On Sunday afternoon, the members of the Fourth Estate that were part of the enormous Lowell Sun extended family gathered together for a Fall Classic usually reserved for high schools - a reunion, this one for of an army of employees who worked at the Sun when it was under the control of the Costello family.
The historic gathering took place at Lenzi's in Dracut, and was a trip down memory lane for generations of folks who worked in ye days of olde in the editorial newsroom, advertising department, compsitor's room and all of the other business branches of operations at the paper.
For some of us - ye humble blogger included - we've been gone from the halls of print for quite some time, In my case, 19 years. There were lots on hand whose departure from the Sun predated even my exodus from 15 Kearney Square to the Lowell PD.
But everyone's individual paths and stories all converged in the function hall yesterday, with proceeds from the event going toward the Lowell Sun Charities.
Throughout the room, with slide shows of employee pics scrolling in the background, folks who haven't seen one another in some cases of 30 years or more, gathered to remember their days together in Kearney Square.
While I still keep in touch with quite a healthy number of folks through various means, including workplace interactions, and especially social media wonderworks such as Facebook and Twitter, it was refreshing to catch up with what folks have been doing for the past few decades.
For me, it was a chance to meet up with a group of people who were all in the newsroom when I started there as a young co-op student from UMass Lowell at the ridiculously naive age of 19 on Valentine's Day, 1984. All of the people here in this pic, were there when I started, and several made me feel welcome right from the get-go.
From left to right, former Sports Editor Ron Driscoll, current Managing Editor Kris Pisarik, fellow movie-buff and former education reporter Kathi Scrizzi-Driscoll, former higher ed and hospital reporter Patti McCafferty (now a colleague over at UMass Lowell), and to my left, Enterprise Editor Chris Scott, who was my newsroom neighbor for my whole stint at the paper.
Once upon a time, if it can be believed in these days of pared-back resources and dwindling hard-copy readers, the Sun printed seven editions and had satellite offices at the State House, in Washington, D.C., in colonial Bedford, and in downtown Ayer, home of its Nashoba edition. Here's a reunion of three of the stalwart reporters who passed through the unforgettable Ayer Bureau - Mike O'Connell, Pat Montminy (who worked side-by-side with me on the most horrific case of my career), and Peter Ward.
Huge props to the team who pulled the event together - Nancy McKenna, Debbie Linnehan, Carmen Bellerose, and Sheila Keough O'Brien
Kendall Wallace, who started at the paper nearly five decades ago, took the opportunity to recall some of its earlier days, when the newspaper business was the premiere delivery of news before everyone required the instant information of the internet.
He passed the torch to former Editor Jack Costello, who, in an emotional thank you, said how much he regretted ever selling the paper, and would leap at the opportunity to buy it back and immerse himself back into the biz.
Outside, some of the Costello siblings reunited with Sun management past and present, in the form of current Editor, right, Jim Campanini.
Patti and I had a chance to thank Kendall, the guy who first hired us into the business, and started us on our professional careers which have followed wandering paths in the ensuing decades, with both of us landing in higher education posts
And while I don't know that I can call it a reunion since I still work with her in the trenches at Middlesex Community College, I got a chance to hang out with one of my favorite peeps, Nancy Roberts - literally the first face I saw when I walked into the newsroom for the first time ever for my interview to land the job. She welcomed me then with a friendly hello and then watched all of our collective backs for years to follow.
Love it, hate it, no one can deny the role the Sun has played in the tableau of the Merrimack Valley that has unfolded over the last century. It was fun seeing old friends. I only wish more of the folks that Dick Cook buzzed into the newsroom over those years were able to join us for the reunion. They literally span the globe nowadays. Maybe next time they pull one of these together, we can see some of the other faces who helped the Sun make history and shaped the news for millions.
3 comments:
Thanks Pat for getting this out on deadline. So many of us have fond memories of our days at the Sun, where we got our start in journalism. While many of us have moved on to other careers, we miss those days of cranking out stories until dawn, getting tips from numerous sources and sharing our lives with colleagues who sat around us in the bustling newsroom at Kearney Square. I miss you all and cherish the time we spent together putting out a mighty fine product.
That Lowell Sun training of working quickly -- and well -- on deadline is clearly still embedded in you, Pat, based on how fast and articulately you got this out. I, too, miss you all, cherish the time I spent with you, and am proud of the great work we did. A dwindling few of us are still in the newspaper business, fighting in a rapidly changing world to retain what we can of the journalism standards we learned and honed at the Sun as we try to get information out to readers -- in whatever form. I'm lucky to still be part of a great experience working at the Cape Cod Times, too, but the '80s group from the Sun is absolute proof of just how special a group of journalists -- and friends -- can be. Those other careers are very lucky to have you all.
This sounds like a fantastic gathering! I left the Sun in 1994, and it still remains one of my favorite places I've ever worked. It was an ideal place to learn the ropes of reporting, and I have such fond memories of everyone who worked there. Hugs to all from Washington DC.
Mary Boyle
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