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Richard W. Thompson (journalist)

Richard W. Thompson (1865 - February 12, 1920) was a journalist and public servant in Indiana and Washington, D.C. He was at various times an editor or managing editor of the Indianapolis Leader, the Indianapolis World, the Indianapolis Freeman and the Washington D.C. Colored American. He was published as a general correspondent in The Colored American, The Washington Post, the Indianapolis Freeman, the Indianapolis World, Atlanta Age, Baltimore Afro-American Ledger, the Cincinnati Rostrum,[1] the Charleston West Virginia Advocate,[2] the Philadelphia Tribune and the Chicago Monitor. His longest-lasting relationship was with the Indianapolis Freeman. In 1896, the black paper, The Leavenworth Herald, edited by Blanche Ketene Bruce, called Thompson the "best newspaper correspondent on the colored press."[3]

Richard W. Thompson
Thompson c. 1902
Born1865
DiedFebruary 12, 1920(1920-02-12) (aged 54–55)
Occupation(s)Journalist, Clerk
Spouses
  • Grace Evelyn Lucas
  • Ella B Gibbs

He was closely associated with Booker T. Washington and twice served as an assistant of Emmett Jay Scott, in 1903 when Scott was Washington's assistant at the Tuskegee Institute and again in 1918 when Scott was special assistant to the Secretary of War during World War I. He played an important role in the support of Washington against the attacks against Washington by William H. Ferris in 1903. He also had a long-running antagonism with William Calvin Chase of the Washington Bee.

Life edit

Richard W. Thompson was born in 1865 in Brandenburg, Meade County, Kentucky.[4] His father was a minister of the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Connection Church, and died in 1872. later that year he moved with his mother, Jane, to New Albany, Indiana. In 1875, he moved to Indianapolis where he attended public schools. His performance in school was excellent, but he was forced to leave school before the end of his senior year due to ill health.[5]

His mother was born in Jefferson County, Kentucky and died of pleurisy[6] 25 February 1900 aged 53. She was survived by her mother, Richard's grandmother.[7] Jane Thompson played a leading role in the community of Indianapolis's Jones Tabernacle A. M. E. Zion church.[8]

Thompson had two wives, Grace Evelyn Lucas and Ella B Gibbs, both of whom taught together in Indianapolis Public Schools. He first married teacher Ella B Gibbs, daughter of Eliza Gibbs, on April 5, 1888. They had one daughter, Vivian Lucille Thompson (b 1893).[9] Another child, Bertram Ferroe Thompson died in 1890 at the age of 18 months.[10] Ella B. Thompson died in the morning of May 29, 1900 after two months illness aged 33. The funeral was at Metropolitan A.M.E. Church.[11]

Even before Ella died, Richard had a relationship with Grace Lucas. In 1892, Lucas was accused in a letter to the Indianapolis Freeman of being a poor teacher and of having an affair with Thompson.[12] After Ella's death, Thompson married Lucas on November 12, 1901, in Jersey City, NJ. Bishop Alexander Walters, a friend of Thompson's, presided.[13] Under the name Grace Lucas Thompson, she occasionally published articles in the Indianapolis Freeman and other newspapers. The pair lived in Washington DC for much of the rest of their lives, and Grace taught public schools in there.[14]

Vivian Lucille Thomas married Walter Scott Turner August 6, 1917.[15] At the time of his death, Thompson was involved in a dispute with assistant superintendent of DC Schools, Roscoe C. Bruce, related with Bruce's alleged opposition to Vivian's appointment as teacher in spite of her passing her examination and being, by those rights, first in line for a position.[16]

In February 1920, Thompson was confined to his home after suffering a nervous breakdown. Thompson died on Friday night, February 12, following an operation at Freedman's Hospital.[17] His funeral was at St. Luke's church, pallbearers were intimate friends of his: Robert Heberton Terrell, John C. Dancy, Walter Singleton, John T. Howe, J. A. Lankford, and J. Finley Wilson.[18]

Early career in Indiana edit

 
Indiana State House, built in 1888

In 1879 Thompson joined with brothers Benjamin, Robert, and James Bagby writing for their paper, the Indianapolis Leader, which was the first black newspaper in Indianapolis. At that time, in connection with his school duties, he kept books for Dr. F. W. Ferree, secretary of the Marion County Board of Health.[19] His work was recognized and he was appointed by speaker to the Indiana State Legislature as a page during the 1880–1881 session. His nomination received the support of many legislators at the time, including Benjamin Harrison, S. Hinton, and J. T. V. Hill.

In 1882, he became city editor of the Indianapolis Leader. He then moved to the Indianapolis Freeman, where he was made an editor, and the Indianapolis World.[5] The Indianapolis World was launched by Edward Elder Cooper, Edwin E. Horn, and Levi E. Christy with Thompson in charge of the city department. At different times he worked for that paper as compositor, foreman of the mechanical department, and managing editor.[19]

In 1886, he turned 21 and registered as a Democrat to vote for Grover Cleveland. In 1887 he was employed as a deputy in the office of auditor of Marion County, Indiana under Thomas Taggart. He came first in a civil service exam ahead of 75 whites in 1888[19] and on August 1 was appointed a letter carrier in the Indianapolis Post Office by Postmaster Aquillo Jones, where he served until July 1893. That year he became managing editor of the Indianapolis Freeman and the Indianapolis World.

