant African” (1960) and “To Kill a Black Man” (1968).
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