A. M. Secrest
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Andrew McDowd Secrest | |
|---|---|
| Born | September 15, 1923 Monroe, North Carolina |
| Died | April 17, 2010 (aged 86) Chapel Hill, North Carolina |
| Occupation | Journalist |
| Spouse | Ann Louise Eastman |
Andrew McDowd "Mac" Secrest Jr. (September 15, 1923 – April 17, 2010), known professionally as A. M. Secrest, was an American newspaper publisher, editor, and civil rights advocate. He served as a federal mediator for the Community Relations Service under President Lyndon B. Johnson.
Secrest was born on September 15, 1923, in Monroe, North Carolina.[1] He attended Duke University, where he earned a B.A. in 1944, a Master's degree in 1970, and a PhD in 1972.[1][2]
Journalism
After serving as an officer aboard the USS Hammann (DE-131) during World War II, Secrest worked for several newspapers including The Laurinburg Exchange and The Charlotte News.[1] In 1953, he became the owner and publisher of The Cheraw Chronicle, a weekly paper in northeastern South Carolina. His editorials opposing segregation and advocating for civil rights drew criticism and harassment, but also support.[3] During his tenure, the paper sustained its circulation and advertising revenue, and Secrest garnered local and national accolades for his journalism.[4][5]
Contribution to civil rights
In 1959, Secrest was appointed to South Carolina's State Advisory Committee of the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights.[6][7] During this period, Secrest joined the board of directors of Penn Community Services, Inc. (now Penn Center), where Martin Luther King Jr. and Southern Christian Leadership Conference members planned the March on Washington and the Poor People's Campaign.[8]
In June 1964, Secrest was appointed to the newly established Community Relations Service as a field conciliator, a role that sent him to different communities in the U.S. to help mediate racial disputes.[9][10] The behind-the-scenes work of the Community Relations Service under director LeRoy Collins is credited with helping deescalate tensions in Selma, Alabama, following the events of Sunday, March 7, 1965, when state troopers and possemen attacked unarmed civil rights demonstrators.[11] Hoping to avoid a repeat of "Bloody Sunday", President Johnson dispatched Collins and Secrest to Selma to meet with King about plans to resume the Selma-to-Montgomery march.[12][13] A compromise was negotiated: on March 9, King would lead demonstrators across the Edmund Pettus Bridge, hold a prayer meeting at the site of the Bloody Sunday violence, then turn the march back to Selma.[12][13] Collins and Secrest secured assurances from Alabama officials that they would not attack demonstrators this time.[14]

Teaching career and retirement
After selling The Cheraw Chronicle in 1968, Secrest taught journalism at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill for five years.[1] From 1976 until he retired in 1985, he taught at North Carolina Central University, a historically black college in Durham.[15] In 2004, Secrest published a memoir, Curses and Blessings: Life and Evolution in the 20th Century South, which includes stories of his encounters with King, John F. Kennedy, Dizzy Gillespie, Richard Nixon, Strom Thurmond, and other notable figures of the time.[16]