Harold Jackson

Harold Jackson

Harold Jackson retired after 45 years as a journalist, including 10 as the first Black editor of the Philadelphia Inquirer’s editorial page. Jackson was senior editorial writer at the Houston Chronicle when he retired in 2020 and currently lives in Houston. He has also been an editorial writer at the Baltimore Sun and the Birmingham (Ala.) News. While at the News, he and two colleagues won the Pulitzer Prize for editorial writing in 1991 for a series on changing Alabama’s inequitable tax system. Jackson, who also worked for United Press International and the Birmingham Post-Herald, grew up in the Loveman Village housing project in Birmingham, Alabama.

For his 2013 column entitled “The memories of a black child in Birmingham,” click here.

Their venom surprised me

For the most part, I was oblivious to the summer of violence that ensued. But one thing I will never forget about those days is one of my rare interactions with white people. I was just about to cross a well-traveled street on my way to the store when a pickup truck whizzed by with two or three white kids in the back who yelled something about “nigger” at me.

Their venom surprised me because it was so unexpected. I remember wondering how they could hate me when they didn’t even know me. Did whoever was driving the truck really intend to hit me? But just how far hatred can take a person toward depravity became more apparent within a matter of days when Sixteenth Street Baptist Church was bombed on Sept. 15, 1963, killing four little girls.

School first

In 1963 I was 9 years old, in the third grade, and not paying much attention to the conversations of all the adults who were apprehensive because the Rev. Fred Shuttlesworth had asked King to help lead the local civil rights movement.

Shuttlesworth, whom I interviewed years later as a reporter, was head of the Alabama Christian Movement for Human Rights, an organization formed out of necessity after the state banned the NAACP.