GOOD NIGHT, FRAN
We will never see the likes of her again.
She was an Akron original, as unique
and as immediately recognizable as the Goodyear blimp. The pronounced limp, the
trademark bib overalls, the mop of shocking white hair, the big, hearty laugh,
the many eccentricities -- all hid the fact that a giant walked in our midst.
And now, Frances Burke Murphey, an Akron Beacon Journal writer for 55
years, is no more. Miss Murphey died at 3:30 a.m. yesterday at age 75, after a
short battle with liver cancer. A memorial service will be held at 3 p.m. Friday
at Boston Heights Village Hall, 45 E. Boston Mills Road.
A piece of Akron
history has died with Miss Murphey.
"The heart of the Beacon Journal
stopped beating yesterday," said Mickey Porter, editor of Porter's People.
Miss Murphey never won a Pulitzer Prize, never worked for the New York
Times and never covered a war in some far-off land.
But she had something
they can't teach you in journalism school. She had a passionate heart. And a love
for people and this community that never dimmed.
"Fran had a heart as large as
all outdoors," said her friend Margaret Dietz.
It was this stout heart, this
love for Akron, that made her a beloved figure here.
"Fran always wanted to do
for the little people," said Helen Yocum, another friend. "I always felt like
maybe she was an underdog at some point in her life. She was very aware of the
underdog."
In her Good Afternoon and Good Morning columns, Miss Murphey wrote
about retirements, weddings, college reunions, outings, anniversaries -- all the
things that make up a life. Her homespun columns were a mirror in which the
community saw its own reflection.
But the gentle, desultory tone of the
columns belied the fierce intelligence, the vise-like memory that made her more
than a journalist. It made her a fount of knowledge about the Akron area and its
history. A drive around town with Miss Murphey was never a simple car ride, it
was an education.
It wasn't just culture and history that were her forte. Miss
Murphey also knew every place in Ohio that served a fried bologna sandwich. Or
rice pudding without raisins.
"Fran could never drive down a street straight,"
said Polly Paffilas, a longtime Beacon Journal writer. "If you went with
her for ice cream, she'd make a five-mile detour, pointing out things."
Five
decades after they both started at the Beacon Journal, Paffilas still
recalls her first look at the imposing Miss Murphey:
"I looked up and there
was this tall woman, wearing bib overalls and a plaid shirt. She had beautiful
black hair and brown eyes. I don't believe I saluted her. But she scared me to
death. . . . It was the beginning of a beautiful friendship."
Newspapering,
Miss Murphey often said, was in her blood.
Her mother, Marie L. (Thompson)
Murphey, was a correspondent with the Akron Times Press, which merged with
the Beacon Journal in 1938. While in junior high, Fran would accompany her
mother to political meetings. On election nights, mother and daughter would tally
the results by flashlight to get them into the paper the next day.
RURAL
UPBRINGING
Miss Murphey, a graduate of Hudson High School and Kent State
University, was born in a house in Macedonia on Dec. 24, 1922. As many of her
columns showed, a sense of place, of home, was very important to her writing.
In a 1993 column, she described an idyllic childhood: "We grew up on 138 acres
spanning Hudson and Macedonia townships. This was a place with pawpaw and walnut
trees, 'pinkie' mushrooms, bushes that yielded blackberries with bramble
scratches and old-fashioned gooseberries that scratched our throats."
Miss
Murphey is survived by four nephews and three nieces, Arland Rininger of Sharon
Township, Dean Rininger of Copley Township, Sheldon Rininger of Akron, Barbara
Joy Godar of Akron, Larry Rininger of Copley Township, Cherie Dachtler of Akron
and Marie Fogle of Hartville.
For all her gregariousness, the most
recognizable woman in Akron was essentially a private person.
"Fran had a lot
of friends. But she never had close friends," Yocum said. "She spread herself
very thin. She'd never admit she had a problem. I never saw her cry."
