Mirror of the Times
The Mirror of the Times was an African American weekly newspaper in San Francisco. The first weekly edition of the "Mirror of the Times" debuted on Friday, September 12, 1856, and its publication was welcomed by several local newspapers. The paper remained in print until around 1858. It was the first African American newspaper in the state – and possibly in the entirety of the West Coast of [the United States|West Coast] – and it advocated against racial segregation and for Black civic engagement.
Foundation
The Mirror of the Times was founded by Jonas H. Townsend, James E Brown, Sr and Mifflin Wistar Gibbs in the latter half of the 1850s, with the first edition documented by other local papers as being published on September 12, 1856. Some sources say 1855, historian J. William Snorgrass gives the date as October 31, 1856, and the United States Library of Congress lists the founding as 1857. Townsend and Gibbs founded the paper after the 1855 inaugural meeting of the California State Convention of Colored Citizens, which agreed that African Americans in California should have their own their own newspaper. The paper's motto was "Truth Crushed To The Earth Will Rise Again", and it was financially supported by the California State Convention of Colored Citizens.Publication
The paper was written for both black and white audiences, and it reported news in both the essay and editorial styles. It advocated against California's Testimony and Witness Laws in 1856 – a set of racially discriminatory laws aimed at black people, which prohibited them from being witnesses or giving testimony in court cases involving white people. Their advocacy failed in 1857, and they responded that one "cannot expect a class of intelligent people to tamely sit down and quietly submit to a law that denies them any protection and give license and security to thieves and robbers to plunder us". By then, the black community of California became disorganized and civically disengaged; the paper attempted to provoke the community to participate more, saying "we have settled down into a state of indifference and lethargy". They recognized that in the 1857 California gubernatorial election, Democratic nominee John B. Weller had won and was hostile to civil rights. A journalist for the paper advocated for more education for black youth, and was discouraged by segregated schools that did not educate black children while being financially supported by black taxpayers. In addition to news, it also reviewed music performances.The paper circulated throughout the western United States.