Move to D.C. edit

Thompson's interest in class included a discussion of the Emancipation Day festivities in 1893, which Thompson covered for the Freeman for a number of years. The celebrations were increasingly of little interest to Washington Elites. Thompson saw the change in the nature of the festivities not so much related to the aging and deaths of so many blacks born into slavery and replacement by people who were born after, but instead as due to the evolution of black social structure, saying that Frederick Douglass, Blanche Bruce, and James D. Lynch were "as far away from the colored people at the other end of the social scale as the most exclusive white society man thinks himself to be from the most humble white laborer." and that leading blacks in Washington saw the celebration in the same way as leading white citizens did.[20]

In July 1894 he moved to Washington D.C., having been appointed by Thomas E Benedict as a compositor in the Government Printing Office. In September of that year he was promoted to chief clerkship of the counting division, which position he held in July 1895 but had left by 1899. He was the first black clerk and time-keeper ever appointed in the department.[5] While continuing to write for papers, his duties in the federal office was to record all public documents, reports, etc. issued from government presses. During a reorganization of the division, he inaugurated the system of bookkeeping used their for some time with the approval of Benedict.[19]

He left the printing office in D.C. to clerk in the office of recorder of deeds, working closely with Henry Plummer Cheatham. In D.C., he also became heavily involved in the intellectual scene of the city. While living in the capital, his work was frequently published outside of D.C. and he published in the Indianapolis Freeman throughout his life. In 1895, he analyzed the Washington, D.C. elite in a series of articles called "Phases of Washington Life" for the Indianapolis Freeman.[21] In 1896, Will Milton Lewise invited Thompson to again address class lines among blacks for the Freeman. Thompson emphasized that class lines were based on authentic characteristics such as character, worth, morals, and conduct, and not on the color of skin, texture of hair, or money.[22] Throughout his life, Thompson became very close with many Washington elites, including Henrietta Vinton Davis,[23] James E. Slaughter, W. Bishop Johnson,[24] T. Thomas Fortune, Paul Bray, Lester Walton, James H. Anderson, William O. Minard, N. B. Dodson, George W. Harris,[25] and R. E. S. Toomey.[26]

Social involvement edit

In 1899, he was recording secretary of the National Afro-American Council and an officer in several of the black literary lyceums.[19] In 1900 he was elected president of D.C.'s Second Baptist Lyceum, one of a number of black D.C. clubs which heard talks from intellectuals and artists and debated issues of the day. Other officers elected in 1900 included R.S. Smith and C.L. Marshall as first and second vice-president, Emma E. Tolliver, Almira Cautchfield, and Birdie Miller as recording, financial, and responding secretaries, Evelyn Cary as Treasurer, and T. H. Norman, Benjamin Washington, Lillian V. Green, B. T. Holme, and Thomas Ware.[27] He was elected to his third term as president of the Second Baptist Lyceum in July 1901.[28] In 1902 was a co-founder of the Sparta Club located on 340 Pennsylvania Ave along with Edward E. Cooper, Richard E. Seldon, and others, and he was in the Pen and Pencil Club.[29] He was elected corresponding secretary of the Mu-So-Lit club in 1913.[30]

Relationship with Booker T. Washington edit

 
Booker T. Washington, 1905

By 1899, Thompson was managing editor of the Colored American, and in the early 1900s he ran what was called the Negro Press Bureau, a syndicated news service to about a dozen black newspapers which Booker T. Washington secretly subsidized and which was one of his prime agencies for influencing black editors.[4] He also owed some of his position in the federal government to his connection to Washington. In the census bureau in January 1900, Thompson was assigned to the Division of Manufactures under Edward W. Parker, who was a special agent to the division and also the Director of the United States Geological Survey and a friend to Booker T. Washington. Thompson's wife had a place in the Government Printing Office.[31] In early 1900 he wrote Washington that his federal salary ($50 per month for himself, $40 per month for his wife) was inadequate, and although he hoped for a promotion and raise soon, he did not wish to continue on as managing editor of the Colored American, instead to write letters, articles, etc., for multiple papers. This would give him more latitude and pay, and he planned to continue to write features for the Colored American.[31]

Dispute with William H. Ferris in 1903 edit

 
The Colored American front page November 25, 1899

In 1903, Thompson was receiving $12 per month from Washington or the Tuskegee Institute to subsidize his income and to pay for pro-Washington reportage.[32] Upon receiving funds from Washington, Thompson noted that he could influence five papers to support Washington's interests: The Kentucky Standard, the Freeman, the Advocate, the Citizen, and the Colored American. He could also occasionally send letters to the Chicago Monitor.[26] Recognizing the importance of this subsidy, Thompson recommended W. Allison Sweeney, editor of the Chicago Monitor, the Chicago Conservator, and the Chicago Leader to receive subsidy as well.[33]

Outside of this sphere, Booker T. Washington was criticized by some members of the black press, especially in the Boston Guardian. Important critics included William Monroe Trotter, William H. Ferris, George W. Forbes, and Clement G. Morgan. Ferris came to Washington in January 1903 and spoke in front of the Bethel Literary and Historical Society on January 6, 1903. As a reply, R. W. Thompson spoke in front of the Second Baptist Lyceum on January 25 in support of Booker T. Washington. Thompson laid out 15 principles of the Washington and the Tuskegee Institute, focusing on agricultural, industrial, and labor as the path to black improvement and stating that Washington does not, for instance, endorsed the elimination of suffrage for blacks in any state, but that black people must make his own place in the world.[34] In 1999, Jacqueline M. Moore argued that Thompson's paper failed to hold his ground against Ferris, who was present at the talk.[35]

The Second Baptist Lyceum met again on February 3 to hear a paper by Jesse Lawson in favor of Washington. In support of Washington were Robert H. Terrell, Bishop Walters, Dr. William Bruce Evans, J. H. Ewing, and Thompson, and those against were W. H. Ferris, Armond W. Scott, Lafayette M. Hershaw, T. M. Dent, Shelby James Davidson, and Mrs. Ida D. Bailey.[36] Terrell, Evans, Lawson, and Thompson all owed positions or favors to Washington's influence.[35] John C. Dancy, George Henry White, Mrs. Anna Evans Murray wife of Daniel Alexander Payne Murray, Reuben S. Smith, Kelly Miller, Prof. Lewis Baxter Moore, and John P. Green were neutral. Thompson's articles about these meetings in support of Washington's position was published in the Atlanta Age, the Indianapolis Freeman, Philadelphia Tribune, Baltimore Afro-American Ledger, The Charleston WV Advocate, and the Colored American.[36] This controversy continued into the summer where important meetings in Louisville and Boston saw heated argument which even led to blows and Trotter's and Granville Martin's imprisonment.[37]

