Gwen
Ifill, one of the nation’s most esteemed journalists, will be featured on the
43rd stamp in the Black Heritage Series.
Deputy
Postmaster General Ron Stroman will be the dedicating official at the First-Day-Of-Issue
(FDOI) ceremony at the Metropolitan African Methodist Episcopal Church in
Washington DC on January 30.
Gwen Ifill was among the first African Americans to hold prominent
positions in both broadcast and print journalism.
After graduating from college in 1977, Ifill worked at The Boston
Herald American, The Baltimore Evening Sun, The Washington Post and The New
York Times. In 1994, she took a broadcast job at NBC, where she covered
politics in the DC bureau. Five years later, she joined PBS; she became the
senior political correspondent for “The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer” and
moderator and managing editor of “Washington Week” — the first woman and
first African American to moderate a major television news-analysis show.
In 2013,
she became co-anchor of the “PBS NewsHour,” part of the first all-female
team to anchor a national nightly news program. Ifill died in 2016.
Among
Ifill’s honors were the Radio Television Digital News Foundation’s Leonard
Zeidenberg First Amendment Award (2006), Harvard’s Joan Shorenstein Center’s
Goldsmith Career Award for Excellence in Journalism (2009) and induction into
the National Association of Black Journalists Hall of Fame (2012). In 2015, she
was awarded the Fourth Estate Award by the National Press Club. She received
numerous honorary degrees and served on the boards of the News Literacy Project
and the Committee to Protect Journalists, which renamed its Press Freedom Award
in her honor.
The 2016 John Chancellor Award was posthumously awarded to Ifill
by the Columbia Journalism School. In 2017, the Washington Press Club
Foundation and the “PBS NewsHour” created a journalism fellowship named for
Ifill. Her alma mater, Simmons University, opened the Gwen Ifill College of
Media, Arts, and Humanities in 2018.
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