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It was on this date in 1992 that one of the greatest
newsmen of the 20th century died. Eric Sevareids career spanned
38 years, during which he shared the CBS Evening News with another broadcasting
icon, Walter Cronkite.
Sevareid was born in 1912 and grew up in Velva. He wanted
to be a journalist and worked as a typesetter for the local paper. After
graduating from high school, he wrote what one reviewer called, a
surprisingly good book about his hair-raising 2,000-mile canoe-trip to
Hudson Bay.
While attending the U of M, Sevareid wrote for the school
paper and two Minneapolis city papers. At one point he posed as a room-service
waiter to get himself an interview with actress Katherine Hepburn. But
Sevareid also gained enemies by leading a fight against the U
for making ROTC compulsory. When Sevareid won that battle, President Lotus
Coffman saw to it that the young man lost the editorship of the schools
paper, The Daily.
For the first time, Sevareid later wrote,
I tasted the ashes of bitterness.
In 1936, Sevareid started getting his work on the front
page when he wrote a series for the Minneapolis Journal about the SilverShirts,
subtitled, Weird Order Beset by Unbelievable Fears and Hatreds,
Claims Six Thousand Members in Minnesota.
Sevareid wrote, You probably wont believe
this story. It concerns an organization now active in Minneapolis
known as the SilverShirts. It concerns secret meetings, whispers of dark
plots against the nation and the SilverShirts incredible credo.
Members of this organization talk about ideas and goals so fantastic that
anyone who has heard them in meetings, as I have, goes away wondering
if he still lives in America in 1936.
The groups founder, William Dudley Pelley, organized
the SilverShirts the day after Hitler took power in Germany. The year
that Sevareid wrote the series, Pelley ran for president as a candidate
of what he called the Christian Party. His intent was to stop Jews and
Communists from taking over America. Sevareid wrote, I was astounded
that such childish reasoning could exist in a brain of a man so mature.
Sevareid was unhappy with how the Journal played the
story as though the SilverShirts were simple whackos rather than
dangerous right-wing survivalists. Little did they know that within a
few short years, such anti-Semitic reasoning would claim the lives of
six million Jews.
After his Silvershirts series ran in Minneapolis, Sevareids
personal life became a living hell, with many people firing vicious verbal
attacks at him. The following year, he and his wife moved to Paris, where
he wrote for the New York Herald Tribune. Two years later Edward R.
Murrow recognized Sevareids talent and offered
him a radio job with CBS. Sevareid was reluctant to switch over to broadcasting,
but he had a baby on the way and the pay was good $250 a month.
Good thing he took it. The baby turned out to be twin boys.
When Sevareid later wrote about his boyhood in North
Dakota, he said there was no roof to the sky, no border to the land...
Wheat was the sole source and meaning of our lives... it was rarely long
outside the conversation. While remembering the democracy within
his hometown, he asked, Why cant the rest of the world be
like us?
This text and audio may not be copied without securing
prior permission from North Dakota Public Radio.
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