‘I practically grew up in the William Allen White home.’
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Loverne Morris doesn’t really know the meaning of the word retirement. In 1967, when she came to San Diego and officially retired from a newspaper career that spanned three decades, she turned to writing books and free-lancing for such publications as Ms. Magazine, True West, and Highlights for Children. Now, at age 91, Morris awaits publication of a children’s story she wrote about her life as an 8-year-old growing up in Kansas. At the outset of World War I, she worked for a railroad company and was given a round-trip rail ticket to anywhere on the Santa Fe line. Landing in Southern California, Morris worked as a schoolteacher, and met and married her husband before starting her reporting career in 1941 for a succession of small-town newspapers. She was interviewed at her Redwood Terrace apartment in Escondido by Times staff writer Caroline Lemke. David McNew photographed her.
In 1928, I had written some children’s stories. I found I could sell my bedtime stories that I’d told my children to the California Cultivator. I’d get the magnificent amount of $5 a story. I sold bedtime stories to the Cultivator and other farm magazines like Agriculture, Old West, and Frontier Times.
William Allen White was the most famous man in Kansas when I was growing up. He was a journalist who was a friend of presidents and kings, and he was the friend of Theodore Roosevelt. Mr. White lived right across the street while I was a poor child being raised by my auntie. So the Whites kind of took me under their wing.
My auntie had a little stroke when I was 9 years old, so Mr. White said that I was to come over to his home after school because it wasn’t good for a child not to have playmates, and it wasn’t good for a lady who had a stroke to have too much commotion. So, I practically grew up in the White home. He was the editor of the Emporia Gazette and a novelist, and he was a friend of H. G. Wells. So I thought I’d like to be a reporter.
I talked to Mr. White about being a reporter, and he said to bring my high school notes in and give them to Laura French, the city editor. I was such a simpleton, I didn’t sign them. I just put them on her desk, and I didn’t put my name on them so of course I didn’t get any credit for that.
Then in 1941, I did some volunteer work for the La Habra Star. I asked if I could interview women on their political views. Then I took my signed columns to the El Monte Independent and got hired for a regular job. After I worked there a year, the Temple City Times editor called me up and offered me a job. I worked there for four years, then The Whittier Daily News editor called me up and offered me a job. I was there until August of ’62.
The first thing I learned when I went into the newspaper business was that, unless it was a signed column, I had no business to get my own views into the news. Back then, news was straight reporting. What happened, when, and where. And now, I think there is a lot of editorializing in the news. It’s unfortunate. It should be labeled for what it is.
I’ve interviewed more than 300 people. When I was working for the Whittier Daily News, I went in as women’s editor, and then the boss decided I was better as a feature writer. I interviewed a lot of old-timers. The idea was that I should interview pioneers, pioneer families that came to Whittier before 1900.
I didn’t start newspaper work until my children were in their teens, and when I first talked about it to my husband he was dismayed. He said, “Don’t you think I can support you?” I said of course I thought he could support me, but I was not domestic. The neighbor women could run rings around me, entertaining or baking fancy cakes. I thought I’d like to do something I might do well. And he could understand that point of view, so he was persuaded.
I regret one thing. I let the career make me neglect my husband. I should have had more time for him, and, if I had it to do over again, I would certainly save more time for him. I was vain. I was getting awards. I was chosen as “Woman of the Year” in Whittier, and the honors that came my way kind of turned my head so I was not devoting as much time to my husband as I should have. I should have kept all my weekends and evenings for him.