Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Vincent Tubbs

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Alma mater
  
Morehouse College

Education
  
Morehouse College

Role
  
Journalist

Name
  
Vincent Tubbs

Occupation
  
Journalist


Born
  
September 25, 1915 (
1915-09-25
)
Dallas, Texas

Spouse(s)
  
Mamie Louise Hansberry (divorced)

Children
  
Nantille Hansberry Tubbs

Died
  
January 15, 1989, Los Angeles, California, United States

Vincent Tubbs was a leading African American journalist, who became the first black person to head a motion picture industry union.

Biography

Born Verley Trenton Tubbs, Jr. in Dallas, Texas, on September 25, 1915, he later became known as Vincent Trenton Tubbs, Jr.

While a student at Morehouse College, Tubbs was one of the founders of the Delta Phi Delta journalism fraternity. In March 1938, he launched National Negro Newspaper Week with Moss Kyles Kendrix and Bernard Milton Jones while they were newspaper editors of the Maroon Tiger at Morehouse.

By the time Tubbs turned 26 years old, he had risen rapidly within the world of African American newspapers. While serving as bureau chief of the Richmond edition of the Norfolk Journal and Guide, P. B. Young, the paper's publisher, heard that Tubbs was talking to the Richmond Bureau chief of the Baltimore Afro-American and fired him. Tubbs was quickly hired by the Afro-American at a substantial pay increase. While there, Tubbs was given the challenging assignment of covering lynchings.

As a "lynch reporter," Tubbs could be called at a moment's notice to go to a remote location in the South, never sure if he would be able to find local transportation, lodging or anything resembling a hospitable environment. He would usually arrive by bus one town early to remove his city clothes and try his best to blend in with the local community. It didn't always work. In the early 1940s, Tubbs was spotted by a sheriff in the border town of Texarkana, Arkansas, who ordered him into his patrol car and took him to the chief of police. After being interrogated for several minutes, Tubbs was ordered to leave the state in five minutes.

During World War Two, he was one of the few black war correspondents. Tubbs covered North Africa and the South Pacific from 1943 to 1945 for the Afro-American. After the war, he became the paper's assistant managing editor.

In April 1954, he married Chicago socialite Mamie Louise Hansberry, daughter of wealthy apartment house owner Carl Augustus Hansberry. This union produced a daughter, Nantille Hansberry Tubbs. His granddaughter is actress Taye Hansberry.

From 1955 to 1959, he served as managing editor of Jet magazine. After leaving Jet, he moved to Los Angeles, where he worked for the publicity department at Warner Brothers Studios. After A. S. "Doc" Young, he became one of the first African American publicists in Hollywood.

In 1967, he was elected as president of the Hollywood Publicists Guild. It was the first time that an African American had headed a motion picture guild. Also in the 1960s, Tubbs helped found the United Television Movie Equity Guild to help minorities in motion picture technical fields.

Tubbs was elected president of the Black Filmmakers Hall of Fame in 1979.

He died of a heart attack in his Los Angeles home on January 15, 1989.

References

Vincent Tubbs Wikipedia