Chicago Sun-Times

Trailblazi­ng newspaper publisher

- BY MAUREEN O’ DONNELL Staff Reporter Email: modonnell@suntimes.com Twitter: @ suntimesob­its

William Garth Sr. carried on the black press tradition of helping to light the way to freedom and social change.

Mr. Garth was CEO and publisher of the Chicago Citizen, a weekly newspaper chain focusing on African-American communitie­s. It includes the Chatham Southeast Citizen, the South Suburban Citizen, the Chicago Weekend, the Hyde Park Citizen and the South End Citizen. The papers, with an audited circulatio­n of about 121,000, constitute the largest black- owned chain in the Midwest, said his son, Darrell.

In 1996, Mr. Garth was elected chair of the 480- newspaper Illinois Press Associatio­n, becoming the country’s first African- American chief of a statewide press organizati­on.

He died Friday at Chicago’s RML Specialty Hospital of complicati­ons from diabetes. He was 78.

The IPA, which praised him for helping to revitalize Chatham, called him “one of our longtime leaders and industry giants.”

Mr. Garth was proud of Chatham. During a 1986 interview with the Chicago Sun- Times, he said, “Nobody can loiter on the corners. If we were to do this interview out on the sidewalk, you’d see people peering out of windows. And the police would be here in 15 minutes, at the most.”

“Bill’s intrepid approach to newspaperi­ng and commitment to his community, combined with his warmth, humor and citizenshi­p made him one of our industry’s finest ambassador­s,” said Dennis DeRossett, president and CEO of the IPA.

And he was “a longtime champion of social, racial and economic justice,” said the Rev. Jesse L. Jackson, founder of the Rainbow/ PUSH Coalition.

“He was a philanthro­pist and community leader whose legacy will live on in the countless lives he has touched and through the college scholarshi­ps he provided,” Mayor Rahm Emanuel said.

“Hewas a mentor, philanthro­pist and a groundbrea­ker,” said Cook County Clerk David Orr.

Mr. Garth grew up one of 15 children in rural Bessemer, Alabama, where the siblings had to share clothes and shoes. After migrating to Chicago, he worked as a salesman at the Citizen papers. He bought the chain from U. S. Rep. Gus Savage, D- Ill., about 35 years ago, his son said.

In 1990, Mr. Garth editoriali­zed in favor of aNike boycott, amid concerns that the shoemaker was taking a large amount of money from African- Americans but not giving back. “If corporatio­ns did for the black community what they do for the white community, we wouldn’t have the unemployme­nt that we do,” he said.

He also persuaded Chicago- area advertiser­s to promote their goods in his newspapers. “He always talked about how there were times when they weren’t going to include him in ad campaigns because of [ his] color,” his son said. “He was able to convince them that wasn’t a good idea.”

After his younger son, Quentis Bernard Garth, was fatally stabbed in a 1989 domestic dispute, Mr. Garth started a scholarshi­p foundation in his name. It has dispensed more than $ 1 million to collegebou­nd students, according to the IPA.

“It gave me, of course, the financial push and assistance; the security, knowing that somebody’s in your corner,” said Markeia Jones, a scholarshi­p recipient who used the money to attend Hampton University. “It was very motivation­al.” She works at a multimedia production company in Atlanta.

He is also survived by his wife, Brenda; his sisters, Geraldine Burgess, Orangie Garth and Charlie Garth; his brothers, X Rashid, Robert Sr., Roosevelt, Jessie, Larry, Joseph and Richard; six stepchildr­en, Robin, Marla, Myron, Bobbie, Schuyler and Kimani; nine grandchild­ren; 20 step- grandchild­ren and 24 step- great- grandchild­ren.

Mr. Garth was a member of the Rainbow/ PUSH board and publisher of PUSH magazine. He also was a founding member of the Chatham Business Associatio­n.

Visitation is at 6 p. m. Friday at AA Rayner Funeral Home, 318 E. 71st. A horse- led procession is to begin at Rayner’s at 10 a. m. Saturday, heading to New Covenant Missionary Baptist Church, 754 E. 77th, for an 11: 15 a. m. wake. His funeral is planned from 12: 15 to 2: 15 p. m., his son said. Burial is at Oak Woods Cemetery.

“BILL’S INTREPID APPROACH TO NEWSPAPERI­NG AND COMMITMENT TO HIS COMMUNITY, COMBINED WITH HISWARMTH, HUMOR AND CITIZENSHI­P MADE HIM ONE OF OUR INDUSTRY’S FINEST AMBASSADOR­S.” DENNIS DEROSSETT, Illinois Press Associatio­n president and CEO

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