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This story originally appeared in the Jackson Free Press. It was added to the Mississippi Free Press website in 2025.
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A Laurel newspaper will close its doors this Thursday. File Photo

Beginning with a Martin Luther King Jr. quote, The Meridian Star issued an apology yesterday for its neglect of civil rights issues facing Mississippians during the Civil Rights Movement.

โ€œThere was a time when this newspaper โ€“ and many others across the south โ€” acted with gross neglect by largely ignoring the unfairness of segregated schools, buses, restaurants, washrooms, theaters and other public places,โ€ the newspaper wrote in its editorial.

โ€œWe did it through omission, by not recording for our readers many of the most important civil rights activities that happened in our midst, including protests and sit-ins. That was wrong. We should have loudly protested segregation and the efforts to block voter registration of black East Mississippians.โ€

See the full text here.

Previous Comments

The meridian star is owned by a large newspaper outfit,community newspaper holdings,inc., based out of birmingham.i would be curious to learn more about the executive management of the company.it may not mean anything ,but the first name of the comapnay CEO is “Donna”.the executive editor,fredie carmichael, is local and is the son of an incumbent state senator.carmichael also wrote an opinion piece on sunday that hit home.http://www.meridianstar.com/local/local_story_018010118.html


a story about the editorial also ran in editor and publisher.http://www.editorandpublisher.com/eandp/news/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1003931673


Excellent. This is exactly the kind of publicity the world needs about our stateโ€”not the back-ass mentality (such as with Lott and Cochran) that we shouldn’t apologize for things that happened in the past.


Just as bad as the we-shouldn’t-apologize mentality are journalists from other parts of the country who talk about Mississippi as if it’s still 1964, without bothering to look and see what papers like the Meridian Star–and JFP of course–are publishing these days. I was pleasantly surprised by the way NPR handled the presidential debates in Oxford. They made a point to contrast the kind of hipster town today’s Oxford is against the place James Meredith had to deal with.

Mississippi native Donna Ladd and partner Todd Stauffer founded the Jackson Free Press in 2002 in the capital city. The heavily awarded local newspaper did many investigations heralded across the state and nation and served as a paper of record due to its diversity, inclusion, in-depth reporting and deep connection to readers and dedication to narrative change in and about Mississippi. In 2022, the nonprofit Mississippi Free Press, founded by Ladd and JFP Associate Publisher Kimberly Griffin in 2020, purchased the journalism assets and archives of the Jackson Free Press. A Google grant through AAN Publishers enabled Newspack's integration of the JFP archives into the Mississippi Free Press website to become part of a more searchable archive of recent Mississippi history and essential journalism.