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IN MEMORIAM: Thomas H. Watkins Built What Black Media Was Told Could Not Last BLACK HISTORY

February 4, 2026

Thomas H. Watkins, who passed away in December at age 88, was a pioneering newspaper publisher who established the New York Daily Challenge as the first Black-owned daily newspaper in New York City's history. Operating from Bedford-Stuyvesant, he built a financially successful enterprise that at its height generated nearly $30 million annually while providing employment for dozens of African Americans across various departments.

Who is affected

  • Thomas H. Watkins (deceased founder)
  • Dozens of African Americans employed in journalism, advertising, production, and management at his publications
  • Black readership communities in New York City and the surrounding region
  • The National Newspaper Publishers Association (NNPA) and its member newspapers
  • Black-owned newspapers across the country
  • Dr. Benjamin Chavis Jr., President and CEO of the National Newspaper Publishers Association
  • Former colleagues of Watkins

What action is being taken

  • No explicit next steps stated in the article
  • (Note: The article describes past actions and achievements of Watkins but does not detail any current ongoing actions beyond publishers remembering him and reflecting on his legacy this week.)

Why it matters

  • Watkins demonstrated that Black-owned media could be both editorially independent and financially viable, proving that Black readership carried measurable economic value at a time when corporations routinely dismissed Black publications. His success created a model for economic self-determination in Black communities, showing that ownership and control of media institutions were essential tools for Black advancement rather than merely symbolic gestures. The Daily Challenge and his other publications provided crucial coverage of issues affecting Black communities—including police misconduct, housing inequity, and political struggles—with depth and consistency that mainstream outlets failed to match, while simultaneously creating substantial employment opportunities and keeping advertising revenue within Black communities.

What's next

  • No explicit next steps stated in the article

Read full article from source: Michigan Chronicle

IN MEMORIAM: Thomas H. Watkins Built What Black Media Was Told Could Not Last BLACK HISTORY