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- Q4719541 description "African American newspaper editor".
- Q4719541 description "African American newspaper editor".
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- Q4719541 abstract "Alexander (or Alex) L. Manly (1866–1944) was notable as an African-American newspaper owner and editor in North Carolina in the late 19th century. With his brother Frank G. Manly as co-owner, he published the Daily Record (Wilmington, North Carolina), the state's only daily African-American newspaper and possibly the nation's only black-owned daily newspaper. At the time, the port of Wilmington had 10,000 residents and was the state's largest city; its population was majority black, with a rising middle class.In August 1898 Manly published a controversial editorial after a feminist women in Georgia wrote about African American males having inappropriate relationships with white women, at a time when white Democrats were inflaming racial tensions and promoting white supremacy in a bid to regain power in the state legislature. They had lost control in the 1894 and 1896 elections to fusion candidates supported by a Republican and Populist coalition; these voters also elected Republican Daniel L. Russell as governor in 1896. When a biracial fusionist candidates were elected to Wilmington's mayor and council, a secret committee of Democrats conducted the only coup d'état in United States history, overturning the city government. They also ran the Manly brothers out of town, threatening their lives; a large mob destroyed the printing press and burned down the newspaper offices; out of control, it also attacked black neighborhoods and killed an estimated 30-100 persons.The Manly brothers were among the 2100 African Americans who permanently moved out of Wilmington after the riot, resulting in its becoming a majority-white city. The brothers lived briefly to Washington, DC, where Alex married. He and his wife moved to Philadelphia, where they had a family. (Frank Manly moved to Alabama and taught at Tuskegee University.) Alex Manly never fully recovered from his losses, having to support his family as a painter. But, he was politically active, helping found The Armstrong Association, a precursor to the National Urban League, and was a member of the African-American newspaper council.".
- Q4719541 birthDate "1866".
- Q4719541 birthYear "1866".
- Q4719541 deathDate "1944".
- Q4719541 deathYear "1944".
- Q4719541 wikiPageExternalLink search.lib.unc.edu.libproxy.lib.unc.edu?R=UNCb2425194.
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- Q4719541 wikiPageExternalLink search.lib.unc.edu.libproxy.lib.unc.edu?R=UNCb3126686.
- Q4719541 wikiPageExternalLink 1898-wrrc.
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- Q4719541 dateOfBirth "1866".
- Q4719541 dateOfDeath "1944".
- Q4719541 name "Manly, Alex".
- Q4719541 shortDescription "African American newspaper editor".
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- Q4719541 comment "Alexander (or Alex) L. Manly (1866–1944) was notable as an African-American newspaper owner and editor in North Carolina in the late 19th century. With his brother Frank G. Manly as co-owner, he published the Daily Record (Wilmington, North Carolina), the state's only daily African-American newspaper and possibly the nation's only black-owned daily newspaper.".
- Q4719541 label "Alexander Manly".
- Q4719541 differentFrom Q19661998.
- Q4719541 givenName "Alex".
- Q4719541 homepage AppdxA.pdf.
- Q4719541 name "Alex Manly".
- Q4719541 name "Manly, Alex".
- Q4719541 surname "Manly".