Waterhouse, Helen Stocking, 1892-1965

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Helen Waterhouse was born in Watertown, Massachusetts in 1893 and received her education at the Boston Naval Art School and Fenway School of Illustration. She worked for the Springfield, Massachusetts Union and the Toronto, Canada Star Weekly. After moving to Akron, Ohio she became county correspondent for the Amherst Newspaper for two years. In 1925, John S. Knight, editor of the Akron Beacon Journal, asked Waterhouse to cover news at the Akron Art Institute (now the Akron Art Museum). By 1928 she became a full-time reporter for the newspaper while her husband Ralph served as superintendent of the Akron Public Schools from 1934 to 1942. In 1940, the marriage ended in divorce.

Helen Waterhouse's career was impressive. She entered numerous contests and sent photographs and clippings to the Ohio Newspaper Women's Association and the Ohio Federation of Press Women. Her stories placed first on 57 occasions as well as second, third, and honorable mention 41 separate times. In 1950 she was named "Ohio Newspaper Woman for the Year" by the National Federation and in 1957 and 1958 she was named "Press Woman of Achievement."

Waterhouse's stories covered a wide range of topics, from the Hindenburg disaster to the Lindbergh kidnapping, from World War II heroism to articles about Russian culture during the 1950s. She frequently travelled abroad gathering stories from as far away as Korea, Japan, Israel, Hong Kong, Manila, Cuba, Nicaragua, Honduras and El Salvador. She also went to Yugoslavia to cover the trial of Dragoljub "Draža" Mihailović (1893-1946), a Yugoslav Serb general during World War II who organized a band of guerrillas known as the Chetniks after the Germans overran Yugoslavia in 1941.

On the local level, Waterhouse became a friend of Sam Shepard while he was on trial for murdering his wife in Bay Village. Her most famous story was her series on Clarence Hathaway, the son of a blind and deaf couple. The Akron Welfare Agency was trying to take their son away, but all of the negative press that Helen provided and the supporting public reaction helped influence the judge to let them keep their child. The journalist had made the Hathaway Family friends with all of Akron and received the coveted TV "Big Story" Award in 1955 for the series.

In 1965, Helen Waterhouse died in an automobile accident in Akron, presumably after a heart attack, at the age of 72. The journalist was known for possessing a keen sense of revealing news, getting at the sources, acquiring interviews, prying for information, and getting close to people.

From the guide to the Helen Waterhouse Papers, 1930-1964, 1930-1964, (Archival Services, University Libraries, The University of Akron)

Archival Resources
Role Title Holding Repository
referencedIn Bain E. "Shorty" Fulton Collection, 1918-1994, 1920-1965 Akron-Summit County Public Library Special Collections Division
creatorOf Helen Waterhouse Papers, 1930-1964, 1930-1964 Archival Services, University Libraries, The University of Akron
creatorOf Morley, Christopher, 1890-1957. Typed letter signed : New York, to Helen S. Waterhouse, 1933 Dec. 6. Pierpont Morgan Library.
referencedIn Captain Pearl R. Nye Collection, 1937-1944 Archive of Folk Culture (U.S.)
Role Title Holding Repository
Relation Name
correspondedWith Archive of American Folk Song corporateBody
associatedWith Fulton, Bain E. person
associatedWith Morley, Christopher, 1890-1957. person
correspondedWith Nye, Pearl R., 1872-1950 corporateBody
Place Name Admin Code Country
Subject
Women journalists
Occupation
Activity

Person

Birth 1892

Death 1965

Female

Americans

English

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