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Editor’s Note: For e-mailed inductee photo
sketches, contact Elizabeth Smith in media relations at
205/348-3782.
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. - Six distinguished leaders who had a
profound influence on American democracy will be inducted into
the College
of Communication and Information Sciences Hall of Fame at
The University of Alabama on Oct. 24, 2002.
Established by the C&IS Board of Visitors, the
Communication Hall of Fame was created in 1998 to honor,
preserve and perpetuate the names and accomplishments of
communication personalities who have brought lasting fame to the
state of Alabama. This year marks the fifth class of inductees
into the Hall of Fame. These honored individuals include:
- Gould M. Beech (1913 - 2000), Newspaperman and
political consultant
- Hugo L. Black (1886 - 1971), Supreme Court Justice,
Senator and First Amendment champion
- Edwin C. Bridges (1945 - ), Director of the Alabama
Department of Archives and History
- Neil O. Davis (1914 - 2000), Newspaperman and
social activist
- Virginia F. Durr (1903 - 1999), Wife of Clifford
Durr (Hall of Fame 1998), activist, organizer, leader in the
civil rights movement and sister-in-law to Hugo Black
- Fred. L. Shuttlesworth (1922 - ), Leader of
Alabama’s civil rights movement
C&IS’s Hall of Fame salutes individuals who have
brought lasting fame to the state of Alabama through the
disciplines that comprise the College. The tie that binds this
year’s honorees is family.
“Together this family of inductees forms a special class
indeed, individuals who, often at great risk, breathed life into
the First Amendment and made our democracy stronger for it,”
said Dr. Culpepper Clark, C&IS dean.
“These remarkable individuals have had a profound impact on
the social, economic, political and cultural life of Alabama and
the nation through the disciplines of communication,” Clark
said. “These men and women represent the finest the state has
to offer. Their commitment to their profession has raised the
sights of us all in the communication and information
disciplines.”
The Communication Hall of Fame Gallery is located in the
rotunda of Reese Phifer Hall on the UA campus. Permanent
archives will be established and maintained for the collection
of memorabilia related to the lives and careers of those chosen
for placement in the Hall of Fame.
The College of
Communication & Information Sciences is among the
largest and most prestigious communication colleges in the
nation. Graduating more than 12,000 students, C&IS is
consistently ranked among the top 10 in number of doctoral
degrees awarded and in many of its research programs. C&IS
graduates have won four of the six Pulitzer Prizes awarded to
University of Alabama alumni, and the forensics and debate
squad, housed within the College, has garnered 14 national
championships.
2002 College of Communication and Information Sciences
Hall of Fame Inductees
GOULD M. BEECH (1913 - 2000)
Later in life, working out of his real estate office in the
quaint river town of Magnolia Springs, Ala., Gould Beech could
have been mistaken for a retired Chamber of Commerce president
or banker.
It is hard to imagine that he was once branded a
“radical” and “dangerous leftist” for the positions he
took and that he was forced from Alabama into political exile in
Texas. Today some of his “radical” positions, such as racial
equality, have been accepted in his home state. Others, such as
reforming the tax code and the constitution, have not.
Beech was born in Florence and raised in Foley and
Montgomery. He attended The University of Alabama, where he met
his future wife, Mary Foster, in a chemistry class. Beech was a
journalism major and served as editor of The Crimson White.
Three other Hall of Fame inductees served under him: Mel Allen,
later to become the Voice of the Yankees, Hazel Brannon Smith,
first woman to win a Pulitzer Prize for editorial writing, and
Carroll Kilpatrick of Washington Post fame.
Beech worked at The Anniston Star and then became
associate editor at The Montgomery Advertiser, where,
under the tutelage of Grover Hall (Hall of Fame inductee 1998),
he wrote forceful editorials against racism, the KKK and in
favor of anti-lynching laws.
After serving in World War II, Beech partnered with Aubrey
Williams to publish The Southern Farmer magazine and used
it to argue for political reforms. He was a confidante of Big
Jim Folsom in the 1940s and became a savvy political consultant
even before the phrase was coined, helping Folsom articulate his
populist message. This made Beech an enemy of powerful Black
Belt politicians. When Folsom nominated Beech to the Board of
Trustees at Auburn University (then Alabama Polytechnic
Institute), he was attacked by the legislature and denied his
seat.
Gould and Mary Beech moved to Houston and continued their
work for peaceful integration and on behalf of black candidates.
Beech was instrumental in Barbara Jordan’s first political
races. After years of scorn from people in their home state, the
Beeches finally returned to Alabama because of their abiding
love for the state. They had a vision for this state, and they
paid dearly for it.
“I was cursed or blessed, as the case may be, with being
able to see things as they really were in the South,” Beech
said. “Even then I was not tempted to leave it.”
