Virginius Dabney

Virginius Dabney (February 8, 1901 – December 28, 1995) was an American teacher, journalist, and writer, who edited the Richmond Times-Dispatch from 1936 to 1969 and wrote several historical books.Dabney won the Pulitzer Prize for editorial writing in 1948 due in part to his opposition to the poll tax.Although he was personally opposed to massive resistance against desegregation of Virginia's public schools, the owners of the Times-Dispatch did not allow him to editorialize against it.His other books written during this time included Richmond: The Story of a City (1976), Across the Years: Memories of a Virginian (1978, his autobiography), Mr. Jefferson's University: A History (1981) and Pistols and Pointed Pens: The Dueling Editors of Old Virginia (1987).Compilations of his newspaper columns were also published as The Last Review: The Confederate Reunion, Richmond, 1932 (1984) and Virginius Dabney's Virginia: Writings about the Old Dominion (1986).
Virginius Dabney (American football)Charlottesville, VirginiaRichmond, VirginiaUniversity of VirginiaPulitzer PrizeRichmond Times-Dispatchpoll taxVirginia Commonwealth UniversityThomas JeffersonConfederateEpiscopal High SchoolAlexandria, VirginiaDelta Kappa EpsilonDabney–Thompson HouseThe Richmond News LeaderDouglas S. FreemanBaltimore Evening SunH. L. MenckenNew York TimesAdolf HitlerprogressiveliberalKu Klux KlanByrd OrganizationHarry F. ByrdEllen Glasgowmint julepsAmerican Society of Newspaper EditorsPeabody AwardsBoard of JurorsFaye Emerson's Wonderful TownFaye Emersonmassive resistancedesegregationMartin Luther King Jr.civil rights movementVietnam WarMedical College of VirginiaRichmond Professional InstituteVirginia Historical SocietyGuggenheim FellowshipSally HemingsWashington PostEncyclopedia VirginiaDictionary of Virginia BiographyVirginia Quarterly Review