Thompson moved from the Washington, D.C. during the last week of February or the first week of March in 1903 to the Tuskegee Institute in Tuskegee, Alabama. He succeeded J. Frank Armstrong as the assistant to Emmett Scott, who was private secretary to Booker T. Washington.[38] In August 1903, after six months working at the Tuskegee Institute, Thompson was given a civil service position in the United States Jeffersonville Quartermaster Depot in Jeffersonville, Indiana, just across the river from Louisville.[39]

 
Tuskegee campus, 1916

Continued relationship with Washington edit

The friction in the African-American community continued and Thompson's role as a newspaperman remained fundamental. In 1905, W. E. B. Du Bois and William Monroe Trotter founded the Niagara Movement as a call for opposition to racial segregation and disenfranchisement, and it was opposed to policies of accommodation and conciliation promoted by African-American leaders such as Booker T. Washington. Washington requested that Emmett Scott direct Thompson and other newspaper men, including W. Calvin Chase, to ignore the Niagara Movement. Thompson had already referenced the movement with some sarcasm and proceeded to avoid the movement in his papers, writing "to advertise the movement by opposition even, would be to magnify it."[40]

The Colored American failed in 1906 and Washington, who had supported it, now moved his support to the Washington Bee, W. Calvin Chase editor. Chase had opposed Washington, but needed the money. Washington used his political influence with Theodore Roosevelt and William Howard Taft to try to remove Lafayette Hershaw and Freeman H. M. Murray from their government positions and spy on meetings of the Niagara Movement. Thompson and Chase both felt uncomfortable supporting Washington's actions in these matters, and received additional payment from Washington to secure their support.[41]

Thompson continued to work closely with Washington for the rest of Washington's life. In 1909 he traveled through South Carolina with Washington, assisting the educator and writing about his work there.[42]

Dispute with Calvin Chase edit

 
The Washington Bee – May 29, 1886

Calvin Chase of the Washington Bee was not, usually, fond of Thompson. In 1909, in Louisville, Thompson founded the National Negro Press Association in conjunction with the National Negro Business League and twice served as its president.[43] In 1910, Chase attacked the organization, calling it "fake"[44] and, writing in the Washington Bee, called Thompson "an editor without a paper", to which Thompson replied from the Indianapolis Freeman that Chase's Bee was "a paper without an editor".[45]

Thompson continued to clerk for the federal government, transferring at the recommendation of Henry Lincoln Johnson in 1911 from the War Department to the Treasury Department where he took the position of messenger[46] for Assistant Secretary Robert O. Bailey. When Bailey left the position, Thompson's position was challenged by black Democrats supported by the Washington Bee who felt that Thompson was no longer a Democrat.[47] Chase and the Bee continued to battle with Thompson for some time. In 1914, Thompson was rebuked by the Indianapolis Freeman and the Chicago Defender for criticism of Ralph W. Tyler that Thompson had published in the two papers.[48] In the spring of 1914, Thompson helped J. Finlay Wilson to start a new black paper in Washington, DC, called the Sun.[49] Thompson was a principal contributor to the paper, which switched leadership from Wilson to T. Thomas Fortune in the summer of 1914, and continued to provoke the ire of Chase.[50] The issue cooled, and by 1918, The Bee reported that in a commencement address of the Columbia Conservatory of Music, Thompson and Judge Robert Terrel both took the stage, with Terrel saying of Thompson that "he is one of the greatest colored journalists in the country, and commended his efforts to uplift the race".[51] After Thompson's death, Chase was in a bitter battle to remove Roscoe Conkling Bruce from his position as assistant superintendent of DC schools in charge of colored schools and supported Thompson's daughter, Vivian, in an effort to gain for her a position as a teacher against Bruce's opposition.[16]

Assistant in the War Department edit

In August 1918, the United States' increased involvement in World War I mean a growing war department. Emmett J. Scott, then secretary of the Tuskegee Institute, was brought on as special assistant to the Secretary of War. William H. Davis, Charles A. Wilson, Charles L. Webb, and Thompson were brought in to be assistants to Scott, the department assigned with caring for the interests of black soldiers and civilians during the war.[52] Scott and Thompson continued to work in the War Department until late January, 1920, when Thompson suffered from a nervous breakdown complicated with stomach troubles which would lead to his death on February 12.[53]

