Charles Gerald Fraser (July 30, 1925 – December 9, 2015) was an American journalist, best known for his long service (1967–1991) at The New York Times, having begun his journalistic career at the New York Amsterdam News in 1952. He was described by journalist and sociologist Thom Blair as "a citizen journalist inside the mainstream press".[1]
Biography
Early years and education
He was born as Charles Gerald Fraser Jr. in Boston, Massachusetts, on July 30, 1925, to parents who had migrated to the United States from the Caribbean. His father, who was a cook, came from Guyana, and his mother, a seamstress, from Jamaica.[2]
From 1952 to 1956, Fraser worked as a reporter with the New York Amsterdam News. There, as Herb Boyd notes, "he covered everything from crime, housing integration, social affairs, economic issues, civil rights, education and labor. When there was a paucity of African-American teachers in the New York school system, Fraser’s front page story in 1955 illuminated their plight. The Teachers Union, Fraser wrote, claimed 'that less than 4 percent of the teachers in New York schools are Negroes.'"[3] Fraser subsequently worked at the United Nations for several West Indian publications, prior to being hired by the New York Daily News.[3]
In 1967, Fraser was employed by The New York Times, becoming the paper's second Black reporter.[3] Later colleague Pranay Gupte, commenting in the Huffington Post on those "tough years in the journalism of an era where blacks weren't necessarily welcomed and their acuity questioned", recalled: "Gerry Fraser overcame by the sheer sturdiness of character. He would come up with his own assignments – not only about the burgeoning black communities in New York state, but also about a wide range of issues, including electoral politics. He would always say that a black reporter could and should cover issues beyond blackness."[4]
Leaving The New York Times in 1991, Fraser joined Earth Times, a monthly publication campaigning on environmental affairs, where he became a senior editor.[1][2]