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  • 14
    Sep
    2010
    6:20am, EDT

    Bebeto Matthews/AP

    Civil rights photojournalist and "photo historian" Ernest C. Withers talks about his picture of Rev. Martin Luther King, right, during a presentation of images from his 70 year career, at a special award ceremony at Parsons School of Design in New York, Monday, Feb. 14, 2005. Withers, 83, who lived in his hometown of Memphis,Tenn., received the National Association of Black Journalist's Trailblazer Award for a lifetime achievement in photojournalism. Many historians credit Withers' photographs of the Emmett Till trial as the spark that ignited the civil rights movement.

    Ernest C. Withers/AP

    Children huddle in the entrance of a tent during 1960 in Tent City near Somerville, Tenn. Tent City was home to black sharecroppers who were kicked-off white-owned lands in 1960 because blacks were registering to vote. Pipe at top is from a stove in the tent.

    A legend exposed

    I was surprised to read in this morning's New York Times that legendary civil rights photojournalist Ernest Withers has been revealed as an FBI informant, according to a Memphis Commercial Appeal story on Sunday. While such an ethical compromise would probably end a journalist's career today, no one can deny the impact Withers' images had on the civil rights movement.

    Update 7:37 p.m. ET:Ron Mott reports this story for NBC Nightly News:

    Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

    42 comments

    So a dead photographer whose name the FBI "accidentally" released under the Freedom Information was an informant. This is a man who took photographs that have shaped the Civil Rights history.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: civil, rights, us-news, withers, ernest

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Rich Shulman

is a multimedia editor at msnbc.com. Before that, he was a picture editor at Corbis and the Director of Photography at the Everett, Wa. Herald.

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