Home | Business News | Browse by Publication | E | Ebony

Celebrating the life and legacy of John H. Johnson 1918-2005.

Publication: Ebony
Publication Date: 01-OCT-05
Format: Online - approximately 8483 words
Delivery: Immediate Online Access
Full Article Title: Celebrating the life and legacy of John H. Johnson 1918-2005.(Obituary)(Cover Story)

Article Excerpt
JOHN HAROLD JOHNSON was the people's publisher. He built a legacy celebrating the achievements and beauty of Black Americans, and they, in turn, honored that legacy by paying tribute to both the dream and the dreamer.

"People say he was a great 'Black' publisher, but I worked for him for 52 years, and it is my testimony as a reporter and historian that considering the depth from whence he came, and the height he climbed and the obstacles he overcame, he was the greatest of all American publishers,

Black or White," EBONY Executive Editor Emeritus Lerone Bennett Jr. said at the funeral service for the media giant.

Former President William Jefferson Clinton escorted Johnson's wife of 64 years, Mrs. Eunice W. Johnson, into the service and paid tribute to Johnson as a "man I liked and admired." Clinton, a fellow Arkansan who in 1996 presented Johnson the Medal of Freedom, the nation's highest civilian honor, said: "John Johnson had a vision of keeping hope alive by showing Black people faces of hope." Clinton noted that Johnson was one of millions of Blacks who fled the Jim Crow South for a better life in the north. "Out of this swarm of hardworking, family-loving men and women carving out their own version of the American Dream," the former president said, "one man stood out because his dream was bigger and he had a vision for how to achieve it."

Media broadcasters Tom Joyner and Tavis Smiley lauded Johnson as a "man of action." Smiley said Johnson died "a masterpiece of magnificence." He also praised Johnson's commitment and independence. Remarking on Johnson's $500 loan against his mother's furniture to launch his first magazine, Smiley said to much applause, "Mr. Johnson took that $500 and built a media empire that 60 years later is still No. 1 and still 100 percent Black-owned."

Many dignitaries attended the funeral service for the media mogul held at the University of Chicago's Rockefeller Memorial Chapel, but hundreds of private citizens waited outside in the hot sun for the chance to bid a fond farewell to the man Bennett called "an American original" who had a relationship with the people that went "beyond polls and focus groups."

Mourners began lining up nearly two hours before the 11 a.m. funeral service began. Those not able to get inside waited outside the chapel until the end of the three-hour ceremony that was filled with poignant and amusing anecdotes by Johnson's friends and business associates.

Bennett added that the "unprecedented upsurge of emotion at his death proves that the people knew him and loved him not because of the money, not because of the awards, but because he was, in Gwendolyn Brooks' terms, 'the real thing.'"

Johnson Publishing Company headquarters, located on downtown Chicago's famed Michigan Avenue, was the focal point of the two-day celebration. The 11-story building, designed by Black architect John Moutoussamy, overlooks Lake Michigan and Grant Park. Thousands gathered and formed long lines outside the building to view the publisher's bier in the two-story glass, marble and steel entrance, draped in black-and purple mourning bunting.

Celebrities and program speakers gathered at the building the morning of the funeral for breakfast before being transported in nearly 50 gleaming black limousines to the service.

Following the three-hour funeral service, more than 1,000 invited guests returned to Johnson Publishing Co. for a repast and reception that lasted until the early evening hours.

The day before the services, Johnson lay in state in the lobby of Johnson Publishing Company, his polished mahogany casket surrounded by red roses. And the people came. They came by the thousands. So many came that the five-hour visitation period was extended by an hour to accommodate the mourners.

Silently, slowly, reverently, pushing walkers and baby strollers, with toddlers in tow and oxygen tanks, they came. They carried early issues of EBONY, recent issues of EBONY and Black history books. They carried autographed copies of Johnson's biography, Succeeding Against the Odds. They wore church hats and police uniforms. They wore jeans, shorts and suits. They represented hip-hop and be-bop. They stood outside in the hot afternoon sun--and they didn't complain.

In two remarkable days, with lines that wound around Chicago's downtown streets, and around the University of Chicago's Rockefeller Chapel, they came from around the country to bear witness to the man who in 60 years of publishing EBONY changed America with words and images.

Johnson, whose business empire also included Jet magazine, Ebony Fashion Fair and Fashion Fair Cosmetics, died of heart failure in Chicago on August 8. He was 87.

