Draft:James W. Jacks
James Jacks should link here
James W. Jacks died December 5, 1921) served as president of the Missouri Press Association.
He bought the Montgomery Standard in 1881.
In response to a letter to American journalists seeking support for anti-lynching efforts, he wrote a scathing racist broadside to anti-lynching activist Florence Balgarnie.[1] National Organization of Afro-American Women
He was buried at Montgomery City Cemetery. He had two sons and a daughter
He was born in Monroe County, Missouri, part of the Little Dixie region. His father was a native Kentuckian who was allied with the Confederacy. He became part owner of a book publisher in St. Louis that printed John Newman Edwards’ “Noted Guerrillas” about subjects including William Quantrill, “Bloody Bill” Anderson, and the James brothers.
References
[edit]- ^ "The Missouri editor whose bigotry outlived him". 16 June 2023.