John McMillion passes away
Former BJ publisher John McMillion passed away Tuesday, March 15 in
Two Harbors, Minnesota.
McMillion switched the BJ from an afternoon to a morning newspaper
to “stop the erosion in operating profit,” as he put it, including eliminating
double-time pay for working on Sundays during his 3 years at 44 E. Exchange
Street.
He began at the BJ in 1986. The Beacon won another Pulitzer, for
coverage of James Goldsmith’s greenmail attack on Goodyear that put hundreds
out of work, in 1987. Chris Harte replaced him as publish in 1989.
John’s obituary:
John M. McMillion was born Dec.
25, 1929 and left this world peacefully in his sleep at his home on March 15,
2022 at the age of 92 years.
John McMillion got his first
newspaper job over 80 years ago, if you give him credit for his first paper
route, which he obtained in junior high school.
Since then, he’s been a police
reporter, a sports writer and editor, covered county, district and federal
courts, politics, the legislature and just about every type of news story you
can imagine, from the sublime to the ridiculous. He wrote a political
column for several years in New Mexico.
In the process, he’s talked to
millionaires, paupers, high government officials and some well-known sports and
entertainment figures. In his home library, he has a picture of him
talking to Bobby Kennedy, a picture of Mamie Eisenhower standing on the rear
platform of a Santa Fe train in Clovis, New Mexico, where he was Managing
Editor, and an autographed Snoopy story board from Charlie Schultz.
John started his career as a
police reporter in Amarillo, Texas after obtaining a journalism degree at the
University of Kansas, after four years in the Navy during the Korean War,
serving three years in Korea and Japan. He has worked for newspapers in Texas,
Colorado, Nebraska, Minnesota and Ohio.
He also did a stint as United
Press International Bureau manager in New Mexico and ran a Gubernatorial
campaign for two years in New Mexico.
He came to Duluth in 1975 as
General Manager of the Duluth News-Tribune and the then Duluth Herald and
became publisher three months later. In 1986 he was transferred as
publisher to another Knight Ridder paper, the Akron Beacon Journal. He did
extensive labor relations work at both Duluth and Akron.
During his tenure in Akron the
Beacon Journal won a Pulitzer prize. He retired at Akron in 1990 and
lived in Albuquerque ten years before returning to the Duluth area in
1998. He said he missed the winters.
John and his wife of 36 years,
Melanie, lived in Two Harbors, Minnesota. They have a daughter, Amanda
(Brian) Kerrigan who graduated in Education from the University of Kansas and
is a teacher in Colorado. John has three older children, a son John
McMillion who is a retired airline pilot for Southwest Airlines, a daughter
Johanna McMillion who is a banker in Ignacio, CO and a daughter Jennifer
(Andrew) Jelson who works for the Univ. of New Mexico Foundation in
Albuquerque, New Mexico. John has five grandsons, Sean (Kailey)
McMillion, Macon (Kelly) Jelson, Garrett Jelson, Benjamin Kerrigan and Liam
Kerrigan.
John grew up in southeast Kansas,
and that is why he talked funny.
A special thank you to friends
Tami Magnuson, Scott Jasperson, Debbie Waterhouse, Dr. Debbie Allert, “The Boat
Club”, and to Pastor Susan Berge and John’s Knife River Lutheran Church family,
who loved and sustained John & Melanie through John’s many years of
disability.
Memorials, in lieu of flowers,
may be directed to Knife River Lutheran Church, or to a favorite charity
of John’s these past 50+ years, St. Labre Indian School, PO Box 216, Ashland,
MT 59003-9989.
Services will be held at 11 AM on
Monday, March 28, 2022 at Knife River Lutheran Church. The service will
also be live-streamed on Knife River Lutheran Church’s Facebook page.
To share your memories or condolences online please visit www.cavallinfuneralhome.com .
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