W. Allison Sweeney

William Allison Sweeney
Born (1851-07-27)July 27, 1851
Superior, Washtenaw Co., MI
Died 1921
Nationality U.S.A.
Occupation Newspaper editor
Known for Nonfiction book; poems

William Allison Sweeney (1851–1921) was an American newspaper writer, editor, and owner, poet, and author of a history of Afro-American soldiers in World War I.

Early life

Sweeney was born in Superior, Washtenaw Co., MI on 27 July 1851 to William Jacob and Aurilla (Day) Sweeney. He was married twice. He was first married to Rene Clark, with whom he had two children; and then second to Roberta Lomax Erskine.[1] He died in 1921.[2]

Sweeney was primarily known as a newspaper man. His career began in 1879. He contributed to both black and to white newspapers; an example of the latter is The Herald, in Indianapolis. He edited and published The People (Wheeling West Virginia, 1885–6), The National People (Detroit, 1886–7); was editor and manager of The Freeman (Indianapolis, 1890–8); and editor and part owner, Chicago Leader (1905–6).[1][3] At the Freeman, Sweeney was associated with R. W. Thompson, who would later suggest to Booker T. Washington that Sweeney's work at the Chicago Conservator receive a subsidy from Washington to support its continued publication.[4]

Sweeney's most famous newspaper association was as editor of the Chicago Conservator. The Conservator was in the center of a political power struggle whose sides were associated with W. E. B. Du Bois and Booker T. Washington. Sweeney was in the Washington camp and became editor of the Conservator in 1904. Sweeney exhibited some ineptness as a manager and businessman while there, as he often missed publication dates for considerable periods of a time.[2]

As a poet, Sweeney was considered to be one of the "Chicago poets" and thought to have written the first poem by a black man employing the technique of free verse.[5] The list of poems below is from Mather.

Sweeney was the first black to serve on a jury in West Virginia (1885).[1]

Criticism

While Sweeney has been called "the 'dean' of the Chicago press corps", who was "idolized by younger journalists", his "essays full of impassioned pleas and profuse in flowery language" can be seen to epitomize "a departing style of black journalism that was giving way to modern techniques of reporting the rising commodity of race news".[6]

Works

Books

Poems

References

  1. 1 2 3 (Ed.) Mather, Frederick Lincoln (1915), Who's who of the colored race: a general biographical dictionary ..., Volume 1. Memento edition., Chicago: Frederick Lincoln Mather, p. 257
  2. 1 2 Giddings, Paula (2008). Ida: a sword among lions. Harper Collins. ISBN 978-0-06-051921-6.
  3. Penn, Irvine Garland (1891). The Afro-American press and its editors. Springfield, MA: Willey & Co. p. 364.
  4. Booker T. Washington, Louis R. Harlan, The Booker T. Washington Papers: 1899-1900 University of Illinois Press, 1976 p209
  5. (Ed.) Guzman, Richard (2006). Black writing from Chicago: in the world, not of it?. Southern Illinois University. p. 9. ISBN 978-0-8093-2703-4.
  6. Albert Kreiling, “The Commercialization of the Black Press and the Rise of Race News in Chicago”, chapter 8 in Solomon (Ed.), William Samuel; Robert Waterman McChesney (1993). Ruthless criticism: new perspectives in U.S. communication history. University of Minnesota Press. p. 179. ISBN 0-8166-2169-1.
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