The Iowa Bystander was an Iowanewspaper serving African Americans. It was founded in Des Moines on June 15, 1894,[1] by I. E. Williamson, Billy Colson, and Jack Logan, and it is considered to be the oldest Black newspaper west of the Mississippi.[2][3] The paper was first called Iowa State Bystander; the term "bystander" given by its editor, Charles Ruff, after a syndicated column "The Bystander's Notes" written by Albion W. Tourgée, a civil rights advocate who wrote for The Daily Inter Ocean.[1] The name was changed to Bystander in 1916 by owner John L. Thompson, who published the paper from 1896-1922. Thompson traveled around the state seeking new subscribers, raising the circulation to 2,000 copies, and changed the paper to a 6-column 8-page layout.[2]
In 1922, Thompson sold the newspaper to Lawrence Jones who, within 2 years, sold the paper to World War I veteran and founder of the National Bar Association, James B. Morris for $1,700. Morris changed the name of the paper to Iowa Bystander.[1] Morris and the paper developed close ties with the NAACP and fought the rise of the Ku Klux Klan in Iowa.[4]
Jonathan Narcisse, who ran for governor of Iowa in 2010 and 2014, was owner from 1990 until his death in 2018.[8] He had transitioned the paper into a digital-only format.
James B. Morris, founder of the National Bar Association, owned and ran the Iowa Bystander from 1922-1972
Robert V. Morris, grandson of James B. Morris and author of Black Faces of War: A Legacy of Honor from the American Revolution to Today, ran the paper from 1979-1983 while he was still a college student[9]
Marie Ross, was news editor for the paper, and won two first-place awards from the National Federation of Press Women for her "Personal Touch" column.[10]
References
^ abc"Iowa Bystander". Library of Congress Chronicling America. July 6, 2018.