Mary Ethridge Williamson, reporter at the BJ from 1988-2006, has been
floating on the C of Celebrities her entire life.
Most important, to me anyway, Mary’s mother, Peg Ethridge, was from my
native state of West Virginia and, like me, graduated from West Virginia
University.
Thus, less impressive, to me, were such luminaries as:
Mary’s father, Mark Ethridge, BJ editor from 1973 to 1976.
Mary’s grandfather, Mark Ethridge, Sr., was Louisville Courier Journal
editor for many years.
Mary’s brother, Mark Ethridge III, was Charlotte Observer managing editor
in the 1970s and 1980s.
Certainly NOT least of all, Mary is
married to Mark Williamson, who as WAKR-Channel 23 anchor and news director covered the 1979 plane crash
that killed New York Yankees legend and Akronite Thurman Munson, who was practicing landings with
his Cessna at Akron/Canton Airport; is Director
Marketing Communications for Akron Public Schools; and for 15 years was
spokesman for 15 years for the volative Mayor Don Plusquellic, not a task
without its turbellent waters.
Mary and Mark
have a daughter, Grace, who gifted them with a granddaughter, Rylee.
This is the mail
that Mary sent to me, at my request:
Hi John,
My father, Mark Ethridge, Jr., was editor of the BJ from 1973 until
1976. He came from the Detroit Free Press where he was editor. After he
left the BJ, he taught journalism at the University of South Carolina.
I grew up in Grosse Pointe. It is a pretty ritzy place with all
those auto executive mansions, but we had a modest house in a
family-oriented neighborhood. My mom, Peg Ethridge, was from West Virginia! Her
parents were graduates of that wonderful university.
My grandfather, Mark Ethridge, Sr., was publisher of the Louisville
Courier Journal for many years. His wife, Willie Snow Ethridge, wrote 15
non-fiction books.
My brother, Mark Ethridge III, was managing editor of the Charlotte
Observer in the 1970s and early 80s. He went on to write three novels.
I worked at the Beacon from the summer of 1988 until the fall of
2006. Before that, I was director of editorial projects at The University of
Akron. I went back to work at the university in 2013 but was laid off in 2014
when its financial situation worsened. I returned to doing some freelance
projects for Live Publishing mainly.
When I started at the BJ, Ohio was going through an epic drought so
we put together a team to write a series about climate change. We were 30 years
ahead of our time. That was just one highlight of a career I loved. I miss my
newsroom colleagues every day.
My husband, Mark Williamson, works for the Akron Public Schools
after a career in broadcasting and city government.
I have one daughter, Grace, who is the mother of my two-year-old
granddaughter, Rylee. She's an absolute joy and mischief-maker. I love being
her "Mimi". She calls Mark, Jiddo, arabic for grandfather -- a nod to
his Lebanese heritage.
Grace is a clinical mental health counselor in the Akron area. She
received her master's degree from UA in 2019.
I'll send you some photos in a separate email.
Thanks for thinking of me. Stay well.
Best,
Mary
--
Mary Ethridge
Editor and Writer
330-687-2445
I know that, during my
26 years at the BJ, I ran to work because I loved the atmosphere so much! And
in the 25 years of my retirement I see time after time how I’m not alone in my
feelings. BJ retiree after retiree just gushes with the glory of working for
John S. Knight, in my opinion the best newspaper owner in history (and I worked
for St. Petersburg Times publisher Nelson Poynter, son of Paul Poynter who
bought the paper in 1912; Nelson ushed new hires into his throne room every
month or so; JSK just walked around the newsroom and chatted with the staff,
including Fran Murphey in her bib overalls). 44 E. Exchange Street will be my
favorite topic when I meet St. Peter at the Golden Gate.
Ben Maidenburg, as
most know, salvaged by career by hiring me after the Dayton Daily News and
famed editor/columnist Jim Fain had me fired for union activities at the Dayton
Daily News, owned by the union-hating Cox Newspapers out of Atlanta.
And State Desk editor
Pat Englehart, with his deNobil cigar and frenzied behavior that irritated
management but inspired his underlings, taught me more about being an editor
than I had learned for coming to the BJ at the age of 38 with 15 years of
journalism experience.
Mary isn’t the only one who spent a life surrounded by celebrities.
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