National Association of Black Journalists Hall of Fame
The National Association of Black Journalists Hall of Fame is a hall of fame project of the National Association of Black Journalists (NABJ) honoring African-American and other journalists. The original Hall of Fame list was established on April 5, 1990, with the induction of seven individuals. No further individuals were inducted until the Hall of Fame was revived by the NABJ in 2004. Since 2004, several individuals have been inducted to the Hall of Fame each year. Nominations are approved by the NABJ Board of Directors, and new inductees are installed annually at the NABJ Hall of Fame Banquet and Inductions. Thirty-nine individuals are currently inductees in the Hall of Fame.[1]
Members
edit1990 original inductees
Seven individuals were inducted to the Hall of Fame at the time of its creation.
- Dorothy Butler Gilliam
- Malvin Russell Goode
- Mal Johnson
- Gordon Parks
- Ted Poston
- Norma Quarles
- Carl T. Rowan
2004 "legendary" inductees
In April 2004, the NABJ revived the Hall of Fame, and the Board of Directors (upon a "strong recommendation" from the NABJ Hall of Fame Screening Committee) voted to posthumously induct ten historical journalists (referred to on the NABJ's website as "legendary figures") as a one-time measure. The ten inductees were:[1]
- Robert S. Abbott
- Samuel Cornish
- Frederick Douglass
- W. E. B. Du Bois
- T. Thomas Fortune
- Marcus Garvey
- Ethel Payne
- John B. Russwurm
- John Sengstacke
- Ida B. Wells-Barnett
2004 contemporary inductees
edit2005 inductees
edit2006 inductees
edit2007 inductees
edit2008 inductees
edit- Charles E. Cobb, Jr.
- Belva Davis
- Vernon Jarrett (posthumous)
- Les Payne
2009 inductees
edit- Earl Caldwell
- Peggy Peterman (posthumous)
- Lynn Norment
- Larry Whiteside (posthumous)
2011 inductees
edit- Ed Bradley (posthumous)
- Merri Dee
- JC Hayward
- Eugene Robinson
- Ray Taliaferro
2012 inductees
edit2013 inductees
edit- Betty Bayé
- Simeon Booker
- Alice Dunnigan (posthumous)
- Sue Simmons
- Wendell Smith (posthumous)
- Cynthia Tucker
2014 inductees
edit- Herb Boyd
- Maureen Bunyan
- Jay Harris
- Moses Newson
- Bernard Shaw
- Zelda Ormes (Posthumous)
- Ernest Dunbar (Posthumous)
- Lee Thornton (Posthumous)
2017 inductees
edit- Michael Days
- John Jenkins
- Rev. Aisha Karimah
- Garth C. Reeves, Sr.
2018 inductees
edit- Albert Dunmore
- Bob Ray Sanders
- Louis Martin
- Victoria Jones
- William Rhoden
2019 inductees
edit- Bob Black
- Garry D. Howard[2]
- “The Fly Jock” Tom Joyner
- Wanda Lloyd
- The Washington Post Metro Seven
2020 inductees
edit2021 inductees
edit- Roland S. Martin
- Rodney A. Brooks
- Rochelle Riley
- Monica Roberts (posthoumous)
- Kirk McKoy
- Cornelius “Neil” Foote Jr (Neil Foote)[3]
- Claire Smith
- A. J. Smitherman (posthumous)
Notes
edit- ^ a b "National Association of Black Journalists Hall of Fame". nabjonline.org. National Association of Black Journalists. Retrieved June 27, 2023.
- ^ "Garry D. Howard".
- ^ "Neil Foote (MSJ84) – Medill Magazine".