06/07/2026
in 1880, Chester Arthur Franklin was born in Denison, Texas. Franklin is best remembered as the man behind the Kansas City Call (simply known as “The Call”), a historic Black newspaper.
Chester Arthur Franklin was the only child of Clara Belle and George F. Franklin. The Franklin family relocated to Omaha, Ne., in the mid-1880s, where George Franklin began publishing the Enterprise, an African American paper. The Franklins moved again to Denver, Co., in 1898, where the elder Franklin purchased The Statesman, another Black paper, from Edwin Henry Hackley. Franklin renamed The Statesman to the Denver Star. When George Franklin died in 1901, his wife and son continued his work at the Denver Star.
Hoping to start a paper with a larger audience in the rapidly expanding town, Chester Franklin and his mother moved to Kansas City in 1913. Franklin purchased his print shop at 1408 Main St., and launched The Call in May 1919. The Call was printed weekly, and papers sold for 5 cents a copy, with Clara Belle Franklin selling papers door-to-door. Within the first 6 years, readership grew from 2,000 in 1919 to 16,737 in 1927. By 1940, The Call became one of the largest Black weeklies in the county, with 20,000 papers being sold a week.
White papers at the time disenfranchised black readers, not covering news within their communities, or reporting on Black issues with bias or sensationalism. The Call stood against this, and further connected the African American community, not just in Missouri, but the Midwest at large.
In 1925, Chester Franklin married Ada Crogman. Crogman took over the paper during Franklin’s partial retirement in 1948, and after his death in 1955. The Call remains in print today.