On April 30, 1983, Robert C. Maynard made American journalism history when he became owner, editor, and publisher of the Oakland Tribune. Maynard’s purchase made him the first Black person to gain controlling interest in a major daily newspaper in the United States. The moment was historic because ownership of a newspaper meant more than holding a title. It meant control over newsroom leadership, editorial direction, hiring, coverage priorities, and the public record. Maynard had already broken barriers before buying the paper. He worked at The Washington Post, where he became the paper’s first Black national correspondent. In 1979, he became editor of the Oakland Tribune, making him one of the most important Black newsroom leaders in the country. When he took ownership in 1983, the Tribune was a major metropolitan daily serving Oakland and the East Bay. Maynard used the paper to focus on community issues, public education, local government, economic development, and fairer representation of people of color in the news. His leadership helped change how American newsrooms thought about diversity and responsibility. He also co-founded the Institute for Journalism Education, later renamed the Robert C. Maynard Institute for Journalism Education, to train and support journalists of color. Robert C. Maynard died in Oakland on August 17, 1993, at age 56. His legacy remains tied to a simple but powerful fact: he did not just enter a newsroom. He helped lead one, own one, and open doors for others to shape the news. #RobertCMaynard #OaklandTribune #BlackHistory #JournalismHistory #BlackPress