journalism history
-
Another Ruth Ellen Church Reference
The food writer who gives the most credit to newspaper food editors is Laura Shapiro. Examples are included in her above book, Something From the Oven. She includes several references to Ruth Ellen Church, a food editor at the Chicago Tribune. One of those references is about the popularity of making cakes – a popular topic for food writers and food historians for what a cake represents. In 1948, Church (writing under the pen name “Mary Meade”) introduced the recipe feature “Cake of the Week.” Church was quoted: “My staff and I have known for a long time that women love cakes, but we were somewhat surprised at the popularity…
-
New Mary Meade (Ruth Ellen Church) Cookbook
This cookbook written by Mary Meade (the pen name of Ruth Ellen Church) arrived on Friday. Church wrote an amazing number of cookbooks while the food editor of the Chicago Tribune from 1936 to 1974. This cookbook, The Modern Homemaker Cookbook, was published in 1966. I am currently collecting material for a conference paper on Church’s career. Her reporting and writing demonstrate that food journalism was more complex than the historical record has shown.
-
New Vivian Castleberry Video
I was excited to find some great clips of an interview with women’s page great Vivian Castleberry. She was one of the few women’s page editors included in the oral history project, Women in Journalism, by the Washington Press Club Foundation. She spent more than two decades as the women’s page editor at the Dallas Times Herald and fought for women’s rights throughout her journalism career. Here is more about Vivian. I am working on a book about Vivian that I hope to finish before the baby arrives.
-
Food Editor Ruth Ellen Church
Yesterday I read about longtime Chicago Tribune food editor Ruth Ellen Church – who often wrote under the name Mary Meade. She was the food editor from 1936 to 1974. She was also known as the country’s first wine editor. She graduated from Iowa State University in 1933 with a degree in food and nutrition journalism. The photo above is from the Special Collections at that University. I plan to find out what information they have about her college years. She published many cookbooks during her career that I am hoping to track down. Sadly, she was murdered in 1991 at the age of 81. Here is the New York…
-
Eleanor Hart
I just received an email from a relative of Eleanor (Ratelle) Hart. I love hearing from family members of the women I study. Eleanor was a reporter and advice columnist for the women’s pages of the Miami Herald in the 1950s and 1960s. I went through her papers at the South Florida Historical Society in Miami about three years ago and presented a paper about her last year at the Florida Communication Association conference. My paper focused on how her column reflected the community’s negotiation of change in terms of race and gender. The integration of neighborhoods and working mothers led to heated letters from readers. Advice columns, like the…
-
Beverley Morales Presentation
I will be presenting the paper “Pioneering Journalist Beverley Morales: Redefining Women’s Page Content in 1960s Florida,” at the Florida Conference of Historians next Spring in Lake City, Florida. Beverley Brink Morales (pictured above) was a ground-breaking journalist who spent much of the 1960s in South Florida. It was a significant time for women’s page editors as women’s news was being redefined as a mix of traditional and progressive content. Florida was a significant place for women’s page journalists as they won a majority of Penney-Missouri Awards – the top recognition for women’s pages – throughout the 1960s. Morales won a prize in the first year of the Awards for…