An 8-foot-tall portrait of the late publisher dominated the lobby of the company headquarters. The Johnson family--his wife, Mrs. Eunice W. Johnson; daughter, company President and CEO Linda Johnson Rice; son-in-law, Mel Farr; and granddaughter, Alexa Rice--greeted mourners at the public viewing. Alpha Phi Alpha and Sigma Pi Phi fraternities conducted farewell rituals.

President Clinton led a host of prominent speakers who praised Johnson's legendary courage and spirit. Along with Bennett, Joyner and Smiley, they included the Rev. Dr. William H. Gray III, former congressman and senior minister, Bright Hope Baptist Church in Philadelphia, who delivered the moving eulogy. Also offering tributes were U.S. Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.), Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich, Chicago Mayor Richard M. Daley, the Hon. John H. Stroger, president, Cook County Board of Commissioners, Black Enterprise founder and publisher Earl G. Graves Sr., noted business leader and former Chairman of The Dial Corporation John W. Teets, Christie Hefner, chairman of Playboy Enterprises, H. Patrick Swygert, president of Howard University, Peoples Gas and North Shore Gas President Desiree Rogers, and the Rev. Jesse L. Jackson Sr.

Johnson Publishing Company was closed the day of his funeral, and employees were transported to the chapel. Funeral arrangements were entrusted to Unity Funeral Parlors, Inc. in Chicago, headed by Norman J. Williams. Stunning floral arrangements were designed by David Waldvogel, owner of Henry Hampton Floral.

Along with the public, the VIP list was extensive. Among the notables in attendance were the Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan; Bishop T.D. Jakes and his wife, Serita; Diahann Carroll, Juanita Jordan, the Rev. Al Sharpton, Don King, Berry Gordy, Suzanne de Passe, Rodney Slater, Edward Lewis, Butch Lewis, AOL-Time Warner CEO Richard Parsons, BET founder Robert L. Johnson and current CEO Debra Lee, U.S. Rep. Maxine Waters, businessman George Johnson, Randy Jackson of the Jackson musical family, fitness guru Donna Richardson, comedian/activist Dick Gregory, Michelle Obama, U.S. Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr., U.S. Rep. Harold Ford Jr., U.S. Rep. Bobby Rush, U.S. Rep. Danny Davis, ambassador and former U.S. Sen. Carol Moseley Braun, Illinois State Senate President Emil Jones Jr., Timothy Evans, chief judge, Cook County Circuit Court; Valerie Jarrett, chairman of the Chicago Stock Exchange; John Rogers, CEO Ariel Capitol Management; Byron Lewis, founder and president of Uniworld Group Inc.; Bernard Bronner, publisher of Upscale magazine; Thomas J. Burrell, chairman-emeritus of Burrell Communications Group; Xernona Clayton, corporate vice president, Urban Affairs, at Turner Broadcasting and executive producer of the Trumpet Awards; the Rev. Addie L. Wyatt, the Rev. Willie Barrow, financial strategist Mellody Hobson, publisher Hermene Hartman, former Illinois Attorney General Roland Burris, Shawnelle Richie Logan, CBS-2 Chicago/WBBM-TV director of community affairs, Neal S. Zucker, president of Corporate Cleaning Services, and Chicago Alderwoman Dorothy Tillman.

Granddaughter Alexa Rice expressed the family's acknowledgement and appreciation of the outpouring of public expressions of condolence. For those seeking to honor Johnson, the family has requested donations be made to the Howard University John H. Johnson School of Communications, 525 Bryant Street NW, Washington, D.C., 20059, or to the United Negro College Fund, 8260 Willow Corporate Drive,...

View this article FREE - Now for a Limited Time, try Goliath Business News
Free for 3 Days!



More articles from Ebony
Style 101: back-to-school fashion guide., October 01, 2005
Ebony celebrity beauty of the month.(actress Shondrella Avery)(Brief A..., October 01, 2005
Her style ... your way.(skin and hair care tips)(Brief Article), October 01, 2005
Getting to the root: hair care for sisters.(Brief Article), October 01, 2005
Finding the right pediatrician: this is one of the most important choi..., October 01, 2005

Looking for additional articles?
Search our database of over 3 million articles.

Looking for more in-depth information on this industry?
Search our complete database of Industry & Market reports by text, subject, publication name or publication date.

About Goliath
Whether you're looking for sales prospects, competitive information, company analysis or best practices in managing your organization, Goliath can help you meet your business needs.

Our extensive business information databases empower business professionals with both the breadth and depth of credible, authoritative information they need to support their business goals. Whether it be strategic planning, sales prospecting, company research or defining management best practices - Goliath is your leading source for accurate information.