Mable Smith, working at her desk at the Cheechako News, 1960s. (Cheechako News photo) |
DON’T
STOP THE PRESSES!
August 2008
For 58-year-old Mable Smith, 1961
was the year of a fortuitous intersection—when fledgling ambition (to be a real
journalist) crossed paths with fledgling opportunity (a still
wet-behind-the-ears peninsula newspaper).
For Smith, it was the beginning
of a time that her daughter-in-law, Betty Smith of Soldotna, would later call
“unquestionably the best of her life.”
The previous
decade had been rough on Mable Smith. In 1950 in Oklahoma , her husband had died in a
heavy-equipment accident, leaving Smith in dire financial straits and requiring
her at the age of 47 to earn a living on her own.
She had
begun, but never completed, journalism training at the University of Oklahoma
in the 1920s, so she sought newspaper work, and found a job in 1951 on a weekly
paper that started her out at $18 a week.
Over time,
her strong work ethic and attention to detail raised her salary to $65 a week,
and then she moved on to other weekly and daily newspapers in Oklahoma
and New Mexico .
But she was
frustrated, according to Betty Smith, “with being stuck with society or ‘light’
news.” Mable knew she could do better than that. She wanted to cover real news—government, politics,
controversy.
She moved to
Alaska in
1958 to be closer to her son’s family, which had homesteaded in the Soldotna
area. At first she lived in Anchorage ,
working in a library, but then in 1961 she applied for a peninsula homestead of
her own and planned for the move south.
As luck
would have it, another opportunity was hatching for her only a few miles away
over in Kenai.
Loren Stewart at the Cheechako office, 1959. |
On Friday, Oct.
30, 1959, in a concrete-block building near the bluff on Main Street , Loren and Dorothy Stewart had
launched the central peninsula’s first newspaper, The Kenai Peninsula Cheechako, later to become The Cheechako News.
Under the
masthead of Volume 1, Number 1, was a subheading: “News From the Oil Center of
Alaska.” Beneath that were two articles bearing large headlines concerning the
progress under way since the Swanson River oil discovery in 1957 and the recent
arrival of statehood: “Gas Service in Kenai by 1960 Is Possibility” and
“Soldotna Bank Open For Business.”
Also on the
front page that day was a quarter-page advertisement for Archer’s grocery store
and filling station in Kenai and a photograph of a young girl, with a caption
that offered a free three-month Cheechako
subscription to the first person to correctly identify her.
Inside was
Loren Stewart’s first editorial, which, in contrast to the progressive themes
on page one, began this way: “The Kenai
Peninsula Cheechako is one ‘voice in the wilderness’ that would have liked
to have seen the Territory remain as it was.”
Stewart’s
opening salvo was, essentially, a lament for things past and passing, but its
ending was more upbeat. He noted the inevitability of progress, and said that,
once it arrived, few would desire to return to the way things once were. He
mentioned paved roads and electricity among the benefits of progress.
Loren and
Dorothy Stewart’s little 10-cent weekly paper, wrought on a linotype machine
that assembled lines of copy from a molten lead alloy, brought a steady diet of
community information and news to the central peninsula. No longer did area
residents have to rely solely on word-of-mouth or on the limited radio
broadcasts available from Anchorage .
From the
Kenai office, and, after 1961, from the office in Ridgeway, the Stewarts and
their small dedicated staff made a difference in the lives of peninsula
residents. And for Mable Smith, the Cheechako
News was an opportunity for her to make a difference, too.
Before Mable
came down to the peninsula to live, she came down to visit, and during that
visit she interviewed with Loren Stewart, who offered her a job—a chance, at
last, to be a real reporter, and a chance to cover hard news.
It was
exactly what she had been waiting for. There was just one minor problem: “She
had to learn to drive before she could come to the homestead,” said Betty
Smith. Mable’s hard-won new career would require her to drive back and forth to
work.
“She took
driving lessons in Anchorage ,”
Betty said. “But she was never a very comfortable driver. I don’t think she
ever got out of second gear. I think the only person slower was Mae Ciechanski.”
It was said that Mable and Mae could drive down a dry gravel road and never
raise dust.
Still, Mable
was fast enough to pursue the news. A few years later, she was named editor of
the Cheechako, and her name (as Mable
“Scoop” Smith) was given top billing in a list of employees.
But Smith
expected more. In a 1965 letter to the Alaska Press Women, she said she felt
restricted by “limited staff,” and added that she had “no time to rewrite or
polish, (and the) material often shows it—never satisfied with it.”
Mable was
certainly dedicated. “She left early (for work) and came home late,” Betty
Smith said. “I can remember Loren finally forcing her to go home from work when
she was so sick that she could hardly hold her head up, but she was still going
to get that paper out.”
Under the
leadership of Smith and the Stewarts, the Cheechako
was in its heyday throughout the 1960s and into the early ‘70s, when competition
from Anchorage
dailies and the Peninsula Clarion
began to spell its doom.
When Mable
retired in 1974, Betty Smith said of her newspaper tenure, “Those years allowed
her to do work she loved and attain a position in a society that recognized and
appreciated her as an individual.”
Mable Smith
died of a heart-related ailment three years later.
The end of
her beloved Cheechako News was also
at hand.
Katherine
Parker, who joined the paper in the early 1970s, said that the Stewarts sold
the Cheechako shortly after its 25th
anniversary in 1984. The new owners brought in computers for the first time and
renamed the paper The Soldotna Sun,
but it closed up shop suddenly in March 1986.
“I remember
I was really shocked when I came back—we’d been in Hawaii —and here they were all getting
prepared to close everything down,” Parker said.
Mable Smith
and the Cheechako News had found each
other and prospered. And suddenly both of them were gone. But they had each
left an indelible mark on the history of the Kenai
Peninsula .
No comments:
Post a Comment