Paffilas
did see Miss Murphey cry on occasion. But she, too, said: "She was running away
from something. I've never figured out what it was. I don't know if anyone really
knew her. Murphey collected people. All these people she picked up, maybe they
filled a void."
One result of spreading herself so thin was that Miss Murphey
was always running late. Always. If she was invited to a dinner party, her
friends knew it was all right to eat without her. She never seemed to mind.
To
call Miss Murphey a workaholic doesn't do the word justice.
"The Beacon
Journal was the most important thing to her," Yocum said. "It was her husband,
child, everything."
She sacrificed her home life to her job. This was a woman
who never married, who never owned a color television or a microwave, who for
years lived in an old farmhouse in Boston Heights without indoor plumbing or
heat. She would routinely fall asleep on a couch in a restroom at the Beacon
Journal after pulling an all-nighter.
WAKE-UP CALLS
Art Cullison, who as an
assistant state editor supervised Miss Murphey for several years in the 1960s,
recalls frequently coming to work at 5:30 a.m. to a note from Miss Murphey asking
him to bang on the restroom door to wake her up.
"She was solid gold," said
Dale Allen, the Beacon Journal's former editor. "She set the tone around
the office in terms of integrity, getting things right. And she was just a rock
in the community. She defined the Beacon Journal for a couple of generations of
readers."
Betsy Lammerding, assistant features editor, agrees.
"Fran was a
consummate reporter," Lammerding said. "Always she thought of the reader. Even
from her hospital bed, she would put together her weekly Excursion travel
column.
"In fact, while hospitalized, she learned of the death of local
restaurateur Joseph Iacomini. In the midst of being moved to the intensive-care
unit because of internal bleeding, she took time to call the Beacon
Journal newsroom to report his death for an obituary. When she gets to
heaven, I wouldn't be surprised if Fran finds some way to send news from the
beyond."
WORKING IN THE HOSPITAL
Beacon Journal Publisher John Dotson
recalls that when he and Editor Jan Leach went to visit Miss Murphey at the
hospital, they had to wait in the hallway while she finished a phone call for her
Sunday travel column.
Over the years, Miss Murphey's idiosyncracies became
part of Akron's folklore. Like many people of uncommon intelligence, she was
eccentric as hell. It was this larger-than-life aspect that made legions of
Akron-area residents gleefully trade their favorite Fran Murphey stories.
Dietz tells about the time when Miss Murphey's doctor weighed her purse because
she was not allowed to carry more than 10 pounds after her knee surgery. The
purse weighed more than 10 pounds because, among other things, it contained Miss
Murphey's three cameras, film, scissors and glue.
"She was a free spirit,"
Paffilas said. "She didn't give a good goddamn about anything. She did it her
way. She was a vagabond, in a way. She danced to her own drummer."
After all,
how many people do you know who go around presenting slide shows on outhouses? Or
who send people postcards and then sweet-talk, emotionally blackmail and just
plain bully them into giving them back to add to a 200,000-plus card collection?
Or who show up for their retirement party at the Civic Theatre and then sit
onstage taking photographs of the audience?
How many times have you visited
someone in the hospital and had the patient take a picture of you?
And how
many elderly women do you know who drive all over the state and simply pull over
and sleep in their car when they are too tired to drive?
At the Beacon
Journal, employees learned not to bat an eye when someone would rush into the
newsroom to announce that he had just spotted a dead body in a car in the parking
deck.
"Don't worry," reporters and editors would say with a yawn. "That's just
Fran sleeping. Whatever you do, don't wake her up."
NEWSROOM WATCHDOG
Susan
Reynolds, former chief news clerk at the Beacon Journal, called Miss
Murphey the "watchdog of recycling" in the newsroom.
One morning, Reynolds
came to work to find all the folders she had thrown away the previous evening
stacked back on her desk. A note in Miss Murphey's distinctive handwriting said,
"All this material can be recycled."
