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Ray Sprigle

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153:, a prominent 66-year-old political leader and early civil rights activist from Atlanta. Dobbs, who was known and respected across the South, took Sprigle into many black communities and introduced him as an NAACP field investigator to people he otherwise would never have been able to meet or interview. 156:
When Sprigle returned to Pittsburgh he wrote 21 powerful and passionate first-person articles that exposed white readers to the oppression, discrimination and humiliation that 10 million black Americans were being subjected to every day by the South's system of legal segregation. The series, featured
197:'s similar but much more famous effort to learn what daily life was like for a Southern black man. Griffin, who dyed his skin black, turned his experiences into the 1961 bestseller 165:, reported on a range of social, political and economic issues, including the inferiority of segregated black public schools. According to the paper's publisher, the 190:, the country's largest African American-owned newspaper, which had editions in more than a dozen cities and was widely read by blacks in the South. 479: 141:
In May 1948, Sprigle, at age 61 and using the name "James Crawford," began a thirty-day, four-thousand-mile undercover mission through the
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after his freshman year and started working as a newspaper reporter and a freelance pulp fiction writer.
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Sprigle had a long and notable career in newspaper journalism, mostly as a general reporter with the
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Sprigle's series was nationally syndicated and carried by about 15 other newspapers, including the
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The Race Beat: The Press, the Civil Rights Struggle, and the Awakening of a Nation
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in Alabama. The evidence that Sprigle uncovered included, among other things, a
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30 Days a Black Man: The Forgotten Story That Exposed the Jim Crow South
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Sprigle's undercover journalism preceded by more than a decade novelist
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copy of a letter from Black written on the stationery of the
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Sprigle's account of traveling in 1948 for a month in the
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Elizabeth A. Brennan and Elizabeth C. Clarage (1999).
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had never run a series that received more attention.
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while passing for black was first serialized by the
245: 214: 145:. Passing as a black man, he was supported by the 62:in August 1948. The series was adapted as a book, 461: 43:in 1938 for his reporting that Alabama Senator 85:) ancestry. He attended local schools. He left 138:Klan asking to resign from the organization. 404: 436: 212: 72: 299: 14: 462: 400: 398: 163:I Was a Negro in the South for 30 Days 118:, newly appointed as a justice to the 480:Pulitzer Prize for Reporting winners 157:on the front page of the Pittsburgh 395: 337: 248:Who's Who of Pulitzer Prize Winners 237: 24: 430: 285:"The Pulitzer Prizes 1938 Winners" 25: 536: 81:, to parents of colonial German ( 371: 110:for a series of articles in the 475:American civil rights activists 27:American journalist (1886–1957) 500:Pittsburgh Post-Gazette people 365: 277: 13: 1: 515:Journalists from Pennsylvania 230: 485:Ohio State University alumni 441:. Guilford, Conn. New York: 108:Pulitzer Prize for Reporting 7: 126:, had been a member of the 120:United States Supreme Court 106:In 1938 he was awarded the 10: 541: 437:Steigerwald, Bill (2017). 