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Robert
Ford
If a tree falls in the forest and no one hears it, goes the
old cliche, does it make a sound? In Watertown, for the past
fourty years, there has been an unofficial corollary. If something
goes on in Watertown, you might ask, and it's not in the Press;
did it really happen?
Bob Ford graduated from Boston University in 1952 and became
editor of the Watertown Sun. Several years thereafter he managed
to convince William Dole of Dole Publishing that Watertown
needed another weekly and so, in 1955, with Bob as co-founder
and editor, the Watertown Press was born.
Bob Ford was at the helm of the Watertown Press for nearly
forty years. His efforts have left an indelible mark on this
town through his comprehensive coverage of the town's affairs
and his acute knowledge of local matters. He understood that
events, no matter how small they seemed, should be scrupulously
reported. From Town Council battles to civic functions to
Little League results to wedding announcements, it all ended
up in the pages of the Press.
But there was more to it than that. To this local focus Bob
added a broad, global vision; he wrote about foreign policy
long before it was fashionable for hometown editors to do
so. When he wrote against the Vietnam War - one of the first
editors in the nation to do so - he did it because he knew
it was a national issue that mattered very much to local people.
He knew the effect that this conflict was having on the community
he cared about so much. His conscience, his compassion, and
his pure and undiluted affection for the people of Watertown
drove the Press' editorial policy for thirty-seven years.
In April of this year, Bob Ford retired from his post as editor
of the Wc~tertown Press. He was honored by a crowd of hundreds
that featured representatives across the spectrum of Watertown
life; as Sun columnist John Moxley noted, people who would
gladly knife one another over a buffet tablejoined together
for one evening to laud Bob's life and work. A defining quote
came from his successor at the Press, Tommy Peterson. "No
man could ever fill Bob's shoes," she noted. "So
they hired a woman!"
The Hall claims a special privilege in honoring Bob tonight.
Bob was on the sidelines of too many Watertown High sporting
events to remember His accounts of those games - with the
participants and their contributions meticulously noted for
posterity - served as a unifying force for the Watertown community,
spurring town pride, keeping everyone in touch with their
neighbor's, their friend's, accomplishments. It didn't matter
if they were of Hall of Fame caliber. Every athlete who played
from the 1950s on gained recognition through Bob's efforts
and remembers the thrill of seeing their name and feats in
the newspaper for the first time.
Bob still writes a column for the Press, lending his voice
of reason to the sometime chaos of town life. And he now gets
to spend more time with what was always rightly his first
love, his family.
A State House resolution honoring Bob was passed this spring,
proclaiming that ` `his retirement is a fitting occasion to
bring tribute to his yeoman efforts over the last forty years
to bring an enlightened, balanced, and honorable view to reporting
on the events and people of Watertown and the world."
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