References edit

  1. ^ [No Headline]. Freeman (Indianapolis, Indiana), Saturday, November 17, 1900, Volume: 13 Issue: 46 Page: 4
  2. ^ Nosegay for "One of Our Boys", Freeman (Indianapolis, Indiana), Saturday, April 4, 1903, Volume: XVI Issue: 14 Page: 4
  3. ^ [No Headline]. Leavenworth Herald (Leavenworth, Kansas), Saturday, May 2, 1896, Page: 2
  4. ^ a b Booker T. Washington, Louis R. Harlan, The Booker T. Washington Papers: 1899–1900 University of Illinois Press, 1976a p48
  5. ^ a b c Personal Mention. Freeman (Indianapolis, Indiana). Saturday, November 18, 1893. Volume: 5 Issue: 46 Page: 8
  6. ^ Around The Churches A Week's Happenings in Religious Circles Saturday, February 24, 1900 Recorder (Indianapolis, Indiana) Page: 4
  7. ^ Demise of Mrs. Jane L. Thompson Saturday, March 3, 1900 Colored American (Washington (DC), District of Columbia) Volume: 7 Issue: 48 Page: 13
  8. ^ Around The Churches. A Week's Happenings in Religious Circles Saturday, March 3, 1900 Recorder (Indianapolis, Indiana) Page: 4
  9. ^ City Notes Saturday, August 11, 1900 Freeman (Indianapolis, Indiana) Volume: 13 Issue: 32 Page: 8
  10. ^ Mortuary Notice, Freeman (Indianapolis, Indiana) Saturday, October 18, 1890, Volume: 2 Issue: 43 Page: Supplement 1
  11. ^ Deaths. Saturday, June 2, 1900 Colored American (Washington (DC), District of Columbia) Volume: 8 Issue: 9 Page: 13
  12. ^ That School Question Again Saturday, April 9, 1892 Freeman (Indianapolis, Indiana) Volume: 4 Issue: 11 Page: 8
  13. ^ The Thompson Nuptials. Bishop Alexander Walters Officiates at a Pretty Wedding Ceremony in Jersey City Saturday, November 16, 1901 Washington Bee (Washington (DC), District of Columbia) Volume: 20 Issue: 25 Page: 1
  14. ^ [R. W. Thompson; Indianapolis; Grace Lucas Thompson] Saturday, September 14, 1912 Freeman (Indianapolis, Indiana) Page: 8
  15. ^ [No Headline] Evening Star (Washington (DC), District of Columbia), Wednesday, August 22, 1917, Page: 7
  16. ^ a b The School Investigation, Washington Bee (Washington (DC), District of Columbia), Saturday, April 24, 1920 Page: 4
  17. ^ Mortuary Notice, Plaindealer (Topeka, Kansas), Friday, February 20, 1920 Volume: 22 Issue: 8 Page: 1
  18. ^ Richard W. Thompson. A Prominent Member of the Colored Press Dead, Washington Bee (Washington (DC), District of Columbia), Saturday, February 21, 1920 Page: 1
  19. ^ a b c d e White Folks, like Colored Folks, Have Their Troubles : Officers in the Twentieth Are Jealous of Funston, Plaindealer (Topeka, Kansas), Friday, October 27, 1899, Volume: I, Issue: 43, Page: 1, Piece: One of Four
  20. ^ Gatewood, Willard B. Aristocrats of Color: The Black Elite, 1880–1920. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1990, p51
  21. ^ Samuels a Myth, So Says. Richard W. Thompson, the Brilliant Author, Freeman (Indianapolis, Indiana), Saturday, August 3, 1895, Volume: 7 Issue: 31 Page: 1
  22. ^ Gatewood, Willard B. 1990, p25
  23. ^ Personal Mention, Freeman (Indianapolis, Indiana), Saturday, November 18, 1893 Volume: 5 Issue: 46 Page: 8
  24. ^ Advertisement, Colored American (Washington (DC), District of Columbia), Saturday, February 10, 1900, Volume: 7 Issue: 46 Page: 6
  25. ^ Items Of Race Interest, Freeman (Indianapolis, Indiana), Saturday, September 30, 1911, Page: 2
  26. ^ a b Booker T. Washington, Louis R. Harlan, 1976b, p358
  27. ^ Washington, D.C., Plaindealer (Topeka, Kansas), Friday, January 26, 1900, Volume: II Issue: 4 Page: 3
  28. ^ The Second Baptist Lyceum. A Review of the Important Work Accomplished during the Administration, Colored American (Washington (DC), District of Columbia), Saturday, July 27, 1901, Volume: 9 Issue: 17 Page: 9
  29. ^ Our Mr. Thompson in the Front Rank. Saturday, Freeman (Indianapolis, Indiana), June 22, 1901, Volume: XIV Issue: 25 Page: 4
  30. ^ Mu-So-Lit Club Elects Officers, Washington Bee (Washington (DC), District of Columbia), Saturday, January 18, 1913, Volume: XXXIII Issue: 32 Page: 5
  31. ^ a b Washington and Harlan 1976a, p396-397
  32. ^ Booker T. Washington, Louis R. Harlan, The Booker T. Washington Papers: 1903–04 University of Illinois Press, 1976b, p355
  33. ^ Booker T. Washington, Louis R. Harlan 1976b p209
  34. ^ The Race's Leader! the Friends of Booker T. Washington after Conspirators, Freeman (Indianapolis, Indiana), Saturday, February 14, 1903, Volume: XVI Issue: 7 Page: 1 Piece: One of Two
  35. ^ a b Jacqueline M. Moore, Leading the Race: The Transformation of the Black Elite in the Nation's Capital, 1880–1920 University of Virginia Press, 1999, p68
  36. ^ a b Booker T. Washington, Louis R. Harlan, 1976b. p34-35
  37. ^ Almost a Riot Over a Picture. Negroes Object to Booker Washington Painting, Washington Bee (Washington (DC), District of Columbia), Saturday, July 11, 1903, Volume: 23 Issue: 6 Page: 1 Piece: One of Two
  38. ^ Mr. Thompson in Tuskegee, Colored American (Washington (DC), District of Columbia), Saturday, February 28, 1903, Volume: IX Issue: 44 Page: 5
  39. ^ R. W. Thompson in Southern Indiana, Freeman (Indianapolis, Indiana), Saturday, August 29, 1903, Volume: XVI Issue: 34 Page: 1
  40. ^ Louis R. Harlan. Booker T. Washington: Volume 2: The Wizard Of Tuskegee, 1901–1915 Oxford University Press, December 4, 1986
  41. ^ Moore, 1999, p 202
  42. ^ Mr. Thompson in South Carolina, Washington Bee (Washington (DC), District of Columbia), Saturday, March 27, 1909, Volume: XXIX Issue: 44 Page: 1
  43. ^ Richard W. Thompson, Washington, D. C. Foremost Newspaper Correspondent, Conducts News Bureau, Flashes Intelligence Over Saturday, Freeman (Indianapolis, Indiana), December 25, 1915, Page: 7
  44. ^ The Fake, Washington Bee (Washington (DC), District of Columbia), Saturday, August 20, 1910, Volume: XXXI Issue: 12 Page: 1
  45. ^ The Face Scraper, Washington Bee (Washington (DC), District of Columbia), Saturday, October 1, 1910, Volume: XXXI Issue: 18 Page: 4
  46. ^ Mr. Thompson, Washington Bee (Washington (DC), District of Columbia), Saturday, May 20, 1911, Volume: XXXI Issue: 51 Page: 5
  47. ^ Colored Democrats. Said to be after R. W. Thompson's Scalp-Mr. Thompson Remains as Messenger, Washington Bee (Washington (DC), District of Columbia), Saturday, August 3, 1912, Volume: XXXIII Issue: 9 Page: 4
  48. ^ Called down. R. W. Thompson Administered a Rebuke by Newspapers to Which He Corresponds, Washington Bee (Washington (DC), District of Columbia), Saturday, January 24, 1914, Volume: XXXIV Issue: 32 Page: 5
  49. ^ Will the Sun Rise? Washington Bee (Washington (DC), District of Columbia), Saturday, March 14, 1914, Volume: XXXIV Issue: 39 Page: 4
  50. ^ Sun Does Move. Wilson out-Fortune in-Coleman and Fortune Editors-Newspaper Displaces Hair Vim, Washington Bee (Washington (DC), District of Columbia), Saturday, August 29, 1914, Volume: XXXV Issue: 13 Page: 1
  51. ^ School Closing Columbia Conservatory Judge Terrell Commends Professor Adams and His Conservatory of Music. Brilliant, Washington Bee (Washington (DC), District of Columbia), Saturday, June 15, 1918, Page: 1
  52. ^ War Department Bureau Steadily Growing, Washington Bee (Washington (DC), District of Columbia), Saturday, August 10, 1918, Page: 1
  53. ^ R. W. Thompson Suffers From Nervous Breakdown, Washington Bee (Washington (DC), District of Columbia) Saturday, January 31, 1920, Page: 1

