- Virginius Dabney
Virginius Dabney (
February 8 ,1901 toDecember 28 ,1995 ) was a U.S.teacher ,journalist ,writer , and editor. He was the editor of the "Richmond Times-Dispatch "from 1936 to 1969 and author of several historical books. He won thePulitzer Prize for editorial writing in 1948 due in part to his opposition to thepoll tax .Youth, education
Virginius Dabney was born on
February 8 ,1901 at theUniversity of Virginia inCharlottesville, Virginia , where his father was a history professor. His mother was a descendant ofThomas Jefferson and his father was the son of a Confederate Veteran. He was educated atEpiscopal High School inAlexandria Virginia and at theUniversity of Virginia , where he was a brother in the Delta Kappa Epsilon Fraternity (DKE).Teacher, journalist, editor
After teaching for a year at Episcopal High School in Alexandria, in 1922, he went to work in
Richmond, Virginia as a journalist at theRichmond News-Leader , which was then edited byDouglas S. Freeman . During this period he was also Virginia correspondent for theBaltimore Evening Sun , where he came to the attention ofH.L. Mencken . In 1928, he left the News-Leader for theRichmond Times-Dispatch , where he became Chief Editorial Writer in 1934, and editor in 1936.As editor, he was responsible for the
editorial page. He editorialized againstAdolf Hitler and in favor of wage and hour laws for women. He was, for his time, a progressive, and at times a liberal voice, opposing theKu Klux Klan and thepoll tax . He was not afraid to take on theByrd Organization , a political machine of Governor (and later Senator)Harry F. Byrd which dominated Virginia's politics from the late 1920s until 1969. He was also known for opining on less serious topics, such as the death ofEllen Glasgow 's dog, and on the qualities ofgrits andmint julep s. He served on the Southern Policy Committee and the Southern Conference for Human Welfare. In 1948, he was awarded thePulitzer Prize for editorial writing. He served as president of theAmerican Society of Newspaper Editors in 1957-58.In the 1950s, his editorials took on a more conservative tone. Although he was personally opposed to
massive resistance againstdesegregation of Virginia's public schools, the owners of the Times-Dispatch did not allow him to editorialize against it. He was offended by the student activists of the 1960s, and was ambivalent about the Rev.Martin Luther King , whom he admired for his courage but disdained for his "trouble-making" and what he called "unfair" attacks on theVietnam War .Author, retirement
Dabney retired from the Times-Dispatch in 1969. He wrote several books, notably including "Virginia: The New Dominion", "Richmond: The Story of a City", and "The Jefferson Scandals, a Rebuttal", which was a refutation of the
Sally Hemings allegations. He died on December 28, 1995 at his home in Richmond at the age of 94.Bibliography
The following are books by Virginius Dabney.
*"The Jefferson Scandals: A Rebuttal"
*"Pistols and Pointed Pens: The Dueling Editors of Old Virginia"Across the Years
*"Richmond: The Story of a City"
*"Virginia: The New Dominion"
*"The Patriots" (editor)
*"Dry Messiah"
*"Below the Potomac"
*"Liberalism in the South"
*" [http://repo.lib.virginia.edu:18080/fedora/get/uva-lib:178665/uva-lib-bdef:100/getFullView Mr. Jefferson's University] " (1981)
*"Virginius Dabney's Virginia"External links
* [http://docsouth.unc.edu/sohp/A-0311-2/menu.html Oral history interview] by Daniel Jordan and William H. Turpin, July 1975 (Southern Oral History Program, UNC-Chapel Hill)
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.