Boston’s tarnished image, and political hopes, setbacks
Boston’s attitude on race
relations has been summed up for much of the last 40 years in Stanley
Forman’s Pulitzer Prize-winning photo, “The soiling of Old Glory.”
Shortly
after that picture of Ted Landsmark being attacked with an American
flag ran in the Boston Herald American, the Banner ran another: of the
bandaged city official vowing to stay in his job and crediting Deputy
Mayor Jeep Jones, also black, with coming to his aid when no one else
did.
If there seemed
little hope in the court-ordered busing crisis epitomized by the
incident, a glimmer came with the election of John D. O’Bryant to the
Boston School Committee in 1977. He would rise to the presidency of the
longtime South Boston-dominated body when district representation came
to the city electoral districts in 1983.
Yet
in a one-step-forward, two-steps-back moment, Massachusetts, and the
nation, would lose its highest ranking black public official in when
two-term U.S. Sen. Ed Brooke was defeated in 1978 after liberal
Democrats campaigned against the Republican war veteran.
It
wasn’t just the Senate turning all-white that year. Boston and New
England were rocked by the Blizzard of ’78, an equal-opportunity show of
nature’s fury, though disproportionately affecting poorer areas of the
city.
That same year,
Northeastern University opened the African American Master
Artists-in-Residency Program. And black businesses saw advances during
the period, with minority interests gaining a foothold in a re-licensed
Channel 7, architects Stull and Lee quietly making a mark with projects
like the Harriet Tubman House, and Cruz Construction and Long Bay
Management making significant headway in real estate development.
Electoral
excitement would reach a crescendo in the 1983 mayoral race in which
state Rep. Mel King would emerge as a leading contender to become
Boston’s first black mayor. A Banner analysis showing the statistical
improbability of attaining that goal, and its endorsement in the
preliminary of a white candidate sensitive to African-American
interests, sparked protests against the paper. The paper ultimately
backed King in the general election. King then lost to South Boston’s
Ray Flynn by a nearly two-to-one margin.