richard, thompson, journalist, other, people, named, richard, thompson, richard, thompson, disambiguation, richard, thompson, 1865, february, 1920, journalist, public, servant, indiana, washington, various, times, editor, managing, editor, indianapolis, leader. For other people named Richard Thompson see Richard Thompson disambiguation Richard W Thompson 1865 February 12 1920 was a journalist and public servant in Indiana and Washington D C He was at various times an editor or managing editor of the Indianapolis Leader the Indianapolis World the Indianapolis Freeman and the Washington D C Colored American He was published as a general correspondent in The Colored American The Washington Post the Indianapolis Freeman the Indianapolis World Atlanta Age Baltimore Afro American Ledger the Cincinnati Rostrum 1 the Charleston West Virginia Advocate 2 the Philadelphia Tribune and the Chicago Monitor His longest lasting relationship was with the Indianapolis Freeman In 1896 the black paper The Leavenworth Herald edited by Blanche Ketene Bruce called Thompson the best newspaper correspondent on the colored press 3 Richard W ThompsonThompson c 1902Born1865Brandenburg Kentucky U S DiedFebruary 12 1920 1920 02 12 aged 54 55 Washington D C U S Occupation s Journalist ClerkSpousesGrace Evelyn Lucas Ella B GibbsHe was closely associated with Booker T Washington and twice served as an assistant of Emmett Jay Scott in 1903 when Scott was Washington s assistant at the Tuskegee Institute and again in 1918 when Scott was special assistant to the Secretary of War during World War I He played an important role in the support of Washington against the attacks against Washington by William H Ferris in 1903 He also had a long running antagonism with William Calvin Chase of the Washington Bee Contents 1 Life 2 Early career in Indiana 3 Move to D C 3 1 Social involvement 4 Relationship with Booker T Washington 4 1 Dispute with William H Ferris in 1903 4 2 Continued relationship with Washington 5 Dispute with Calvin Chase 6 Assistant in the War Department 7 ReferencesLife editRichard W Thompson was born in 1865 in Brandenburg Meade County Kentucky 4 His father was a minister of the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Connection Church and died in 1872 later that year he moved with his mother Jane to New Albany Indiana In 1875 he moved to Indianapolis where he attended public schools His performance in school was excellent but he was forced to leave school before the end of his senior year due to ill health 5 His mother was born in Jefferson County Kentucky and died of pleurisy 6 25 February 1900 aged 53 She was survived by her mother Richard s grandmother 7 Jane Thompson played a leading role in the community of Indianapolis s Jones Tabernacle A M E Zion church 8 Thompson had two wives Grace Evelyn Lucas and Ella B Gibbs both of whom taught together in Indianapolis Public Schools He first married teacher Ella B Gibbs daughter of Eliza Gibbs on April 5 1888 They had one daughter Vivian Lucille Thompson b 1893 9 Another child Bertram Ferroe Thompson died in 1890 at the age of 18 months 10 Ella B Thompson died in the morning of May 29 1900 after two months illness aged 33 The funeral was at Metropolitan A M E Church 11 Even before Ella died Richard had a relationship with Grace Lucas In 1892 Lucas was accused in a letter to the Indianapolis Freeman of being a poor teacher and of having an affair with Thompson 12 After Ella s death Thompson married Lucas on November 12 1901 in Jersey City NJ Bishop Alexander Walters a friend of Thompson s presided 13 Under the name Grace Lucas Thompson she occasionally published articles in the Indianapolis Freeman and other newspapers The pair lived in Washington DC for much of the rest of their lives and Grace taught public schools in there 14 Vivian Lucille Thomas married Walter Scott Turner August 6 1917 15 At the time of his death Thompson was involved in a dispute with assistant superintendent of DC Schools Roscoe C Bruce related with Bruce s alleged opposition to Vivian s appointment as teacher in spite of her passing her examination and being by those rights first in line for a position 16 In February 1920 Thompson was confined to his home after suffering a nervous breakdown Thompson died on Friday night February 12 following an operation at Freedman s Hospital 17 His funeral was at St Luke s church pallbearers were intimate friends of his Robert Heberton Terrell John C Dancy Walter Singleton John T Howe J A Lankford and J Finley Wilson 18 Early career in Indiana edit nbsp Indiana State House built in 1888In 1879 Thompson joined with brothers Benjamin Robert and James Bagby writing for their paper the Indianapolis Leader which was the first black newspaper in Indianapolis At that time in connection with his school duties he kept books for Dr F W Ferree secretary of the Marion County Board of Health 19 His work was recognized and he was appointed by speaker to the Indiana State Legislature as a page during the 1880 1881 session His nomination received the support of many legislators at the time including Benjamin Harrison S Hinton and J T V Hill In 1882 he became city editor of the Indianapolis Leader He then moved to the Indianapolis Freeman where he was made an editor and the Indianapolis World 5 The Indianapolis World was launched by Edward Elder Cooper Edwin E Horn and Levi E Christy with Thompson in charge of the city department At different times he worked for that paper as compositor foreman of the mechanical department and managing editor 19 In 1886 he turned 21 and registered as a Democrat to vote for Grover Cleveland In 1887 he was employed as a deputy in the office of auditor of Marion County Indiana under Thomas Taggart He came first in a civil service exam ahead of 75 whites in 1888 19 and on August 1 was appointed a letter carrier in the Indianapolis Post Office by Postmaster Aquillo Jones where he served until July 1893 That year he became managing editor of the Indianapolis Freeman and the Indianapolis World Move to D C editThompson s interest in class included a discussion of the Emancipation Day festivities in 1893 which Thompson covered for the