On the morning of February 26, 1979, a crowd of nearly 350 guests packed into the University of Georgia Chapel in Athens to attend the first annual “McGill Lecture” in honor of
famed civil rights-era editor Ralph McGill of the Atlanta Constitution. Presiding over the inaugural lecture was McGill’s closest friend and editorial successor, Gene Patterson, who in the years
leading up to McGill’s death in 1969 had carried on the torch of McGill’s integrationist crusades
on an almost daily basis in the pages of the Constitution. “Ralph McGill’s legacy was the example he set for the rest of us in journalism,” Patterson remarked to the audience. “Perhaps never
again in American life will one editor be thrust forward by destiny to take up so monumental an
issue, so clearly-defined, and, starting nearly alone, to fight it to overwhelming victory”\cite{patterson1979ralph}. As
Patterson’s remarks serve to emphasize, McGill’s status as a civil rights hero had already become
enshrined within cultural memory only a decade after his death, much in the same way Patter-
son’s own legacy eventually would. This process of memorialization has led New York Times editor Howell Raines to hail both McGill and Patterson in 2001 “as the South’s two most heroic
voices on civil rights and race,” concluding that each man was to a great degree responsible for
fashioning Atlanta’s image as “the city too busy to hate”\cite{clark2002changing}.