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HUGO L. BLACK (1886 - 1971)
Hugo Black remains one of the First Amendment’s greatest
champions.
Raised in Clay County and a 1906 graduate of The University
of Alabama School of Law, Black practiced law in Birmingham,
often representing industrial workers and striking miners. He
vowed to win election to the U.S. Senate by age 40, and he did
so in 1926. He served as President Franklin Roosevelt’s top
lieutenant in the Senate, tirelessly arguing on behalf of New
Deal legislation and programs.
He was Roosevelt’s first appointment to the Supreme Court
and served for 34 years, 26 of them as senior justice. His
deeply held and cherished beliefs about free speech, individual
liberties, racial equality and trial by jury led him to cast
countless votes and write numerous opinions that made him a
political pariah in his home state.
Never yielding to social pressures, this very Southern
justice, whose written opinions often borrowed lines from his
favorite hymns, never hesitated to call segregated schools
unconstitutional and wrong.
Black demonstrated a great love for the Constitution, and
carried a dog-eared copy of it with him so he could quote from
it liberally.
For Black, nothing would substitute for a literal reading of
the revered document. But there was one thing he loved almost as
much as the Constitution -- a vigorous and spirited game of
tennis. He could be found on “the other court” almost daily
until his death in 1971 at age 85.
“The American Constitution,” he wrote, “is no accident
of history, but it is the evolutionary product of man’s
striving throughout past ages to protect himself from tyrannical
kings, potentates, and rulers … A written constitution was
chosen … because this was the best way to protect minority
rights from the tyranny of the majority.”
In Alabama, liberal democracy has always been a frail
creature. Perhaps because of that frailty, Alabama has produced
some of its greatest champions, many of whom are represented in
the College of Communication and Information Sciences Hall of
Fame. If anything, Hugo Black is parent to them all. It is
fitting that his countenance will now grace the inside of the
rotunda of the University’s Old Union Building, Reese Phifer
Hall.
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EDWIN C. BRIDGES (1945 - )
The Alabama Department of Archives and History was the first
state archive in the nation when it was established in 1901.
Today, under the visionary leadership of Ed Bridges, it
continues as a model for archives, libraries and institutions
that preserve the records and artifacts that tell our nation’s
story. “What I have loved most is the intersection of history
and current policy, and the way they come together in an
archive,” says Bridges.
Born and raised in Bainbridge, Ga., Bridges nearly followed
his father and grandfather in becoming a country doctor. But an
extraordinary college professor, the late William Leverette, a
native of Selma, became a mentor and gave his pupil an abiding
love of history. Bridges received his undergraduate degree at
Furman, and his master’s and doctorate at The University of
Chicago. He taught at Georgia Tech and did historical research
before joining the Georgia Department of Archives and History,
eventually becoming its assistant director.
In 1982 he became director of the Alabama Department of
Archives and History, the only person from outside the state to
hold the position. “In a sense Ed was the quintessential
outsider in a state that likes insiders,” says historian Wayne
Flynt. “But no one now can think of history in Alabama without
thinking of Ed Bridges.”
At the Archives, Bridges modernized the catalog and
descriptions of collections, improved reference services and
stressed community outreach. He secured funding for an addition
to the building, which will provide much needed space for the
interpretation of Alabama’s history.
A respected leader in his field, Bridges helped develop the
University of Pittsburgh Institute for Advanced Archival
Studies, represented the United States in an exchange with
archivists from the Soviet Union, has published in journals
devoted to archives and history, and served on national and
international organizations devoted to archives, libraries and
historical research.
Bridges is also a tremendous asset for his adopted state. His
work with Leadership Alabama is a perfect illustration of his
talent for placing history in service of public policy. “What
Ed has done with his staff is to take the archives out into the
community,” says Flynt. “He’s made it a resource in every
community in the state of Alabama.”
Not surprisingly, others, most recently the Truman
Presidential Library, have tried to lure him away. His decision
to stay in the state that he has done so much to cultivate is
good fortune indeed.
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NEIL O. DAVIS (1914 - 2000)
A prestigious Neiman Fellowship to Harvard University had
never been awarded to a weekly newspaperman until Neil Davis
received one in 1941.
Davis had shown his spirit and backbone even as student
editor of The Plainsman at Auburn University. He spoke
out clearly and forcefully when the administration attempted to
stifle the strong support he had shown for the New Deal in his
newspaper. It was not the last time he would be threatened for
his independent thinking.
Born in Hartford, Ala., in 1914, he graduated from Geneva
County High School. Nearly half of the 27 graduates went to
college. At Auburn he met Henrietta Worsley, a Plainsman
associate editor. She became his wife, served as chief reporter
and associate editor and published their paper, The Lee
County Bulletin, for the three years he served in World War
II.