Freeman for a number of years The celebrations were increasingly of little interest to Washington Elites Thompson saw the change in the nature of the festivities not so much related to the aging and deaths of so many blacks born into slavery and replacement by people who were born after but instead as due to the evolution of black social structure saying that Frederick Douglass Blanche Bruce and James D Lynch were as far away from the colored people at the other end of the social scale as the most exclusive white society man thinks himself to be from the most humble white laborer and that leading blacks in Washington saw the celebration in the same way as leading white citizens did 20 In July 1894 he moved to Washington D C having been appointed by Thomas E Benedict as a compositor in the Government Printing Office In September of that year he was promoted to chief clerkship of the counting division which position he held in July 1895 but had left by 1899 He was the first black clerk and time keeper ever appointed in the department 5 While continuing to write for papers his duties in the federal office was to record all public documents reports etc issued from government presses During a reorganization of the division he inaugurated the system of bookkeeping used their for some time with the approval of Benedict 19 He left the printing office in D C to clerk in the office of recorder of deeds working closely with Henry Plummer Cheatham In D C he also became heavily involved in the intellectual scene of the city While living in the capital his work was frequently published outside of D C and he published in the Indianapolis Freeman throughout his life In 1895 he analyzed the Washington D C elite in a series of articles called Phases of Washington Life for the Indianapolis Freeman 21 In 1896 Will Milton Lewise invited Thompson to again address class lines among blacks for the Freeman Thompson emphasized that class lines were based on authentic characteristics such as character worth morals and conduct and not on the color of skin texture of hair or money 22 Throughout his life Thompson became very close with many Washington elites including Henrietta Vinton Davis 23 James E Slaughter W Bishop Johnson 24 T Thomas Fortune Paul Bray Lester Walton James H Anderson William O Minard N B Dodson George W Harris 25 and R E S Toomey 26 Social involvement edit In 1899 he was recording secretary of the National Afro American Council and an officer in several of the black literary lyceums 19 In 1900 he was elected president of D C s Second Baptist Lyceum one of a number of black D C clubs which heard talks from intellectuals and artists and debated issues of the day Other officers elected in 1900 included R S Smith and C L Marshall as first and second vice president Emma E Tolliver Almira Cautchfield and Birdie Miller as recording financial and responding secretaries Evelyn Cary as Treasurer and T H Norman Benjamin Washington Lillian V Green B T Holme and Thomas Ware 27 He was elected to his third term as president of the Second Baptist Lyceum in July 1901 28 In 1902 was a co founder of the Sparta Club located on 340 Pennsylvania Ave along with Edward E Cooper Richard E Seldon and others and he was in the Pen and Pencil Club 29 He was elected corresponding secretary of the Mu So Lit club in 1913 30 Relationship with Booker T Washington edit nbsp Booker T Washington 1905By 1899 Thompson was managing editor of the Colored American and in the early 1900s he ran what was called the Negro Press Bureau a syndicated news service to about a dozen black newspapers which Booker T Washington secretly subsidized and which was one of his prime agencies for influencing black editors 4 He also owed some of his position in the federal government to his connection to Washington In the census bureau in January 1900 Thompson was assigned to the Division of Manufactures under Edward W Parker who was a special agent to the division and also the Director of the United States Geological Survey and a friend to Booker T Washington Thompson s wife had a place in the Government Printing Office 31 In early 1900 he wrote Washington that his federal salary 50 per month for himself 40 per month for his wife was inadequate and although he hoped for a promotion and raise soon he did not wish to continue on as managing editor of the Colored American instead to write letters articles etc for multiple papers This would give him more latitude and pay and he planned to continue to write features for the Colored American 31 Dispute with William H Ferris in 1903 edit nbsp The Colored American front page November 25 1899In 1903 Thompson was receiving 12 per month from Washington or the Tuskegee Institute to subsidize his income and to pay for pro Washington reportage 32 Upon receiving funds from Washington Thompson noted that he could influence five papers to support Washington s interests The Kentucky Standard the Freeman the Advocate the Citizen and the Colored American He could also occasionally send letters to the Chicago Monitor 26 Recognizing the importance of this subsidy Thompson recommended W Allison Sweeney editor of the Chicago Monitor the Chicago Conservator and the Chicago Leader to receive subsidy as well 33 Outside of this sphere Booker T Washington was criticized by some members of the black press especially in the Boston Guardian Important critics included William Monroe Trotter William H Ferris George W Forbes and Clement G Morgan Ferris came to Washington in January 1903 and spoke in front of the Bethel Literary and Historical Society on January 6 1903 As a reply R W Thompson spoke in front of the Second Baptist Lyceum on January 25 in support of Booker T Washington Thompson laid out 15 principles of the Washington and the Tuskegee Institute focusing on agricultural industrial and labor as the path to black improvement and stating that Washington does not for instance endorsed the elimination of suffrage for blacks in any state but that black people must make his own place in the world 34 In 1999 Jacqueline M Moore argued that Thompson s paper failed to hold his ground against Ferris who was present at the talk 35 The