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BOOK REVIEW Recollections of Tribune's Bob Howard
Robert P. Howard Memoir, Oral History FOLLOWING upon a number of memoirs from Illinois legislators, the Oral History Office at Sangamon State University turns in this latest volume to a rather different but equally fascinating perspective on 20th century developments in this state. Robert P. Howard was a newspaperman, head of the AP office in Springfield from 1933 to 1938, then briefly with the Chicago Sun, and finally a political reporter and state-house correspondent in Springfield for the Chicago Tribune. During these years he developed an interest in history and historical figures, an interest he continues to cultivate to this day: My interest in history went back to when I was in Springfield in the thirties. . . . The paintings of the governors at that time were in the Governor's Office, and I used to wonder who they were. [Someone] at one time gave me a booklet, a small thing I would carry in my coat pocket, that listed a bibliography of Illinois history. So I kept that for years and acquired some books on the subject. After his retirement in 1970, Howard was appointed to the State Archives Board, became active in the State Historical Society and completed a manuscript he had been working on for some time, Illinois: A History of the Prairie State (published in 1972). Mr. Howard's instinct for the good story and concern for the historical perspective, combined with Cullom Davis' marvelous ability to sculpt an interview have produced yet another valuable contribution to our understanding of a part of our past.□ February 1983 | Illinois Issues | 33 |
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