407:"Sprigle's secret journey" 470:American male journalists 92: 490:Writers from Akron, Ohio 206: 73:Early life and education 495:Writers from Pittsburgh 412:Pittsburgh Post-Gazette 217:In the Land of Jim Crow 175:New York Herald Tribune 100:Pittsburgh Post-Gazette 60:Pittsburgh Post-Gazette 36:Pittsburgh Post-Gazette 374:"Ray Sprigle, Pioneer" 252:. Oryx Press. p.  520:Journalists from Ohio 181:Philadelphia Inquirer 87:Ohio State University 353:. September 27, 1937 223:Simon & Schuster 213:Ray Sprigle (1949). 77:Sprigle was born in 525:Activists from Ohio 195:John Howard Griffin 149:and accompanied by 405:Bill Steigerwald. 187:Pittsburgh Courier 124:Franklin Roosevelt 83:Pennsylvania Dutch 151:John Wesley Dobbs 16:(Redirected from 532: 456: 424: 423: 421: 419: 402: 393: 392: 390: 388: 369: 363: 362: 360: 358: 341: 335: 334: 303: 297: 296: 294: 292: 281: 275: 274: 272: 270: 251: 241: 226: 220: 161:under the title 21: 540: 539: 535: 534: 533: 531: 530: 529: 460: 459: 453: 433: 431:Further reading 428: 427: 417: 415: 403: 396: 386: 384: 378:racetraitor.org 372:Rees, Richard. 370: 366: 356: 354: 343: 342: 338: 331: 321:Alfred A. Knopf 304: 300: 290: 288: 283: 282: 278: 268: 266: 264: 242: 238: 233: 209: 95: 75: 64:In the Land of 28: 23: 22: 18:Raymond Sprigle 15: 12: 11: 5: 538: 528: 527: 522: 517: 512: 507: 502: 497: 492: 487: 482: 477: 472: 458: 457: 452:978-1493026180 451: 432: 429: 426: 425: 394: 364: 336: 329: 311:Hank Klibanoff 298: 287:. pulitzer.org 276: 262: 235: 234: 232: 229: 228: 227: 208: 205: 94: 91: 74: 71: 41:Pulitzer Prize 26: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 537: 526: 523: 521: 518: 516: 513: 511: 508: 506: 503: 501: 498: 496: 493: 491: 488: 486: 483: 481: 478: 476: 473: 471: 468: 467: 465: 454: 448: 444: 440: 435: 434: 414: 413: 408: 401: 399: 383: 382:Noel Ignatiev 379: 375: 368: 352: 351: 350:Life Magazine 346: 340: 332: 330:0-679-40381-7 326: 322: 318: 317: 312: 308: 307:Roberts, Gene 302: 286: 280: 265: 263:1-57356-111-8 259: 255: 250: 249: 240: 236: 224: 219: 218: 211: 210: 204: 202: 201: 200:Black Like Me 196: 191: 189: 188: 183: 182: 177: 176: 170: 168: 164: 160: 154: 152: 148: 144: 139: 137: 133: 129: 125: 122:by President 121: 117: 114:proving that 113: 109: 104: 102: 101: 90: 88: 84: 80: 70: 68: 67: 61: 57: 52: 50: 46: 42: 38: 37: 32: 19: 438: 418:November 16, 416:. Retrieved 410: 385:. Retrieved 377: 367: 357:November 16, 355:. Retrieved 348: 339: 319:. New York: 314: 301: 289:. Retrieved 279: 269:November 16, 267:. Retrieved 247: 239: 221:. New York: 216: 198: 192: 185: 179: 173: 171: 167:Post-Gazette 166: 162: 159:Post-Gazette 158: 155: 140: 128:Ku Klux Klan 112:Post-Gazette 111: 105: 98: 96: 76: 63: 59: 53: 49:Ku Klux Klan 34: 30: 29: 510:1957 deaths 505:1886 births 443:Lyons Press 132:photostatic 79:Akron, Ohio 39:. He won a 31:Ray Sprigle 464:Categories 291:August 28, 231:References 143:Deep South 116:Hugo Black 56:Deep South 45:Hugo Black 387:June 20, 313:(2006). 184:and the 69:(1949). 66:Jim Crow 136:Alabama 449:  327:  260:  93:Career 207:Works 147:NAACP 447:ISBN 420:2011 389:2017 359:2011 325:ISBN 309:and 293:2011 271:2011 258:ISBN 254:560 466:: 445:. 409:. 397:^ 380:. 376:. 347:. 323:. 256:. 203:. 178:, 103:. 51:. 455:. 422:. 391:. 361:. 333:. 295:. 273:. 225:. 20:)

Index

Raymond Sprigle
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Pulitzer Prize
Hugo Black
Ku Klux Klan
Deep South
Jim Crow
Akron, Ohio
Pennsylvania Dutch
Ohio State University
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Pulitzer Prize for Reporting
Hugo Black
United States Supreme Court
Franklin Roosevelt
Ku Klux Klan
photostatic
Alabama
Deep South
NAACP
John Wesley Dobbs
New York Herald Tribune
Philadelphia Inquirer
Pittsburgh Courier
John Howard Griffin
Black Like Me
In the Land of Jim Crow
Simon & Schuster
Who's Who of Pulitzer Prize Winners
560

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