Capitol Hill Restoration Society

Overbeck Lecture: Alice Dunnigan “Alone Atop the Hill”

Posted on February 9th, 2015

On Tuesday, February 24, at 7:30 p.m., author and attorney Carol McCabe Booker will deliver an Overbeck History Lecture based on the newly republished autobiography of Alice Dunnigan, who overcame both race and gender barriers as the first black woman to break into the national press corps in Washington. 

Although well-received when she self-published it in 1974, Dunnigan’s memoir (originally titled A Black Woman’s Experience: from Schoolhouse to the White House) is long out of print. Booker was convinced that with her editing and additional annotation, it would be a compelling read for a general audience today, and the University of Georgia Press agreed.

The new, retitled edition, Alone atop the Hill, follows Dunnigan from her childhood as the daughter of a sharecropper and laundress in Kentucky to her arrival in World War II Washington, where she worked first as a typist and eventually as a reporter. Ultimately she would become the first black female journalist accredited to the White House and credentialed by the House and Senate Press Galleries and the first to travel with a U.S. president (Harry Truman). She was also the first reporter to que­stion President Eisenhower about civil rights, and to provide coverage of virtually ev­ery racial issue before the Congress, the federal courts and the executive branch for more than a hundred black newspapers.

But far more than a recitation of firsts, Booker notes, Dunnigan’s memoir provides an uninhibited and unvarnished look at the terrain, the players and the politics in a national capital struggling to make its way through a racial revolution.

Carol Booker is coauthor with her husband, journalist Simeon Booker, of the highly acclaimed history Shocking the Con­science: A Reporter’s Account of the Civil Rights Movement, which served as the basis for their excellent, jointly presented Overbeck lecture in April of 2013. She has written and edited for Voice of America, freelanced for the Washing­ton Post, Reader’s Digest, Ebony, Jet, and Black Stars, and reported from Africa, including the Nigerian war front, for Westinghouse Broadcast­ing (Group W).

Her lecture will be held at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, February 24, at the Naval Lodge Hall at 330 Pennsylvania Ave. S.E. and will conclude with a book signing. As always, admission is free but a reservation is required due to limited seating. Please email OverbeckLecture@ CapitolHillHistory.org and indicate how many seats you will need.

The Overbeck History Lectures are a project of the Capitol Hill Community Foundation.