William
Allen White died January 29, 1944. Below are various editorials and tributes
to White after his passing.
Wichita Eagle- "The
world long has put the personality of Will White as an inseparable part
of modern America and America has given Kansas an added identity in him.
The thousand brilliant facets of his outstanding gifts have become as
much a part of the life of the people of this commonwealth as in the sunshine
of their prairies!"
Salina Journal- "Above
all things the Emporia editor was a Kansan. When the state was attacked,
he defended. When things went wrong, he preached encouragement and optimism.
When evil flourished in political or social problems, he went on the war
path. Born with the spirit of a crusader, crossed with kindly, friendly,
sentimental tendencies, he never dared let his right hand know what his
left was doing. In his passing the nation as well as his home state have
lost a valiant fighter for all that is worthwhile. His place will not
be filled."
Topeka State Journal- "There
is something about William Allen White that to me seemed as elemental
as Pike's Peak. His rugged soul had a way of enveloping all. It was boundless.
There was no dissembling about Mr. White. He said what he was. Regardless
of what he may have thought yesterday, if there was reason for changing
his ideas because of having seen the problem from a new angle or new light,
he changed his ideas by just that much. His genius will be a part of the
annals of Kansas. He lies down to rest and his soul becomes to Kansas
evermore as the shadow of a great rock in a weary land."
Henry J. Haskell, editor of The Kansas
City Star, speaking at White's funeral- "We are met here
this afternoon as the friends of William Allen White to show our respect
and affection. We are met in a chapel that seems empty without him. Yet
in a larger sense this chapel is not empty. It is crowded with memories
that are more than memories- with enduring achievements that live on in
the generation that he touched and moved and influenced.
"When we met him in person or on the
printed page, we came like Bunyan's Pilgrim to the Interpreter's house.
For primarily he was a great interpreter of life- of the human comedy
or tragedy that passed before him. Interpretation was his technique. He
was a preacher of righteousness, of sane and wholesome and unselfish living.
But he preached largely by revealing to us our own hearts and the hearts
of others...
"Behind all his work was the personality
of the man. He was a great human being- great in intellingence, in understanding,
in courage, in zest. Life to him always was a glorious adventure. 'I never
have been bored an hour in my life,' he wrote on the occasion of his sixty-fifth
birthday. 'I get up every morning now wondering what new, strange, gorgeous
thing is going to happen, and it always happens at fairly reasonable intervals.
Lady Luck has been good to me. I fancy she is good to everyone, only some
people are dour, and when she gives them the come hither with her eyes,
they look down or turn away and lift an eyebrow. But me, I give her the
wink and away we go!'"
President Franklin D. Roosevelt in
a telegraph to Mrs. White- "My heart goes out to you and Bill
in the loss of a beloved husband and father. The newspaper world loses
one of its wisest and most beloved editors in the death of William Allen
White.
"He made The Emporia Gazette
a national institution. As a writer of truth, forcible and vigorous prose,
he was unsurpassed. He ennobled the profession of journalism which he
served with such unselfish devotion thru more than two score years. To
me his passing brings a real sense of personal loss, for we had been the
best of friends for years."
Kansas Senator Arthur Capper- "William
Allen White, sincere citizen and great editor, chose to live most of his
useful life near the scenes of his youth. Yet his deep sympathies knew
no boundaries of space, religion, color or nationality.
"William Allen White's recognition
of the civic responsibilities of the profession of newspaper editor has
been in a large measure the means by which his chosen profession has attained
the place of honor which it holds today in the eyes of his countrymen.
He championed democracy. He was an advocate of the freedom of the press...
"The newspaper profession has lost
an inspiring leader. His state and his nation have lost a Christian citizen.
The world has lost a friend."
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