As chief of staff for Rep. John Moss’ Government Information Subcommittee in the U.S. House of Representatives, Samuel Archibald helped draft the original FOIA legislation enacted in 1966.

A former reporter with the Sacramento (Calif.) Bee, he was hired by Moss to come to Washington as an aide and became a key player in Moss’ investigation of government secrecy, which led to FOIA. Archibald rallied support, rounding up key journalists — such as American Society of Newspaper Editors members J. Russell Wiggins and James S. Pope — to testify on the need for legislation.

Archibald later became director of the Washington office of the University of Missouri Freedom of Information Center, rounding out his career as a journalism professor at the University of Colorado at Boulder, his alma mater, where he became professor emeritus.

Samuel Archibald died on April 7, 2006, in Charlotte, N.C.