Portland New Age Explained

Portland New Age
Type:African American newspaper
Owners:-->
Founders:-->
Publisher:Adolphus D. Griffin
Publishing City:Oregon
Publishing Country:United States

The New Age, later known as the Portland New Age, was the first African American newspaper published in Oregon.

History

Adolphus D. Griffin, or A.D. Griffin, launched the weekly newspaper in 1896. Griffin, served various occupational roles throughout his life, which included editor, publisher, politician, entrepreneur, and even custodian.[1] He was known as a "political leader of the colored people of the Willamette Valley,"[2]

Shortly after the New Age's initial launch, Griffin offered to circulate it to Portland's black residents for free.[3] The city's black population, which numbered fewer than 800 on the paper's launch date,[4] were highly literate in comparison to southern blacks of the time, and to Oregon's white laboring class. At the time, black people were legally prohibited from living in the state by a provision in the Oregon Constitution.[5] The New Age, which included national news items in addition to local coverage, was intended for a black readership.[6] However, the publication likely attracted some white audiences, as well.

Griffin was a member of the Oregon Press Association.[7]

Prior to launching the New Age, Griffin had been editor of the Northwest Echo in Spokane, Washington. He left Portland for unknown reasons in 1907, and the newspaper did not survive his departure. He died nine years later; at the time he was editor of the Kansas Elevator.[8]

The Oregon Historical Society holds about 400 issues of the New Age, and the University of Oregon and Harvard University have issues on microfilm.[9]

See also

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Shreds and Patches. (1898, August 13). Colored American, 6 (20), p. [4].
  2. News: Hopkins Koglin. Oz. February 16, 1993. New Age Weekly Gave Blacks in Portland a Perspective. The Oregonian.
  3. Advertisement. (1900, August 11). Portland New Age, p. 4.
  4. Web site: Portland New Age « Historic Oregon Newspapers. October 6, 2015. Historic Oregon Newspaper. https://web.archive.org/web/20151006041653/http://oregonnews.uoregon.edu/history/newage/. October 6, 2015. April 17, 2019.
  5. Web site: Historic Oregon Newspapers: Preserving History While Shaping the Future. October 7, 2015. The Public Domain Review. en. April 17, 2019.
  6. A. D. Griffin; Portland
  7. Web site: Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937, January 13, 1906, Page 10, Image 10 « Historic Oregon Newspapers.
  8. Web site: The New Age, Portland, OR (1896–1907). The Black Past: Remembered and Reclaimed. blackpast.org. en. October 24, 2018. Kimberley. Mangun. January 22, 2007.
  9. Web site: Library. University of Oregon, Knight. Portland new age..