Davis championed unskilled rural workers, advocated strong
public education, and fought against the poll tax,
discrimination and segregation. His well-reasoned and cogent
editorials helped convince many in his community that
integration was not only inevitable, it was right. In 1964, he
purchased The Tuskegee News, and despite criticism and
attacks from George Wallace, he continued to irritate and
provoke those who clung to the old order.
He served as president of the Alabama Press Association, was
an adjunct professor of journalism at Auburn and was appointed
by President Lyndon Johnson to the Presidential Commission on
Rural Poverty. His editorials were twice nominated for Pulitzer
Prizes.
“He never did like the new computers and things we brought
into the operation,” says Paul Davis, publisher of The
Tuskegee News, “but he was on the cutting edge when it
came to writing editorials and oftentimes his work would appear
in The New York Times and Boston Globe because he
was so well respected.”
Lee County, The Tuskegee Institute, and Auburn University in
particular are better for Neil Davis having “put down his
bucket” where he was. The well he drew from nourished a world
of opportunity for generations of Alabamians.
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VIRGINIA F. DURR (1903 - 1999)
By all rights Virginia Durr should have lived a life of
privilege and ease. She was born to Birmingham, Ala.’s
“magic circle” of wealth power.
However, her life began to change while attending Wellesley,
when this daughter of a Birmingham minister was required to
share a table with African-Americans or leave school. She
returned home with a broadened perspective. The “deep-eyed
Southern bigot,” as she described her youthful self, would
become a powerful activist, organizer, and leader in the civil
rights movement.
Her sister married Hugo Black, and she married Clifford Durr
(Hall of Fame 1998), an attorney who was impressed by her
tenacious work in a law library. The Durrs went to Washington
when Clifford Durr served in President Franklin Roosevelt’s
administration. While there, Virginia Durr began her tireless
work against the poll tax, a protracted battle for black
suffrage that did not end until passage of the Voting Rights Act
of 1965. As a founding member of the Southern Conference on
Human Welfare in 1938, Virginia Durr was vilified as a communist
agitator by no less than Bull Connor who tried to break up their
integrated meeting in Birmingham.
Her criticism of the Korean War cost Clifford Durr his
position in Washington, and when the couple returned to Alabama
they were outcasts, branded as socialists and worse. In 1954
Virginia Durr was called for questioning before the Senate’s
anti-communist subcommittee. When Rosa Parks was arrested for
refusing to move to the back of a Montgomery bus, the Durrs
helped bail her out of jail and from the first night of her
ordeal offered wise counsel and advice. Her “upbringing of
privilege did not prohibit her from wanting equality for all
people,” Parks said upon her friend’s death. “She was a
lady and a scholar, and I shall miss her.”
In 1997, Virginia Durr received an honorary doctorate from
The University of Alabama, where her husband had been a Rhodes
Scholar graduate. To the end, she remained a passionate,
articulate, and tireless advocate for justice. “The problem
is,” she said, “once you open a gate, there’s another and
another gate beyond each one. It makes you think you want to
live forever …”
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FRED L. SHUTTLESWORTH (1922 - )
“Reverend Shuttlesworth was the real leader of the civil
rights movement in Alabama,” says Cleo Thomas, attorney and
former University of Alabama trustee.
Shuttlesworth was tougher than dynamite. A powerful blast
tore apart his Birmingham home, but he emerged from the rubble
even more determined to fight for justice. He was brutally
beaten by a mob when he tried to enroll his children in an
all-white school. Seriously injured when slammed against a wall
by the terrible force of a water cannon, he rose from his
hospital bed to re-energize the Birmingham movement at its
crucial hour. His unyielding quest for justice made him one of
the most hated men by those who hid under white robes or behind
tarnished badges.
Born in Birmingham and educated at Selma University and
Alabama State, he was known as “the cussin’ preacher,”
partly because of the fire and passion he brought to his
churches. In 1956, he created the Alabama Christian Movement for
Human Rights, and the following year he joined Dr. Martin Luther
King Jr. and others to form the Southern Christian Leadership
Conference.
When the movement’s leaders became indecisive or faltered,
he prodded them into action. Shuttlesworth was an irresistible
force that could not be contained, either by Bull Connor, who
jailed him for going too far, or by other black leaders who felt
he was going too fast. Dr. King called him “the most
courageous civil rights fighter in the South.” If King was the
movement’s Moses, Shuttlesworth was its Lion of Judah.
The bravest preacher in Birmingham moved to Cincinnati in
1966 where he continues to serve as pastor of the Greater New
Light Baptist Church and remains involved in progressive social
initiatives.
“He really sets a high standard for the moral life, for
what we can do together,” Thomas says. “And he did it with
such spirit and such zeal and such confidence, such absolute
knowledge for the rightness of what he was doing, and
fearlessness. And so he stands for goodness. He stands for
leading the examined life.”
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