Negro Digest Once the idea of
Negro Digest occurred to him, it began to seem like a "black gold mine," Johnson stated in his autobiography
Succeeding against the Odds. Writers attended Southern church meetings, offering insider civil rights perspectives. People considered Johnson's decision to publish Till's photograph his greatest moment.
Michigan congressman
Charles Diggs recalled that given the emotion the image stimulated, it was "probably one of the greatest media products in the last 40 or 50 years".
Because of the reach of
Ebony and
Jet president
Dwight D. Eisenhower met with Johnson, this would start a pipeline of information in which every single subsequent president to his death met with Johnson to form a relation with the man
Lyndon B. Johnson described as “the only man who can get 20 million people to listen to you.” The show toured over 200 cities across the
United States,
Canada, and
the Caribbean, raising between $47 and $51 million for the
United Negro College Fund (UNCF) and other Black charities. at 820 Michigan st. It is the first and still only black designed building in downtown Chicago. As he did with all of his business ventures he turned to guerrilla tactics to get the brand rolling. His brand would make its way into the Chicago and New York City malls where he would again pay people to buy out initial shipments. His next task was selling in the south, he would do this by going uninvited to a luncheon to honor
Neiman-Marcus CEO
Herbert Marcus where he would set up a meeting with him. His meeting would consist of dinner and a visit to the traveling Fashion Fair show that happened to be in Dallas at the time. This day would secure his inclusion in Neiman-Marcus south. His connections to the Dillards board and CEO would further his expansion into the south.
Honors and awards Johnson won many awards, and was honored with many positions, like how he became a member of the
Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity, Chicago-based Theta chapter, in 1937. In 1951, he was the second African American to be selected as one of the ten Young Men of the Year by the
United States Junior Chamber of Commerce. In 1961, he was appointed special ambassador to Côte d'Ivoire's independence ceremonies, and in 1963 to Kenya's. Over the years Johnson had devoted a portion of several issues of
Ebony to articles relating to
African independence movements, but in August 1976 he dedicated an entire special issue to the subject "Africa, the Continent of the Future". In 1977 he was named the most outstanding Black publisher in history by the
National Newspaper Publishers Association. In 1984 he was named Chicagoan of the year. In 1987, Johnson was inducted into the
Junior Achievement National Business Hall of Fame, Publishing Hall of Fame, and the Black press Hall of Fame. Also in 1989 he received the PUSH foundation's international humanitarian award. Alfred C. Sykes, chairman of the Center for Communication, and president of
Hearst Media Technology, said| "Mr. Johnson is a role model for many young people today, an example of how hard work, commitment and belief in oneself can lead to outstanding achievement. He rose from disadvantaged circumstances to achieve success in both business and national service during a time when great obstacles were placed in his path." ==Death, funeral and legacy ==