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Video (Click titles to view):
First Job - Caldwell is hired by buddy Frank Cardon to be assistant to the sports editor at his hometown paper. Running Time 1:59
Blacks Allowed? - Caldwell must wait to hear about a job because editors don't know if they're allowed to hire blacks as reporters. Running Time 2:12
Discrimination - Caldwell encounters bias while applying for a job at a newspaper in Harrisburg, Pa. Running Time 1:56
Demonstration - As race emerges as a burning issue, Caldwell must decide whether to participate in local demonstrations by blacks. Running Time 3:08
Links:
Caldwell Bio (Caldwell Journals)
Newswatch Interview
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Earl Caldwell
His love for journalism began at his hometown paper
As a college student Earl Caldwell believed his fate lay in the
insurance business. He entered the University of Buffalo as a business
major and in his second year he was offered a summer internship with a
Philadelphia insurance company. When he went to the office they told him
because he was black that he'd have to work in the south. And by the
way, they added, no insurance company outside of the south would ever
hire him, even as a professional.
Caldwell's ambition for insurance was sunk. "I was horrified of the South,"
Caldwell says.
Stunned by the scope of racism in the insurance business, Caldwell returned
home to Clearfield, Pa. where he found his high school buddy, Frank Cardon
working at the local paper, The Progress. Cardon, who was the sports
editor, got Caldwell a job there reading proofs and assisting Cardon. He
didn't make much money but he learned as many aspects of the paper as he
could.
When Cardon left for a job at another paper, Caldwell applied for the
sports editor position and got it. As a young man, getting a full-fledged
job as the sports editor was as far as he could see his career
going. He never imagined how far journalism would take him.
Caldwell found a mentor in Progress editor George Scott, who
encouraged the young man to move up the chain of newspapers. Scott helped him get a job at the Intelligencer-Journal in Lancaster, Pa. in 1959. There,
Caldwell served as a sports writer, the first African American in the
paper's newsroom. He almost didn't get the job because the
Intelligencer-Journal editors weren't sure their policy allowed them
to hire blacks.
A few years later when Caldwell tried to move on to another paper, he
got his first whiff of discrimination in the business. He interviewed for a
job at the newspaper in Harrisburg, Pa., the state capitol. The editor
said he would hire him. Caldwell, excited about his new job, hurried back to
his Intelligencer-Journal editor and told him he was resigning. Weeks
passed and Caldwell never heard from the Harrisburg editor again.
Fortunately for Caldwell, his editor allowed him to rescind his
resignation.
Convinced that he would likely spend the rest of his career at the
Intelligencer-Journal, Caldwell decided there would be greater
opportunity outside of covering sports, and began covering news in metro,
government, planning and crime. As the civil rights movement took hold and
protests decrying discrimination grew numerous, Caldwell began to notice
that race was becoming a big issue.
Soon he would become witness to some of the most shattering events of
the last 50 years as America moved through the storm of social
transformation.
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