The Call (Kansas City)

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Kansas City The Call, or The Call is an African-American newspaper founded in 1919 in Kansas City, Missouri by Chester A. Franklin. It continues to serve the black community of Kansas City, Missouri and Kansas City, Kansas. It is considered one of the top six African-American weeklies in the nation.

Before 1827, when the African-American newspaper Freedom’s Journal was founded in New York City, there were no black-owned and operated newspapers. News of their community was not generally covered by white journalists, and the mainstream press expressed bias against blacks. This reduced communication both within and outside the communities. Black publications have struggled to survive, given difficulties in financing. With the majority of black population in the South until the 20th-century Great Migrations, Northern blacks were not served by Southern papers.[1]

Founder

Chester Arthur Franklin (1880–1955) founded The Call newspaper in May 1919 in Kansas City, Missouri. He owned and operated it until his death on May 7, 1955, establishing an office also in Kansas City, Kansas.

Franklin was born in Texas on June 7, 1880, the only child of George F. Franklin, a barber, and Clara Belle (née Williams) Franklin, a teacher. Tired of racial segregation and disfranchisement of minorities in Texas, his family moved to Omaha, Nebraska and eventually to Denver, Colorado in search of opportunities. There Chester worked for his father, who owned local newspapers in both cities.

Eventually Franklin took over Denver’s The Star for his father; he printed, edited, and distributed the paper until 1913.[2]

That year, Franklin decided to move to Kansas City, Missouri, having heard about its growing African-American population and vibrant music and culture. Franklin intended to start up a paper and gain a larger audience within Missouri and Kansas. He set up his own printing shop before organizing to publish his own newspaper. His mother had accompanied him and his family. Franklin launched The Call and sold copies for 5 cents; his mother helped by peddling subscriptions door to door.[2]

Franklin taught himself how to use the Linotype machine, because white union workers were not allowed to assist blacks. He developed the newspaper, and The Call became one of the six largest African-American weeklies in the country, and one of the largest black-owned and operated businesses in the Midwest.[3] “During its first eight years, The Call grew steadily from a circulation of about 2,000 in 1919 to 16,737 in 1927, and then remained at that level until the late 1930s”.[2] The newspaper employed (and still employs) many African Americans in the Kansas City community.

Franklin's vision

Franklin wanted to develop a paper that empowered and gave a voice to the black community, while being free of sensationalism. He advocated developing self-reliance within the community, siding strongly with the philosophy of W.E.B. Dubois. In The Call, he included news and announcements of the local community, including celebrations such as graduations and graduates, and life passages such as deaths and memorials. He wanted the community to know and celebrate itself; their lives were reflected in his paper, instead of being ignored.[2] Advertising promoted black businesses. Local and national news editorials gave a black perspective on certain events.

Franklin also included police reports and coverage of crimes, but some readers protested having negative news covered in the African-American community. They wrote letters urging more positive stories; Franklin responded that “the press is to publish, not suppress news…”.[2] his coverage included treatment of the community's religious life, from features and advertisements for pastors and formal church events, to news of potlucks.

Relevance

For 84 years The Call has addressed many civil rights issues, some specific to the African-American community of Kansas City, and others related to conditions in the Midwest and the United States as a whole. Franklin urged blacks to register and vote.

During the 1950s, his editorials in The Call’s protested urban development in inner Kansas City that seemed designed to keep blacks segregated from whites, who began to move into new suburban developments in the 1950s and 60s following construction of highways for commuters. The paper condemned the building of urban projects that displace longtime residents and broke up working communities. He criticized the Housing Authority for their policies and the gentrification of black neighborhoods.[2]

Kansas City schools were largely segregated. Lucile Bluford worked on this issue, especially in the case of Lloyd Gaines). Bluford and Gaines were both rejected from furthering their education based on the color of their skin, and both Bluford and Franklin used The Call as a platform for defending their cause- including encouraging readers to donate to the NAACP.[2] The Call provides empowerment and the avocation of self-reliance to improve the African-American community.

Alumni

  • Roy Wilkins, a reporter and managing editor from 1923-1931, who later wrote for NAACP's The Crisis and became executive director of the NAACP. He helped gain passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Fair Housing Act of 1968.[4]
  • Frank A. (Fay) Young, the pioneering African-American sportswriter, served as managing editor of The Call from 1934-1937.[5]
  • Lucile Bluford, a Kansas University alum, who became a reporter and managing editor for The Call. Opposed to segregation, she filed suit against the University of Missouri for discriminating against her admission. After C.A. Franklin died in 1955, Bluford became part-owner and the head of The Call, operating it until her death in 2003.[6]

Offices

The Call has two offices, with the original being in the 18th & Vine District at 1715 East 18th Street in Kansas City, Missouri. The other is at 2730 North 13th Street in Kansas City, Kansas. New issues are distributed weekly either online or via merchants.

References

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External links