Democracy Dies in Darkness

The roots of Tim Cook’s activism lie in rural Alabama

March 7, 2016 at 2:13 p.m. EST
Luis Gonzalez walks his dog recently near downtown Robertsdale, Alabama. Tim Cook, Chief Executive Officer of Apple, grew up here. (Photo by Jeff Haller for The Washington Post)

ROBERTSDALE, Ala. — There are few clues that this is the home town of Apple chief executive Tim Cook, the place where he said his “most improbable journey” began and where he forged the beliefs that today put him at the center of a national debate over privacy.

His name is not noted on the town’s welcome signs along the main drag, Route 59. There’s nothing in the local chamber’s brochures, and the local paper rarely has anything about him. His old high school keeps a glass case celebrating former NFL running back Joe Childress, Class of 1952, but not the leader of the world’s most valuable company, Class of 1978.