Joseph Blackburn Bass founded the Topeka Call, a black community newspaper. He continued to work on that newspaper when it was purchased by another owner and its name changed to the Topeka Plaindealer. Bass was active in local politics, and in 1896 was one of the Kansas delegates to the Republican National Convention that nominated William McKinley for President. After a short stint publishing a black community newspaper in Helena, Montana, Bass moved to Los Angeles, where in 1913, he accepted Charlotta Spears' offer to edit the California Eagle. Spears and Bass married in 1914. Portrait photograph of Joseph Blackburn Bass, editor-in-chief of the California eagle and husband of Charlotta Bass. Written on back of photograph: copied from Beasley "Negro Trail Blazers of California (1919)
Type
image
Identifier
uclalsc_1889_b06_f08_004a.tif ark:/21198/z1qz3v10
Subject
African American newspaper editors Bass, J. B. (Joseph Blackburn), 1867-1934
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