She was a pioneer in more ways than you
can count. As she was quick to tell you, she was not the first woman hired at the
Beacon Journal. But when she started there in 1943, women reporters were
enough of a rarity that she had to sign a contract saying that her job was
temporary, that the men returning from World War II could have it if they wanted
it.
"Just in case that day ever came, Fran once told me she learned how to
operate the Beacon's elevator and switchboard," said Joan Rice, assistant
features editor.
The newsroom was a more diverse place by the time Rice
started at the Beacon Journal in 1966.
"Women role models ran the gamut --
everything from Betty Jaycox, in her full-length black mink, to Fran Murphey, in
her bibs and boots," Rice recalled.
"But I never got the impression Fran
expected anyone to emulate her. She did her thing. You could do yours. Fran was
Fran. In lock step with no one. The real deal."
The real deal. Miss Murphey
single-handedly ensured that both the University of Akron and the Akron-Summit
County Public Library opened their board meetings to the public. She did so by
sheer dint of personality, badgering the trustees, citing the law, until they
finally gave in.
Dietz, who worked at the library from 1963 to 1974, remembers
a young, imposing-looking woman covering these meetings, dressed in boots and
overalls.
"She'd offset them with these fancy, fancy earrings," she
recalled.
"She was the best supporter the library ever had. All these public
meetings are public because of her."
Pam Creedon, director of Kent State
University's School of Journalism, called Miss Murphey a "stalwart supporter" of
her alma mater. Until the end, Miss Murphey attended every monthly alumni council
meeting. She frequently spoke to students and quoted the motto of William Taylor,
the first director of the journalism school: "Nothing short of right is
right."
FUNDS AT KENT STATE
She gave money to the school to establish two
funds -- the Frances B. Murphey Fellowship Fund for bringing in visiting
professors and the Frances B. Murphey Scholarship Fund for female journalism
students.
With money from the ticket sales to her 1996 retirement party at the
Civic Theatre also going into the scholarship fund, the two funds currently have
about $30,000.
But Creedon believes Miss Murphey's contributions cannot be
measured by money alone.
"Fran represented the kind of courageous women who
entered a (nontraditional) field and made way for women like me to enter the
field," she said. "And she stayed. She is a legend."
But if Miss Murphey gave
her heart, her time, her very self to her community, the community paid her
back.
This was a woman who could not go anywhere in Ohio without running into
a familiar face. Strangers sent her postcards to add to her famous collection.
Once a week an old man used to quietly come up to the Beacon Journal
newsroom and stick a piece of pie in Miss Murphey's mailbox.
Miss Murphey was
visibly moved to see the hundreds of readers show up at her Civic Theatre
retirement party. She laughed as speaker after speaker took to the stage dressed
in bib overalls. She took pictures of the outhouse constructed on the stage.
And she was uncharacteristically silent when publisher Dotson announced that she
had won Knight Ridder Newspapers' 1996 John S. Knight Excellence Award for
Community Service.
Dotson says the Beacon Journal held Miss Murphey's
retirement party at the Civic because "it was the largest-capacity place we could
find. And it was nearly filled with her fans."
30 MILLION WORDS
A few
years before her retirement, the Beacon Journal figured that Miss Murphey
had written more than 30 million words and taken more than 40,000 photos. But
unlike many workaholics, Miss Murphey never neglected her friendships. Even while
undergoing a battery of tests while hospitalized in September, she sent Yocum a
note and a check. The note asked her to carry on with the lunch Miss Murphey had
set up months earlier for about 10 friends. The check was to pay for their
meal.
After her retirement from the Beacon Journal -- though "retirement"
isn't quite an accurate word since she continued to write her weekly travel
column until her death -- Miss Murphey still did not have time to unpack the
scores of boxes she moved from her office to her home. But she would find time to
gather housebound acquaintances and take them along on road trips.
Corky
Gutter of University Heights recalls a trip to southern Ohio that was intercepted
by a detour to a nursing home. Miss Murphey spent a half-hour visiting an old
woman in her 90s.
