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  1. John H. Johnson

    John H. Johnson. John H. Johnson was born January 19, 1918 in rural Arkansas City,
    Arkansas. His parents were Leroy Johnson and Gertrude Jenkins Johnson. ...

  2. John H

    ... empire. [2] In November 2005, a portion of Chicago?s famed Michigan Avenue
    was renamed John H. Johnson Avenue. [edit] External links.

  3. Black Business

    ... in the names of Anthony Johnson, and later as ... and _____ Page 2 H-Net
    Reviews ... Norbert Rillieux, James Forten, John B. Vashon ...

  4. Communications

    ... I also read an article out the Aug.29, 2005 issue of Jet entitled ?Thousands Join
    in Historic Farewell Celebration of Publisher John H. Johnson in Chicago ...

  5. Mr.

    ... When in November 1945 John H. Johnson, a 27-year-old Black businessman with a vision
    and an abiding faith in himself, launched Ebony magazine, his timing couldn ...

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John H. Johnson

Submitted by koji on March 10, 2005

Category: Biographies
Words: 678 | Pages: 3
Views: 270
Popularity Rank: 27,162
Average Member Grade: N/A (Add a Comment / Grade this Paper)

John H. Johnson was born January 19, 1918 in rural Arkansas City, Arkansas. His parents were Leroy Johnson and Gertrude Jenkins Johnson. His father was killed in a sawmill accident when little John was eight years old. He attended the community's overcrowded, segregated elementary school. In the early 1930s, there was no public high school for African-Americans in Arkansas. His mother heard of better opportunities for African-Americans in Chicago and saved her meager earnings as a washerwoman and a cook and for years until she could afford to move her family to Chicago. This resulted in them becoming a part of the African-American Great Migration of 1933. There, Johnson was exposed to something he never knew existed, middle class black people.
Johnson enrolled in DuSable High School and was an excelling student. Because of his achievements, Johnson was invited in 1936, to speak at a dinner held by the Urban League. Harry Pace, the President of the Supreme Liberty Life Insurance Company, was so impressed with Johnson's speech that he offered him a job and a scholarship to attend college part-time. But his interest focused primarily on the operations at the insurance firm and eventually he dropped his studies at the University of Chicago. In 1939 at the age of 21 he became the editor of Pace's in-house magazine. Collecting articles culled from national publications, Johnson realizes he had struck gold.
In 1941, Johnson married Eunice Walker and found a full-time position at Supreme Liberty Life. One of Johnson's job descriptions at Supreme Liberty Life was to collect the news and information about African-Americans and prepare a weekly digest for Pace. He thought that a "Negro newspaper" could be sold and marketed and have people to be very interested in it. In 1942, Johnson borrowed $500 from his mother's furniture and started the Johnson Publishing Company. Johnson got idea, The Negro Digest, and modeled it after the Reader's Digest but it took...

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