
Nancy Maynard
Maynard was the only black woman covering news in NYC in '68
Nancy Maynard got her first sense of the power of the press when
she was a teen. Her former grammar school, PS 46, had burned down. She
read about it in the local paper and became so outraged at the negative
and inaccurate description of her neighborhood that she decided right
there she needed to fix it. Over the course of her career as a
journalist, which spans nearly four decades, Maynard influenced
the make-up of newsrooms across the country as both a reporter and
mentor to younger reporters trying her best to improve the institution
for people of color.
Maynard credits her mother, who had a journalism bug, with
encouraging her young interest in journalism and keeping her steered in
that direction. Her father was a jazz musician and also tried to direct
her professional attention toward music, but journalism won out. She
worked on the student newspaper of her junior high school and continued
to participate in newsroom activities whenever she could.
She got her start in a major mainstream daily as a copy boy at the New
York Post while studying journalism at Long Island University. Several
New York Times editors taught at the university, and she garnered
immediate attention from the Times. She could have gotten a job at
the paper right out of college but she decided her career would be better
served working at the Post first. In 1966 after graduating, she
joined the New York Post reporting staff at the age of 20. Legend has it
that she was the youngest reporter on a New York daily staff, but Maynard isn't so sure that's true. Two years later, however, she would
become the youngest staff reporter on the New York Times staff.
While at the Post, Maynard won the attention of the legendary
Ted Posten who broke the color barrier in the Post's newsroom. He took
her under his wing steering her career and developing her talent.
There had been a few African Americans working for mainstream news
outlets in New York, but none were women. Maynard was a novelty.
At the time she was the only black woman covering news in the City.
Sometimes that made relationships to sources difficult, particularly
during the civil rights movement, which was controlled by men.
Maynard said she didn't have too much trouble at the paper as a
black reporter. "The Post had such an inferiority complex that I
didn't have a problem of being seen as not good enough, smart enough or trained
enough to do the job," she said.
It wasn't until 1968 that she ran into her first problem at the paper
where she felt editors were trying to hold her back. In the spring of
that year, she had the opportunity to cover the garbage strike in
Memphis where New York unions were sending a delegation. Martin Luther
King was to be there and Maynard requested to go. But the editor
denied her request saying it would have been a conflict of interest for
her to travel with the delegation free of charge. The editor said the
Post didn't have the money to cover her travel expenses.
That week, King was assassinated on the balcony of the Lorraine Motel in
Memphis. With her editor's decision, Maynard knew it was time for
her to move on to another paper.
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