Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Claude Sitton

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Alma mater
  
Emory University

Education
  
Emory University

Role
  
Reporter

Name
  
Claude Sitton

Years active
  
1950s – 1990s


Claude Sitton Blog IN RARIFIED AIR


Born
  
Claude Fox Sitton December 4, 1925 Atlanta, Georgia, U.S. (
1925-12-04
)

Occupation
  
Newspaper reporter, editor

Spouse
  
Eva Whetstone (m. 1953–2015) (his death)

Died
  
March 10, 2015, Atlanta, Georgia, United States

Notable awards
  
Pulitzer Prize for Commentary

Awards
  
Pulitzer Prize for Commentary

Laurie Pritchett's Cleverness


Claude Fox Sitton (December 4, 1925 – March 10, 2015) was a Pulitzer Prize-winning American newspaper reporter and editor. He worked for The New York Times during the 1950s and 1960s, distinguishing himself by his coverage of the civil rights movement. He went on to become national news director of the Times and then editor of The News & Observer in Raleigh, North Carolina.

Contents

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Early life and education

Claude Sitton Claude Sitton frontline civil rights reporter in the

Claude Fox Sitton was born in Atlanta, Georgia, to Claude Booker and Pauline Fox Sitton and raised on a farm in Rockdale County, Georgia. He had one sibling, Paul Lyon Sitton, who was the first administrator of the Urban Mass Transportation Administration.

Claude Sitton Claude Sitton Reporter whose unflinching despatches from

Sitton graduated high school in 1943 and entered the Merchant Marine before joining the U.S. Navy. He reached the rank of boatswain’s mate 2nd class in the Navy. His primary ship was the USS LST-706.

Taking advantage of the G.I. Bill, Sitton entered Oxford College of Emory University, moving to Emory's main campus, in Atlanta, after a year. Sitton, who started out as a business major, graduated in 1949 with a journalism degree. While at Emory, he was editor-in-chief of the student newspaper, The Emory Wheel. He returned to his alma mater to teach from 1991 to 1994, and was a member of Board of Counselors of Oxford College from 1993 to 2001.

In 1953, Sitton married Eva McLaurin Whetstone. They had four children, Lauren Lea, Clinton Whetstone, Suzanna Fox and Claude McLaurin.

Career

Sitton started out with wire services, working for International News Service and United Press. Wanting to work outside the country, he joined the United States Information Agency in 1955 as an information officer and press attaché at the American Embassy in Ghana.

The New York Times

Sitton joined The New York Times as a copy editor in 1957. Nine months later, he was named Southern correspondent. Sitton covered the civil rights movement for theTimes from 1958 to 1964. In the Pulitzer Prize-winning history of civil rights journalism The Race Beat, authors Gene Roberts and Hank Klibanoff describe Sitton as the standard bearer for civil rights journalism in the 1950s.

"Sitton's byline would be atop the stories that landed on the desks of three presidents," they write. "His phone number would be carried protectively in the wallets of the civil rights workers who saw him, and the power of his byline, as their best hope for survival."

In 1964, Sitton was named national news director of the Times. He left the Times in 1968 for The News & Observer.

The News & Observer

In 1968, Sitton moved to Raleigh, North Carolina, to become editorial director and vice president of The News and Observer Publishing Co. Within two years, he was also editor of The News & Observer. He oversaw the editorial and news pages of The News & Observer and the news in its afternoon sister paper, The Raleigh Times.

Sitton was a forceful editor who was determined to hold accountable those he thought were not acting in the public good. Among those his paper covered who eventually stepped down were Wake County school superintendent John Murphy, North Carolina State University Chancellor Bruce Poulton and popular NCSU basketball coach Jim Valvano.

Sitton retired in 1990 as editor of The News & Observer and vice president of The News & Observer Publishing Co.

Death

Sitton died March 10, 2015, in hospice care in Atlanta, Georgia, from congestive heart failure. He was 89. Survivors included his wife of 61 years, Eva Whetstone, four children and 10 grandchildren.

Awards

In addition to the Pulitzer for commentary, which he won in 1983, Sitton received the George Polk Career Award (1991) and John Chancellor Award for excellence in journalism (2000). Sitton lived in Oxford, Georgia.

References

Claude Sitton Wikipedia