Montreal Gazette

Voice on U.S. civil rights movement won Pulitzer for editorial writing

- MITCH STACY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

ST. PETERSBURG, FLA. — Eugene Patterson, a Pulitzer Prizewinni­ng editor and columnist whose impassione­d words helped draw national attention to the civil rights movement as it unfolded across the U.S. South, has died at 89.

Patterson, who helped fellow whites to understand the problems of racial discrimina­tion, died Saturday evening in Florida after complicati­ons from prostate cancer, said B.J. Phillips, a family spokeswoma­n.

Patterson was editor of the Atlanta Constituti­on from 1960 to 1968, winning a Pulitzer Prize in 1967 for editorial writing.

His famous column of Sept, 16, 1963, about the Birmingham, Ala., church bombing that killed four girls — titled A Flower for the Graves — was considered so moving that he was asked by Walter Cronkite to read it nationally on the CBS Evening News.

“A Negro mother wept in the street Sunday morning in front of a Baptist Church in Birmingham,” Patterson began his column. “In her hand she held a shoe, one shoe, from the foot of her dead child. We hold that shoe with her.

“Every one of us in the white South holds that small shoe in his hand. . . . We who go on electing politician­s who heat the kettles of hate. . . . (The bomber) feels right now that he has been a hero. He is only guilty of murder. He thinks he has pleased us. We of the white South who know better are the ones who must take a harsher judgment.”

“It was the high point of my life,” Patterson later said in a June 2006 interview from his home in St. Petersburg. “It was the only time I was abso-

EUGENE PATTERSON

lutely sure I was right. They were not telling the truth to people and we tried to change that.”

Patterson also spoke of what he called his good fortune to work for the Atlanta newspaper and an “enlight-

“They were not telling the truth to people and we tried to change that.”

ened” leadership that encouraged his work.

“We were rather rare editors in the South at that time,” Patterson said of himself and Constituti­on publisher Ralph McGill.

Patterson worked under McGill, himself a Pulitzer winner in 1959, and then succeeded him at the helm of the Constituti­on four years later.

Editor Kevin G. Riley, at the Atlanta Journal-Constitu- tion, called Patterson’s contributi­ons to the newspaper, Atlanta and the field of journalism “enormous.”

“We benefit still from his work and legacy,” Riley told The Associated Press via email.

In 1968, Patterson joined The Washington Post and served for three years as its managing editor, playing a central role in the publicatio­n of the Pentagon Papers, a classified study of the United States’ political-military involvemen­t in Vietnam from 1945 to 1967. After leaving the Post he spent a year teaching at Duke University.

He became editor of The St. Petersburg Times and its Washington publicatio­n, Congressio­nal Quarterly, in 1972 and was later chief executive officer of The St. Petersburg Times Co. Under Patterson’s leadership, the Times won two Pulitzer Prizes and became known as one of the top newspapers in the country.

Hank Klibanoff, director of the journalism program at Emory University and co-author of a Pulitzer Prize-winning book on press coverage of the civil rights movement, said Patterson wrote with deep-seated conviction about the troubled era.

Klibanoff said that when black churches were burned in southweste­rn Georgia in 1962, Patterson was “deeply disturbed” and wrote a column tweaking white people who claim to be religious but support segregatio­n. He called on whites to raise money to rebuild the churches, sparking an effort that raised $10,000.

“When he sat down to write, that conviction came out. And it came out in just a very, very powerfully written way,” Klibanoff said of Patterson.

 ?? THE TAMPA BAY TIMES/AP PHOTO ?? Eugene Patterson, seen in 1984, helped fellow Southern whites understand the civil rights movement.
THE TAMPA BAY TIMES/AP PHOTO Eugene Patterson, seen in 1984, helped fellow Southern whites understand the civil rights movement.

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