American journalist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Michael DeMond Davis (January 1939 – November 13, 2003), also known by the byline Mike Davis, was an Americans journalist and author. In 1963, he was hired as the first black reporter at the Atlanta Constitution.[1] He co-authored Thurgood Marshall, Warrior at the Bar, Rebel at the Bench, a biography of the Supreme Court justice.[2] His other works include Black American Women in Olympic Track and Field.
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One of four children of John P. Davis and Marguerite Davis (née DeMond),[3] Michael D. Davis grew up in Washington, D.C., and New York City.[citation needed] His father, John P. Davis was a graduate of Harvard Law School and a prominent journalist and civil rights lawyer.[3] His mother was a graduate of Syracuse University. Mike Davis was the grandson of Dr. William Henry Davis and the Reverend Abraham Lincoln DeMond
In 1943, the first lawsuit challenging segregated schools in Washington, D.C., was brought in Michael D. Davis's name by his father, John P. Davis. The Washington Star was highly critical of an African-American lawyer legally challenging the District's Dual school system when the principal of Noyes School refused to admit Mike Davis at five years of age, stating that the District citizens had long accepted separate schools for blacks and whites and that the suit brought by John P. Davis would cause even deeper divisions in the nation's capital.
The U.S. Congress, in response to John P. Davis's suit, appropriated federal funds to construct the Lucy D. Slowe elementary school directly across the street from his Brookland home in the neighborhood of Washington, D.C. Davis attended the Fieldston school in New York, New York.
As a student at Morehouse College in Atlanta, Georgia, and a member of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC), he worked closely with Martin Luther King Jr., and was a leader of the student sit-in movement. He was arrested many times in Atlanta's bus stations and department stores.
Ralph McGill, publisher of the Atlanta Constitution, and Eugene Patterson hired Davis as the paper's first African-American reporter.[1] McGill became his mentor and friend.
Davis went on to Vietnam as the Afro-American Newspapers war correspondent. During his 18 months in Vietnam, he reported on combat activities of black service people in the Afro's 13-state circulation area. When he returned home, he joined the Baltimore Sun. He was a staff member of the San Diego Union, where he covered Governor Jerry Brown, the now-defunct Washington Star, an editor of NBC television news in Washington, D.C., and a reporter for the Washington Times.
His work has received several Front Page Awards from the American Newspaper Guild.[citation needed] The NAACP gave him an award for his coverage of Vietnam.
From July to November 1967, Davis published over 100 articles as the Vietnam War correspondent for the Baltimore Afro-American in the column called the "Vietnam Notebook".
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