Second Baptist Lyceum met again on February 3 to hear a paper by Jesse Lawson in favor of Washington In support of Washington were Robert H Terrell Bishop Walters Dr William Bruce Evans J H Ewing and Thompson and those against were W H Ferris Armond W Scott Lafayette M Hershaw T M Dent Shelby James Davidson and Mrs Ida D Bailey 36 Terrell Evans Lawson and Thompson all owed positions or favors to Washington s influence 35 John C Dancy George Henry White Mrs Anna Evans Murray wife of Daniel Alexander Payne Murray Reuben S Smith Kelly Miller Prof Lewis Baxter Moore and John P Green were neutral Thompson s articles about these meetings in support of Washington s position was published in the Atlanta Age the Indianapolis Freeman Philadelphia Tribune Baltimore Afro American Ledger The Charleston WV Advocate and the Colored American 36 This controversy continued into the summer where important meetings in Louisville and Boston saw heated argument which even led to blows and Trotter s and Granville Martin s imprisonment 37 Thompson moved from the Washington D C during the last week of February or the first week of March in 1903 to the Tuskegee Institute in Tuskegee Alabama He succeeded J Frank Armstrong as the assistant to Emmett Scott who was private secretary to Booker T Washington 38 In August 1903 after six months working at the Tuskegee Institute Thompson was given a civil service position in the United States Jeffersonville Quartermaster Depot in Jeffersonville Indiana just across the river from Louisville 39 nbsp Tuskegee campus 1916 Continued relationship with Washington edit The friction in the African American community continued and Thompson s role as a newspaperman remained fundamental In 1905 W E B Du Bois and William Monroe Trotter founded the Niagara Movement as a call for opposition to racial segregation and disenfranchisement and it was opposed to policies of accommodation and conciliation promoted by African American leaders such as Booker T Washington Washington requested that Emmett Scott direct Thompson and other newspaper men including W Calvin Chase to ignore the Niagara Movement Thompson had already referenced the movement with some sarcasm and proceeded to avoid the movement in his papers writing to advertise the movement by opposition even would be to magnify it 40 The Colored American failed in 1906 and Washington who had supported it now moved his support to the Washington Bee W Calvin Chase editor Chase had opposed Washington but needed the money Washington used his political influence with Theodore Roosevelt and William Howard Taft to try to remove Lafayette Hershaw and Freeman H M Murray from their government positions and spy on meetings of the Niagara Movement Thompson and Chase both felt uncomfortable supporting Washington s actions in these matters and received additional payment from Washington to secure their support 41 Thompson continued to work closely with Washington for the rest of Washington s life In 1909 he traveled through South Carolina with Washington assisting the educator and writing about his work there 42 Dispute with Calvin Chase edit nbsp The Washington Bee May 29 1886Calvin Chase of the Washington Bee was not usually fond of Thompson In 1909 in Louisville Thompson founded the National Negro Press Association in conjunction with the National Negro Business League and twice served as its president 43 In 1910 Chase attacked the organization calling it fake 44 and writing in the Washington Bee called Thompson an editor without a paper to which Thompson replied from the Indianapolis Freeman that Chase s Bee was a paper without an editor 45 Thompson continued to clerk for the federal government transferring at the recommendation of Henry Lincoln Johnson in 1911 from the War Department to the Treasury Department where he took the position of messenger 46 for Assistant Secretary Robert O Bailey When Bailey left the position Thompson s position was challenged by black Democrats supported by the Washington Bee who felt that Thompson was no longer a Democrat 47 Chase and the Bee continued to battle with Thompson for some time In 1914 Thompson was rebuked by the Indianapolis Freeman and the Chicago Defender for criticism of Ralph W Tyler that Thompson had published in the two papers 48 In the spring of 1914 Thompson helped J Finlay Wilson to start a new black paper in Washington DC called the Sun 49 Thompson was a principal contributor to the paper which switched leadership from Wilson to T Thomas Fortune in the summer of 1914 and continued to provoke the ire of Chase 50 The issue cooled and by 1918 The Bee reported that in a commencement address of the Columbia Conservatory of Music Thompson and Judge Robert Terrel both took the stage with Terrel saying of Thompson that he is one of the greatest colored journalists in the country and commended his efforts to uplift the race 51 After Thompson s death Chase was in a bitter battle to remove Roscoe Conkling Bruce from his position as assistant superintendent of DC schools in charge of colored schools and supported Thompson s daughter Vivian in an effort to gain for her a position as a teacher against Bruce s opposition 16 Assistant in the War Department editIn August 1918 the United States increased involvement in World War I mean a growing war department Emmett J Scott then secretary of the Tuskegee Institute was brought on as special assistant to the Secretary of War William H Davis Charles A Wilson Charles L Webb and Thompson were brought in to be assistants to Scott the department assigned with caring for the interests of black soldiers and civilians during the war 52 Scott and Thompson continued to work in the War Department until late January 1920 when Thompson suffered from a nervous breakdown complicated with stomach troubles which would lead to his death on February 12 53 References edit No Headline Freeman Indianapolis Indiana Saturday November 17 1900 Volume 13 Issue 46 Page 4 Nosegay for One of Our Boys Freeman Indianapolis Indiana Saturday April 4 1903 Volume XVI Issue 14 Page 4 No Headline Leavenworth Herald Leavenworth Kansas Saturday May 2 1896 Page 2 a b Booker T Washington Louis R Harlan The