Charles Dwelley

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Charles Muth Dwelley
Born(1908-03-08)March 8, 1908
DiedSeptember 30, 1993(1993-09-30) (aged 85)[1]
Resting placePleasant Ridge Cemetery, La Conner, Washington[2]
48°23′30″N 122°26′52″W / 48.3918°N 122.4478°W / 48.3918; -122.4478
Other namesChuck Dwelley
OccupationThe editor of The Concrete Herald
Years active1929–1970
PredecessorG.L. Leonard[3][4]
SuccessorJune Fader[5]
Spouse(s)Helen Lyle (Grubb) Dwelley · Alice May (Hurn) Dwelley · Helen Lenore (Pemberton) Dwelley
ChildrenArthur (Art) Gilbert Dwelley (1930–2000)
Parents
  • Charles Lemuel Dwelley (father)
  • Mary Elizabeth Muth Dwelley (mother)
Signature

Charles Muth Dwelley (March 8, 1908 – September 30, 1993) was a

National Editorial Association
.

Personal life

Three generations of Dwelleys: Charles Lemuel, Charles Muth ("Chuck"), and Art.

Dwelley was born in Mount Vernon, Washington, on March 8, 1908, into the family of Charles Lemuel Dwelley (1878–1964) and Mary Elizabeth Muth Dwelley (1877–1954). He was often referred to as "Chuck" to distinguish him from his father. The family had two other children: Chuck's older sister, Dorothy (born in 1905), and his younger brother, William (born in 1916).[2]

Dwelley's father, Charles Lemuel, was the fourth child of Joseph F. Dwelley, one of the first settlers of

Skagit County, who arrived in Washington from Kittery, Maine, in 1870.[10] The family moved to Anacortes, Washington in 1910, shortly after Chuck's birth, where Chuck's father worked at a pulp mill until his retirement.[2] Chuck graduated from Anacortes High School in 1925.[7]

Dwelley was married three times. He married his first wife, Helen Lyle Grubb of Anacortes (born in 1910),

Sedro-Woolley, and in 1929, to Concrete, Washington, to work for The Concrete Herald.[7] Their only child, Arthur "Art" Gilbert Dwelley, was born February 6, 1930.[12] The couple lived on the top floor of the building where they published the newspaper most of their lives, until they divorced in the summer of 1961.[13] Helen moved to Mount Vernon in July 1961,[14]
and died there in 1969.

Dwelley remarried on January 1, 1962.

Lutheran Church near Three Lakes in Snohomish County, Washington before moving to Concrete with Dwelley. Alice died on May 6, 1967, at the age 54.[15]

On March 16, 1968, Dwelley remarried for the last time. His third wife, Helen Lenore Pemberton (born December 14, 1910), held a journalism degree from Washington State University. She worked on internal publication for General Dynamics Corporation, and left her job to live with Dwelley in Concrete.[16] In the early 1990s, the couple moved to Tenino, Washington, to live with Dwelley's son, Art. Charles Dwelley died on September 30, 1993.[1][17] He was buried in Pleasant Ridge Cemetery in La Conner, Washington.[2] Helen moved to California, where she died on November 18, 2011, at almost 101 years old. She was buried next to Dwelley in La Conner.[16]

All three of Dwelley's wives helped him write for The Concrete Herald. His son, Art followed his father's trade: he edited and published a local newspaper (the Tenino Independent), was a community activist, and became a local historian. He died on October 10, 2000.[11]

Career in journalism

Dwelley started his career as a journalist working for the

Sedro-Woolley to work for The Courier Times.[2][18] In 1929, Frank Evans, editor of The Courier Times, sent Dwelley to Concrete, Washington, in an effort to save a failing local newspaper: The Concrete Herald, which Evans just purchased.[19][20]

The Concrete Herald

Evans and Dwelley assumed ownership of the newspaper and its debts, reincorporating it in 1930.[21] Shortly afterwards, the Depression struck. The financial situation for the newspaper remained dire throughout the 1930s. In one incident, Dwelley invited his readers to pay for the newspaper issue that he couldn't publish due to medical reasons in order to help pay for his medical bill.[22]

Living with his wife and newborn son in the same building where he operated Linotype machines,[23] young Dwelley worked hard and managed to make the newspaper work,[2][24] eventually paying all the debts and buying out Evans' share.[7] He is credited with "rescuing the failing Concrete Herald."[18] Many of his peers, including fellow editor and politician Sim Wilson, noted the accomplishment of maintaining a profitable newspaper in a small town.[19] From 1930 to 1943, the population of Concrete declined slightly, but the number of Herald subscriptions rose by 67%.[25][26]

World War II interruption

On March 27, 1944, Dwelley learned that his younger brother William had been killed in

Farragut, Idaho, and graduated with honors as Torpedoman Third Class from the Torpedo School at Naval Base San Diego as in December 1944.[29] Dwelley was assigned to the Seventh Fleet and stationed in the Admiralty Islands. As it became apparent that the Navy has a surplus of torpedomen, in April 1945 he was assigned to Manila, Philippines, as a shore patrol officer.[27] Dwelley returned to Seattle on a liberty ship on December 10, 1945, and was discharged at Bremerton, Washington, on December 16, having served 21 months.[27]

During this time, Dwelley's wife, Helen Lyle, edited a truncated version of The Concrete Herald from April 1944 to November 1944, but couldn't keep up. From November 2, 1944, to May 31, 1945, the newspaper's publication was completely suspended.[30]

Libel controversy

In 1956, The Concrete Herald and Dwelley personally were sued for

Washington State Supreme Court decision imposed serious limitations on criticism in newspaper columns.[32] The proceedings lasted almost three years, but the court eventually acquitted Dwelley and his paper,[33] which Dwelley celebrated with an 80-point bold headline "WE WON," surpassing the size of the headlines proclaiming the end of World War II.[2][34]

The Concrete Herald at its zenith