Newsies, 1930 - 1979
Biographical / Historical
Printed stories about the AFRO’s youngest employees, the AFRO newspaper carriers or “newsies,” are found as early as 1912, when the AFRO was still known as the AFRO American Ledger, and already employed both boys and girls to sell papers at that time. A recruitment article from 1959 states there were 3500 AFRO Carriers that year. The morgue files about newsies reflect the active recruitment efforts to recruit and retain newsies through incentives, depicting newsies enjoying the many prizes, parties, picnics, local excursions, and overnight trips the AFRO organized for their news carriers. Top prizes for top sellers included multiple trips to New York City and at least one trip to Disneyland in California in 1960. In 1939, 1940, and 1964 Baltimore newsies attended the New York World’s Fair. Recruitment articles also tout the lessons in business and responsibility to be learned as an AFRO news carrier, in addition to the wages. Much of Baltimore’s late 20th century Black business and government leadership began their working lives as AFRO newspaper carriers, with congressman Elijah Cummings being among the most famous former newsies. The Newsies program began to wane in the early 1970s, which Howard H. Murphy, then Comptroller of the newspaper, attributed to parents’ increasing safety concerns in a 1971 interview.
Scope and Contents
Series documents the AFRO’s coverage of its news carriers, also known as “Newsies,” and contains mainly photographs, photomontages, and clippings. Newsies from the 1930s through the 1970s are pictured on the job delivering newspapers, selling subscriptions, receiving awards and prizes, and participating in outings, parties, and trips organized by the AFRO company. Locations of AFRO editions (Baltimore, Washington, Philadelphia, Richmond, Newark) are most highly represented, but newsies based elsewhere are also pictured, including Boston, Harlem, Tampa, and several locations in North Carolina and Virginia.
Extent
0.7 Linear Feet
Dates
- Creation: 1930 - 1979
Arrangement
The main categories of content - newsies on the job, outings, and prizes and parties - are subdivided by decade. Documentation of trips is arranged by specific trip, chronologically.
Additional material related to AFRO newsies may be found elsewhere in the morgue filed under individual names.
Business records related to newsies are found in the records of the Circulation Department in the AFRO Business Records.
Processing Information
The AFRO Subjects series of the AFRO Morgue files has been processed in tandem with the morgue processing project that began in 2023. Material in this series brings together files formerly scattered across the morgue. In creating this arrangement, in some cases material once filed under an inidividual's name may be filed under a more general subject heading related to the AFRO program.
Processing of the AFRO Subjects series of the AFRO Morgue files is ongoing. As each subject is completed, metadata is added to the finding aid.
Sources consulted for the historical notes are cited at the subseries level.
Bibliography
“What it takes to be: An AFRO Carrier.” Baltimore Afro-American. 17 Oct 1959.
Brown, Stacia, host. “Episode 2: Eddie-AFRO!” Rise of Charm City, WEAA, 5 Feb 2016.
Original location
DS0102, GFE 003; DS0507, GFC 018; ML0104, MAR 010; ML0403, MAR 060; ML0903, MAR 151; ML1303, MAR 228; TN0102, TUB 014; TN0201, TUB 035; TN0306, TUB 037; TN1307, TUB 242; TN1307, TUB 243; TN1307, TUB 244; WY0201, GFF 014
Repository Details
Part of the AFRO American Newspapers Archives Repository