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Dean B. Ellis Library receives
historical gift from John Robert Starr family
July 8, 2010
--
The Dean B. Ellis Library
on the Arkansas State University campus at Jonesboro has received a
major historical gift to its Department of Archives and Special
Collections, said Dr. Brady Banta, ASU archivist.
The family of renowned Arkansas journalist John Robert Starr has
donated its entire collection of his career and literary papers to
Arkansas State University.
A former Associated Press Bureau Chief in Little Rock, John Robert Starr
became managing editor of the Arkansas Democrat in 1978. He joined a
dynamic team that presided over one of the great newspaper wars as the
Democrat challenged the editorial, circulation and advertising revenue
dominance of the Arkansas Gazette, the oldest newspaper west of the
Mississippi. Ultimately, the Democrat won the war in 1991, and its
owner, Walter E. Hussman, bought the Gazette’s assets to form one
statewide newspaper, the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette.
Additionally, Starr, a Pine Bluff native who died in 2000, was known to
have a contentious relationship with former Arkansas Governor and U.S.
President Bill Clinton that was often highlighted in Starr’s
seven-day-a-week column. Banta noted that Starr’s frequent criticism of
and communications with Clinton add to the collection’s historical
significance.
Banta said Dr. Joel Gambill, chair of the ASU Department of Journalism,
was pivotal in ASU’s securing of the John Robert Starr Collection.
“Dr. Gambill established contact with the Starr family about the
collected works—some 35 boxes of material,” Banta noted. “Because of
his efforts, ASU will now have another in-house collection that will
provide a fascinating look at the late-20th century political
and journalistic landscape of Arkansas.”
Banta said it will take months to catalog the materials, and then
Gambill will have sole access to the collection for a period of up to
five years, in accordance with the family’s wishes.
“My mom, my brother Johnny, my sister Linda and I are pleased that my
dad’s papers are finding a permanent home at Arkansas State under the
direction of Dr. Joel Gambill,” said Rusty Starr, publisher of the
Palatka (Fla.) Daily News and a 1976 journalism graduate
of ASU.
“We believe the Little Rock newspaper war will be studied for years to
come, and we are very proud of my dad’s role as editor of the Arkansas
Democrat. We also believe the papers include insights into my dad’s
various writings, including his seven-day-a-week column that held
Arkansas politicians accountable for their actions. These papers truly
belong to the people of Arkansas who my father endeavored to serve.”
Banta said the collection—at the least—includes correspondence, column
clippings, information about the newspaper war from the perspectives of
both newspapers, and information on Gov. Clinton.
“Arkansas State University is honored and grateful that Norma Starr and
her family have entrusted Mr. Starr’s papers to the university’s care,”
said ASU Interim System President Robert Potts, who met with Rusty Starr
earlier this year when he was on campus as featured guest in the
Journalism Alumni Speaker Series.
“John Robert Starr was clearly one of the most prominent figures in
Arkansas journalism during an era of major changes in the newspaper
industry,” said Dr. Dan Howard, Interim Chancellor for ASU-Jonesboro.
“The university community and countless others will benefit from the
Starr family’s generosity.”
The Arkansas State University Department of Archives and Special
Collections also houses collections from ASU’s beginnings, with the V.C.
Kays and H.M. Cooley collections; regional interest collections,
including the Judd Hill and Mabel H. Gieseck collections; and political
papers of former Gov. Francis Cherry and former U.S. First District
Representative E.C. “Took” Gathings. Additionally, the department is
home to the Mid-South Center for Oral History.
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