She was especially mindful of the elderly, said her niece,
Barbara Joy Godar, who cared for her in her last months.
"I have a flower
garden with hundreds and hundreds of flowers," Godar said. "She used to go to
nursing homes and bring people here to see the flowers. . . . She brought many,
many people here over the years. . . . She didn't pay too much attention to
herself, she was all newspaper."
Paffilas recalls accompanying Miss Murphey on
a trip to Germany, where they saw a Passion play. Miss Murphey slept through the
play because she'd been up all night writing postcards to friends. She even sent
postcards to the homes of all the people who were on the bus tour with her.
After a party at the Beacon Journal, she would make the clerks pack up the
lettuce from party trays and she would then take it over to the home of a friend
who raised rabbits.
But it would be doing an injustice to Miss Murphey's
memory to portray her as an angel. She was no such thing. Her appetites were too
large, her intelligence too restless, her pursuit of truth too obsessive for
that. Indeed, if the Old Testament had had female prophets, Miss Murphey would
have fit the bill.
After two decades, Gutter still remembers Miss Murphey's
wrath. While working as public relations officer for Hale Farm and Village in
Bath, Gutter would get a phone scolding from Miss Murphey every time she sent out
a press release.
"This isn't a press release, this is a high school English
theme," Miss Murphey would say. "You don't need those adjectives."
GRADUATION
CALL
Finally, after six months of critiquing, Gutter got another call. "You
finally made it," the voice said.
"I felt like I'd graduated from college,"
Gutter said. "I just jumped up and down with joy."
Miss Murphey was never
daunted by position or power.
She met Oliver Ocasek when they were both
students at Kent State in the 1940s. They remained close friends.
Decades
later, Ocasek, then president of the Ohio Senate, was about to convene a meeting
when he heard a loud voice say, "Hey buster, stand still so I can take a
picture."
Two Senate guards came rushing in. "You want her removed?" they
asked Ocasek.
"Removed? Oh, my God, no. If you do, I'll be a dead pigeon,"
replied the head of that august chamber.
Heck, even Allen was afraid of her.
When the Beacon Journal newsroom was being remodeled in the early '90s,
Allen and then-managing editor Jim Crutchfield decided that Miss Murphey should
have her own office.
"We cooked up the scheme because of her constantly
spreading empire," Allen said. "But I wasn't gonna tell her (about the move). I
didn't have the guts to do it."
The "empire" refers to Miss Murphey's
mind-boggling spread of personal possessions. Basically, she threw nothing out.
Newspapers were piled from floor to ceiling. Her desk was so covered with papers
that she had to type with the keyboard on her lap. And when she ran out of space,
she would sneak boxes under other people's desks.
AFFECTIONATE INSULTS
Allen had good reason to be afraid of Miss Murphey. She was so democratic in her
tongue-lashings that being her editor was no protection. Just ask Cullison.
"The most endearing thing about her was to call you an s.o.b.," Cullison said
with a laugh. "She'd call the editor of the paper an s.o.b. She always said, 'I
never cuss out my enemies.' "
The amazing thing is, even the people Miss
Murphey insulted by her trademark "Go to hell," were not insulted. The ones she
told to go to hell treasured it as a compliment. People would shrug off her
chronic lateness, her legendary temper or her hilarious eccentricities with an
affectionate, bemused, "That's Fran."
Because those who knew her sensed the
goodness behind the gruffness.
Reynolds recalled with pride the time Miss
Murphey told her to go to hell and walked away in a huff. Minutes later, she
returned. "You know why I told you to go to hell, right?" she asked. "It's
because when I end up there, I want my friends there."
No dice, Fran.
If
prayers count for anything, there's no hell in your future. Instead, they
probably steered you toward the Big Guy with the white, overflowing beard. With
any luck, he was wearing bib overalls.
Drop us a postcard.
Akron Beacon Journal
Tuesday, November 10, 1998