Union Recorder 200 Years | Page 17

I bought some vintage books at an estate sale in Deepstep in January. When I got them home, inside one I found a clipping from the Union-Recorder of August 1, 1991, by community columnist Reynolds Allen, who wrote about Flannery O’Connor. Beside the column was the editorial page masthead with the names of Roger Coover as publisher, Cecil Bentley as editor and Daniel Baker as manag- ing editor. That brought back memories of my 10 years at the newspaper. But I was even more struck by what ap- peared above our names. The masthead read ‘’The Union-Recorder / The Southern Recorder established 1820 / The Federal Union estab- lished 1830 / Merged 1872: The Union-Re- corder.’’ To think that I was a part of one of the state’s oldest newspapers, one that began 200 years ago, was a bit humbling. Before my tenure at the U-R, as we called it, my knowledge of Milledgeville was scant. Yes, I knew it had been Georgia’s capital before the upstart city of Atlanta grabbed it. I played in a rock band that had a few gigs in Milled- geville in the 1960s and early 1970s. And I was familiar with Lake Sinclair, where my parents had a small trailer on a lot where we stayed on summer weekends. But that was about where my connection with Milledgeville ended. I had spent most of my first 38 years in Ma- con, attended high school there (Cecil Bentley was a classmate), then went to the University of Georgia (at the same time as Cecil) and earned a degree in journalism. After stints as a high school teacher and convenience store manager, I got back into newspapers in Macon in 1983, eventually working with Cecil. When he left the Macon Telegraph and News in 1986 to become editor of its sister Knight-Ridder newspaper, the Union-Record- er, I told him to keep me in mind if there were any jobs there. A few months later, he called. He wanted me to be managing editor of the U-R. That was a big decision. My wife and I had three children, the oldest 11. Did we want to move our family to a new town, uproot our kids, take a chance? We did. And it was a good decision. Once we got settled in a house in Car- rington Woods, our children adapted to their new schools, made friends and thrived. My wife got a teaching job and earned advanced degrees from Georgia College. And I had the responsibility of helping lead the newsroom. The news staff was small -- few- er than a dozen people -- but we strived to put out the best newspaper we could. That same sense of dedication was felt throughout the building -- in advertising, circulation, compos- ing and the press room. We all were invested and felt like we were making a difference. I am particularly proud of the recognition the U-R received from others in the business. We routinely earned multiple honors from the Associated Press and Georgia Press Association for our work, competing against other papers our size across the state. But even more important was the recogni- tion that the Union-Recorder received from the residents of Milledgeville and Baldwin County. Circulation continued to grow as readers turned to the U-R for local news. That was our niche, what made us stand out from the big-city papers that were available. We could offer what they couldn’t -- news of the local community. I left the Union-Recorder in late 1995 to work at newspapers in Macon and Athens before returning to the U-R a second time in 2000, then moving the next year to the La- Grange paper, where I retired in 2011. I get back to Milledgeville twice a month and occasionally run into folks I knew when I lived there. The people are what makes Milledgeville special -- whether they are former colleagues from the U-R, folks at church or neighbors. Being accepted when we moved there made my family’s lives much easier. As the Union-Recorder marks its 200th an- niversary, I’m proud to have been a small part of its history. May it have 200 years more. 200th l 17