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The Philadelphia Tribune

The Philadelphia Tribune is the oldest continuously published African-American newspaper in the United States.[2]

Type

Privately held

Irv Randolph

November 27, 1884 (November 27, 1884)

English

United States

31,544 weekday
23,698 Sunday
(as of September 2020)[1]

The paper began in 1884 when Christopher J. Perry published its first copy. Throughout its history, The Philadelphia Tribune has been committed to the social, political, and economic advancement of African Americans in the Greater Philadelphia region. During a time when African Americans struggled for equality, the Tribune acted as the "Voice of the black community" for Philadelphia. Historian V. P. Franklin asserted that the Tribune "was (and is) an important Afro-American cultural institution that embodied the predominant cultural values of upper-, middle-, and lower-class Black Philadelphians."[3]


In the early 21st century, the paper is headquartered at 520 South 16th Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. It publishes on Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, and Sunday. The Philadelphia Tribune also publishes the Tribune Magazine, Entertainment Now, Sojourner, The Learning Key, and The Sunday Tribune. The Tribune serves the Philadelphia–Camden Metro Area, as well as Chester.[4] The Tribune has received the John B. Russwurm award as "Best Newspaper" in the country seven times since 1995.[4]

List of newspapers in Pennsylvania

Banner-Haley, Charles Pete (Spring 1998). "The Philadelphia Tribune and the Persistence of Black Republicanism during the Great Depression". . 65 (2): 190–202. JSTOR 27774100.

Pennsylvania History

Franklin, V. P. (October 1984). ""Voice of the Black Community:" The Philadelphia Tribune, 1912–41". Pennsylvania History. 51 (4): 261–284.  27773002.

JSTOR

Taylor, Frederick Jerome (1990). "Black Musicians in "The Philadelphia Tribune", 1912–20". The Black Perspective in Music. 18 (1/2): 127–140. :10.2307/1214862. JSTOR 1214862.

doi

Official website

West Chester University, , 2014.

Goin' North: Stories from the First Great Migration to Philadelphia