Writing Toward Justice
The Life and Reporting of Alice A. Dunnigan
Boyds Mills, PA : Calkins Creek, 2026.
Format: Book
Description: 40 pages : color illustrations ; 25 cm
Alice Dunnigan knew all about injustice--she was the daughter of poor Black sharecroppers in Kentucky. But Alice also knew the key to fighting injustice was to speak out. At 13 years old, she wrote to a Black newspaper asking for a job--and got it! It was only the beginning. After many years of hard work as a teacher, a cleaner, a typist, and a journalist, Alice became the first Black woman in the Capitol Press Corporation But one person was still beyond her grasp, a person who needed to be held accountable: President Truman. Would he keep his promise to support civil rights for Black Americans? By scrimping and saving for a ticket on the president's cross-country train tour, Alice was able to meet the president and win him over to her cause: justice.
Subjects:
Dunnigan, Alice Allison, 1906-1983 -- Juvenile literature.
African American women journalists -- Biography -- Juvenile literature.
African American journalists -- Biography.
Women journalists -- Biography.
Dunnigan, Alice Allison, 1906-1983 -- Juvenile literature.
African American women journalists -- Biography -- Juvenile literature.
African American journalists -- Biography.
Women journalists -- Biography.
Target Audience: Grades 1-4
ISBN:
1662680899
| Availability | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Call Number | Location | Shelf Location | Status |
| C BIOGRAPHY Dunnigan, Alice | Main (Downtown) | Garden Level, Children's Biography | In |
| C BIOGRAPHY Dunnigan, Alice | St. Andrews Indoors | Children's Biography | In |