Resilience & Overcoming Adversity

Black journalist Alice Allison Dunnigan inspired female journalists

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It is a thrilling and highly deserved honor: A statue of Alice Allison Dunnigan, the first African-American woman to receive White House press credentials and the first black female member of the Senate and House of Representatives press galleries, is moving around the country. Dunnigan’s likeness has traveled from the Newseum in Washington to the University of Kentucky and will display at the Harry S. Truman Presidential Library and Museum in Missouri before moving to Dunnigan’s hometown later this year.

But even as we celebrate this recognition, it would be a mistake to neglect the suffering and enormous odds Dunnigan had to overcome to attain it.

As I note in my book, “Trailblazer: A Pioneering Journalist’s Fight to Make the Media Look More Like America,” I deeply admire Dunnigan and other women of the black press who broke race and gender barriers. But romanticizing their contributions and minimizing their pain does them an injustice by obscuring the racist and sexist system in which black Americans of all genders had to operate — and operate still.

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