| |
Tomorrow and the next day, too will be
the birthdays of Calvin Andrist, who was born in Ada, MN, in 1888
or maybe 1887. His son, John, says, Dad always claimed two birth
dates. After celebrating on April 10 for half a century, he had reason
to request an official birth certificate. That showed his birth as April
9, 1887. He refused to give up April 10 and declared henceforth and forevermore
he would have a two-day birthday celebration.
Calvins family moved to a Canadian homestead north of Crosby, but
his stepmother wasnt fond of him, so he set out on foot, at age
16, to make his fortune in the town of Portal some 25 miles away. With
only an 8th grade education, his career choices were limited, at best.
John says, Farm work was plentiful in the labor intensive business
of farming in those days, but when fall came there was little to sustain
him. So he was preparing to distribute Canadian booze to customers in
North Dakota, which was still a dry state at the turn of the century.
It was in that fall of 1907 that a pioneer newspaper publisher offered
Andrist a job as a printers devil at the Kermit News in Kermit,
ND. The publisher promised him room and board in exchange for his work,
just to tide him over until spring. Andrist chose the newspaper over bootlegging,
and it led him far beyond the following spring. The following year, he
went to work for the Larson Leader in Larson.
When the building was destroyed in a fire, he moved to
Ambrose to work for the Ambrose Tribune and then the Ambrose Newsman.
In 1912, Steve says, his grandfather finally got a chance to run his own
newspaper when a group of merchants in Noonan bought out the interest
of an alcoholic publisher of the Noonan Miner. They offered the business
to Cal, virtually for nothing, if hed take it over. He did. And
he also went on to purchase the Divide County Journal in Crosby with a
partner, Nansen B. Henderson, who he bought out a few years later.
During Calvins tenure, about 8 other county newspapers folded, leaving
The Divide County Journal the countys sole surviving newspaper.
Calvin served as President of the ND Press Assn. and was inducted into
the ND Newspaper Hall of Fame in 1978.
Meanwhile, Andrists son, John, began working for him in 1950, and
after Calvin retired in 1958, John took over, and then bought, the paper.
John shortened the name to The Journal in the 1970s, because the papers
territory now extended beyond the boundaries of Divide County.
John went to his first ND Newspaper Association meeting in 1947 when still
in high school; he moved up from there and is the only North Dakotan to
have ever served as president at the national level. Hes also the
only newspaper professional to be inducted into the ND Newspaper Hall
of Fame while still living. In more recent years, John has also served
in the State Senate.
In the fall of 2000, John was given the James O. Amos Award, a national
honor given to individuals who have provided distinguished service in
the area of community newspapers. The award was established in 1938 for
General James Amos, a pioneer journalist who owned the Sidney County Democrat;
like The Journal, the Sidney paper is still in the Amos family.
That brings us to Johns son, Steve, who is the third generation
of Andrists to own and operate The Journal. During the 1980s, Steve worked
for the Bismarck Tribune, and for papers in Winona and Rochester, MN.
Then, in 1991, he went back to Crosby to take over his family legacy.
Steve has been keeping the family tradition alive and well and has since
purchased a second paper, The Tioga Tribune. You can say happy birthday
to him in 16 days...
Source: John Andrist and http://www.crosbynd.com/journal/history.htm
This text and audio may not be copied without securing
prior permission from North Dakota Public Radio.
|