The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Breaking University of Georgia barrier was start of her news

- By Raisa Habersham Raisa.Habersham@ajc.com

Charlayne Hunter-Gault had one thing in mind when she got to the University of Georgia: being a reporter.

But in 1961, in Jim Crow South — and virtually anywhere in America — achieving that dream proved difficult.

“(One) time I went to see if I could work on the school newspaper (The Red & Black) and was welcomed by the editor, but never got an assignment,” Hunter-Gault recounted in an essay for The New Yorker in 2015 — which she wrote in response to protests at the University of Missouri following a series of racial incidents at that campus.

The mistreatme­nt reminded Hunter-Gault of the harassment she and classmate Hamilton E. Holmes experience­d when they became the first black students to enroll at UGA.

But the intimidati­on — including the threats, epithets and spit spewed at her on campus — only fueled the now renowned journalist, who would go on to win two Emmys and a Peabody award for her work on Apartheid’s People, a PBS NewsHour series focusing on life in South Africa.

Hunter-Gault establishe­d a decades-long career most writers and journalist­s would envy.

Immediatel­y after graduating, Hunter-Gault worked as an editorial assistant at The New Yorker, quickly rising to staff writer. Shortly after, she joined Washington, D.C., news station WRCTV’s investigat­ive team, occasional­ly anchoring the evening news.

Hunter-Gault returned to print reporting, working as a metropolit­an reporter for The New York Times. She would go on to hold national reporting positions with PBS NewsHour and CNN. In 1986, The National Associatio­n of Black Journalist­s chose the decorated reporter as its Journalist of The Year.

Hunter-Gault detailed her life’s experience­s in her book, “In My Place.” On Jan. 9, 2001, UGA establishe­d the Hunter-Holmes Academic building, marking 40 years since she and Holmes made history.

While she was denied opportunit­ies at The Red & Black, Hunter-Gault kept pressing toward great success, inspiring dozens of black students who came through the UGA program.

 ?? AJC ?? Charlayne Hunter (left) prepares to leave one of her classes at the University of Georgia on Jan. 11, 1961.
AJC Charlayne Hunter (left) prepares to leave one of her classes at the University of Georgia on Jan. 11, 1961.
 ?? CHARLES PUGH / AJC ?? Charlayne Hunter and Hamilton Holmes, the first black students at the University of Georgia, arrive on campus in January 1961 surrounded by reporters.
CHARLES PUGH / AJC Charlayne Hunter and Hamilton Holmes, the first black students at the University of Georgia, arrive on campus in January 1961 surrounded by reporters.

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