Booker T Washington Papers 1899 1900 University of Illinois Press 1976a p48 a b c Personal Mention Freeman Indianapolis Indiana Saturday November 18 1893 Volume 5 Issue 46 Page 8 Around The Churches A Week s Happenings in Religious Circles Saturday February 24 1900 Recorder Indianapolis Indiana Page 4 Demise of Mrs Jane L Thompson Saturday March 3 1900 Colored American Washington DC District of Columbia Volume 7 Issue 48 Page 13 Around The Churches A Week s Happenings in Religious Circles Saturday March 3 1900 Recorder Indianapolis Indiana Page 4 City Notes Saturday August 11 1900 Freeman Indianapolis Indiana Volume 13 Issue 32 Page 8 Mortuary Notice Freeman Indianapolis Indiana Saturday October 18 1890 Volume 2 Issue 43 Page Supplement 1 Deaths Saturday June 2 1900 Colored American Washington DC District of Columbia Volume 8 Issue 9 Page 13 That School Question Again Saturday April 9 1892 Freeman Indianapolis Indiana Volume 4 Issue 11 Page 8 The Thompson Nuptials Bishop Alexander Walters Officiates at a Pretty Wedding Ceremony in Jersey City Saturday November 16 1901 Washington Bee Washington DC District of Columbia Volume 20 Issue 25 Page 1 R W Thompson Indianapolis Grace Lucas Thompson Saturday September 14 1912 Freeman Indianapolis Indiana Page 8 No Headline Evening Star Washington DC District of Columbia Wednesday August 22 1917 Page 7 a b The School Investigation Washington Bee Washington DC District of Columbia Saturday April 24 1920 Page 4 Mortuary Notice Plaindealer Topeka Kansas Friday February 20 1920 Volume 22 Issue 8 Page 1 Richard W Thompson A Prominent Member of the Colored Press Dead Washington Bee Washington DC District of Columbia Saturday February 21 1920 Page 1 a b c d e White Folks like Colored Folks Have Their Troubles Officers in the Twentieth Are Jealous of Funston Plaindealer Topeka Kansas Friday October 27 1899 Volume I Issue 43 Page 1 Piece One of Four Gatewood Willard B Aristocrats of Color The Black Elite 1880 1920 Bloomington Indiana University Press 1990 p51 Samuels a Myth So Says Richard W Thompson the Brilliant Author Freeman Indianapolis Indiana Saturday August 3 1895 Volume 7 Issue 31 Page 1 Gatewood Willard B 1990 p25 Personal Mention Freeman Indianapolis Indiana Saturday November 18 1893 Volume 5 Issue 46 Page 8 Advertisement Colored American Washington DC District of Columbia Saturday February 10 1900 Volume 7 Issue 46 Page 6 Items Of Race Interest Freeman Indianapolis Indiana Saturday September 30 1911 Page 2 a b Booker T Washington Louis R Harlan 1976b p358 Washington D C Plaindealer Topeka Kansas Friday January 26 1900 Volume II Issue 4 Page 3 The Second Baptist Lyceum A Review of the Important Work Accomplished during the Administration Colored American Washington DC District of Columbia Saturday July 27 1901 Volume 9 Issue 17 Page 9 Our Mr Thompson in the Front Rank Saturday Freeman Indianapolis Indiana June 22 1901 Volume XIV Issue 25 Page 4 Mu So Lit Club Elects Officers Washington Bee Washington DC District of Columbia Saturday January 18 1913 Volume XXXIII Issue 32 Page 5 a b Washington and Harlan 1976a p396 397 Booker T Washington Louis R Harlan The Booker T Washington Papers 1903 04 University of Illinois Press 1976b p355 Booker T Washington Louis R Harlan 1976b p209 The Race s Leader the Friends of Booker T Washington after Conspirators Freeman Indianapolis Indiana Saturday February 14 1903 Volume XVI Issue 7 Page 1 Piece One of Two a b Jacqueline M Moore Leading the Race The Transformation of the Black Elite in the Nation s Capital 1880 1920 University of Virginia Press 1999 p68 a b Booker T Washington Louis R Harlan 1976b p34 35 Almost a Riot Over a Picture Negroes Object to Booker Washington Painting Washington Bee Washington DC District of Columbia Saturday July 11 1903 Volume 23 Issue 6 Page 1 Piece One of Two Mr Thompson in Tuskegee Colored American Washington DC District of Columbia Saturday February 28 1903 Volume IX Issue 44 Page 5 R W Thompson in Southern Indiana Freeman Indianapolis Indiana Saturday August 29 1903 Volume XVI Issue 34 Page 1 Louis R Harlan Booker T Washington Volume 2 The Wizard Of Tuskegee 1901 1915 Oxford University Press December 4 1986 Moore 1999 p 202 Mr Thompson in South Carolina Washington Bee Washington DC District of Columbia Saturday March 27 1909 Volume XXIX Issue 44 Page 1 Richard W Thompson Washington D C Foremost Newspaper Correspondent Conducts News Bureau Flashes Intelligence Over Saturday Freeman Indianapolis Indiana December 25 1915 Page 7 The Fake Washington Bee Washington DC District of Columbia Saturday August 20 1910 Volume XXXI Issue 12 Page 1 The Face Scraper Washington Bee Washington DC District of Columbia Saturday October 1 1910 Volume XXXI Issue 18 Page 4 Mr Thompson Washington Bee Washington DC District of Columbia Saturday May 20 1911 Volume XXXI Issue 51 Page 5 Colored Democrats Said to be after R W Thompson s Scalp Mr Thompson Remains as Messenger Washington Bee Washington DC District of Columbia Saturday August 3 1912 Volume XXXIII Issue 9 Page 4 Called down R W Thompson Administered a Rebuke by Newspapers to Which He Corresponds Washington Bee Washington DC District of Columbia Saturday January 24 1914 Volume XXXIV Issue 32 Page 5 Will the Sun Rise Washington Bee Washington DC District of Columbia Saturday March 14 1914 Volume XXXIV Issue 39 Page 4 Sun Does Move Wilson out Fortune in Coleman and Fortune Editors Newspaper Displaces Hair Vim Washington Bee Washington DC District of Columbia Saturday August 29 1914 Volume XXXV Issue 13 Page 1 School Closing Columbia Conservatory Judge Terrell Commends Professor Adams and His Conservatory of Music Brilliant Washington Bee Washington DC District of Columbia Saturday June 15 1918 Page 1 War Department Bureau Steadily Growing Washington Bee Washington DC District of Columbia Saturday August 10 1918 Page 1 R W Thompson Suffers From Nervous Breakdown Washington Bee Washington DC District of Columbia Saturday January 31 1920 Page 1 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Richard W Thompson journalist amp oldid 1177474853, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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