Image

3:01 AM / Tuesday September 26, 2023

21 Nov 2010

Johnson Publishing sells historic building

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
November 21, 2010 Category: Education Posted by:

By Richard Prince

Robert C. Maynard Institute for Journalism Education

CHICAGO – Johnson Publishing Co. has sold its historic building on Chicago’s Michigan Avenue to Columbia College Chicago, the company has announced.

It has not yet selected a new home and is to remain in the building for 18 months.

“The sale of 820 S. Michigan is part of the continuing evolution of the company that my father and mother started in the early 1942s,” Linda Johnson
Rice, Johnson Publishing Co. chairman, said in a statement.

“Just as when JPC moved to this location in 1972, my father would be the first to say it makes good business sense to relocate to space that serves the
current needs of the company.”

The purchase price was not disclosed, but spokesman Rodrigo A. Sierra, senior vice president and chief marketing officer, said, “It does strengthen our
balance sheet. We want to be focused on our businesses and not on upkeep of a building.”

JPC said that it uses only about 40 percent of the building.

The announcement said, “The 11-story, 110,000 square-foot historic building, which has been home to EBONY and JET magazines as well as Fashion Fair
Cosmetics for almost 40 years, was completed in 1972 as the first major downtown Chicago building designed by an African American since Jean Baptiste
Point DuSable’s trading post, built two centuries earlier.”

The building is historic not only because it was designed by an African American, John W. Moutoussamy, but also because it was owned by one — the first
skyscraper owned by an African American in the Loop.

In his memoir, “Succeeding Against the Odds,” written with Lerone Bennett Jr., company founderJohn H. Johnson described how he enlisted a white lawyer
to buy the land for him when the owner would not sell to a black person.

Writing in the Washington Post in 1980, Carla Hall described the building as it looked then:

“On the wall of the advertising department are framed posters of slick, crisp ads that ran 10 years ago promoting the Ebony readership as a bountiful
consumer market to be tapped by companies. The caption on one showing black professionals reads: ‘If these men and women have rhythm, they’ve put it to
work on marketing cycles or computer electronics or fabric patterns… Ebony is where 49 million people do their shopping.’

“The $8 million building contains a $300,000 art collection, the work of many black artists all over the country. It is practically a monument —
sometimes an ostentatious one — to black success.”

After Johnson — father of Linda Johnson Rice — died in 2005 at age 87, a new honorary street sign reading John H. Johnson Avenue was posted on the
corner near the Michigan Avenue entrance.

After 18 months, Columbia College Chicago plans to use the site for a library.

Allen Turner, chairman of the school’s Board of Trustees, said in a statement, “The purchase of the Johnson Building offered us a rare opportunity for
much needed expansion, especially given that the space is central to our South Loop campus. Just as important, we will have a part in preserving the
legacy of the Johnson Building and its legendary significance to all Chicagoans.”

Lynn Norment, an editor who worked at Ebony from 1977 to 2009 and is now with Carol H. Williams Advertising, also located downtown, said of the
building, “It represents wonderful memories, the legacy of Mr. Johnson. It represents a black institution in our community. I spent half my life there,
and I was there for more than half of Ebony’s life, and I realize now I was there for the heyday. It’s kind of sad.”

  • Facebook
  • Twitter

Leave a Comment

Recent News

Seniors

It’s easier than ever to improve your hearing

September 21, 2023

Tweet Email BPT Imagine this: You’re having dinner with friends. You know that someone just said something...

Food And Beverage

Put a plant-based spin on the taco night menu

September 21, 2023

Tweet Email ABOVE PHOTO: Smoky Chipotle Pecan Burrito Bowls FAMILY FEATURES Mealtime traditions are common among many...

Health

Cannabis can increase risk during surgery, affect pain afterwards

September 21, 2023

Tweet Email BPT Marijuana is the most common drug in the United States, used by more than...

Travel

Delta Air Lines will restrict access to its Sky Club airport lounges as it faces overcrowding

September 14, 2023

Tweet Email By Ken Sweet Delta Air Lines passengers who have long enjoyed access to free meals,...

Oasis

Chaos or community reexamined

September 1, 2023

Tweet Email Around 250,000 people showed up on the National Mall in Washington DC last Saturday to...

Technology

The iPhone 12 emits too much radiation and Apple must take it off the market, a French agency says

September 13, 2023

Tweet Email PARIS (AP) — A government watchdog agency in France has ordered Apple to withdraw the iPhone 12...

The Philadelphia Sunday Sun Staff