Carol Sutton
Carol Sutton (June 29, 1933 – February 19, 1985) was an American journalist. In 1974 she became the first female managing editor of a major U.S. daily newspaper, The Courier-Journal in Louisville, Kentucky. She was cited as the example of female achievement in journalism when Time named American Women as the 1975 People of the Year. During her tenure at the paper, it was awarded the 1976 Pulitzer Prize for Feature Photography for its coverage of school desegregation in Louisville. She is also credited with significantly raising the number of minority reporters on staff.
"Kentucky Women Remembered," a permanent exhibit at the Kentucky State Capitol's Main Floor of watercolors of Women of Kentucky and those who help(ed) change the mindset of those upcoming. "TODAY'S WOMAN" Magazine for KY & Indiana. Daughter Kate Whaley Archer accepts the First Posthumous Award Ever Given. Carol Sutton knew of her Kentucky Journalism Hall of Fame award at the University of Kentucky before her death in 1985, and was very humbled and honored by it. The family holds a Carol Sutton Memorial Scholarship Award in her honor every year, which has grown from our first recipient to 8 or twelve deserving people. It is for we people who want and need more racial and ethnic equality within the news reporting workplace. She was the first white woman to be inducted into the National Association of Black Journalist's Hall of Fame.[1][2]
References
- "American Women", Time, January 5, 1976.
- Robert D. McFadden, "Carol Sutton, Ranking Editor In Louisville, Ky., Dead at 51", New York Times, Feb 20, 1985.
- "Carol Sutton." Almanac of Famous People, 8th ed. Gale Group, 2003.
Kimberly Wilmot Voss, "The Burden of Being First: Carol Sutton and the Courier-Journal," American Journalism: A Journal of Media History, Vol. 27, No. 1, Winter 2010. James D. Ausenbaugh, "At Sixth and Broadway: Tales From the Glory Days of a Great Newspaper, The Courier-Journal," Mews Publishing Company, 1998. Patricia Bradley, "Mass Media and the Shaping of American Feminism, 1963-1975," University Press of Mississippi, 2003. Scribner's Encyclopedia of American Lives, vol. 1, Notable Americans Who Died Between 1981 and 1985, Kenneth T. Jackson, editor in chief, Charles Scribner's Sons, New York, 1998. Mimi O'Malley, "It Happened in Kentucky," Morris Book Publishing, Guilford, CT, 2006. "The First Woman Senior Editor at a Major Newspaper Worked in Louisville. It Didn't End Well, Either" by Keith Runyon, wfpl.org, May 16, 2014. Kimberly Voss and Lance Speere,"Taking Chances and Making Changes: The Career Paths and Pitfalls of Pioneering Women in Newspaper Management," Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, published online March 20, 2014 by SAGE on behalf of Association for Education in Journalism & Mass Communication. Kay Mills, "A Place in the News," Columbia University Press, New York, 1990. Marion Marzoff, "Up From the Footnote: A History of Women Journalists," Hasting House, New York.1977.
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