Généalogie Wylie » Theodore Perry Wesley "T. Perry" (1905-2001)

Données personnelles Theodore Perry Wesley "T. Perry" 


Famille de Theodore Perry Wesley "T. Perry"

Il est marié avec Mabel Aline Powers.

Ils se sont mariés le 2 juin 1928 à Owensboro, Daviess County, Kentucky, il avait 22 ans.


Enfant(s):

  1. (Ne pas publique)


Notes par Theodore Perry Wesley "T. Perry"

http://www.depauw.edu/library/archives/ijhof/inductees/wesleyp.htm
T. Perry Wesley Inducted 1981
T. Perry Wesley, editor emeritus of the Spencer (Ind.) Evening World and a native of Kentucky, has spent most of his 50 years as a journalist in Indiana.
As editor and publisher of the Evening World and later as editor for a total of 33 years, he dedicated his efforts to the betterment of the newspaper and the community which it served.
Shortly after becoming owner of the Evening World, he decided the little newspaper could not compete for national and international news with the big city papers that circulated in Spencer and Owen County. So he left the news of the outside world to those newspapers which had more space and resources and dedicated the Evening World to reporting news at home as completely as possible.
He also kept others informed about events in Owen County as a correspondent for the big city newspapers.
Always busy as a newsman, Wesley found time to serve the community and state in many ways. He was a member of the Indiana Democratic Party's platform committee five times and secretary of the Bloomington Hospital Board of Directors and a member of the governor's commission for the study and revision of state mental health laws.
His long career, certainly not yet finished, was capped recently by the publication of his autobiography, Datelines and By-Lines. Its preface tells much about the character of the man. In it he recalls the poverty of his youth and that of his neighbors in Casey County, Kentucky: "So far as I can recall, no one in Casey County was on welfare...we were poor...we knew it and we lived with it. No one ever told us the world owed us a living, so we didn't know it."
http://www.depauw.edu/library/archives/ijhof/inductees/wesleyp.htm=============

Our "Mr. Wesley" Leaves A Treasure Chest Of Memories By Tom Douglas

Twelve years ago my wife Jo and I joined a group at the Senior Center here to celebrate a special occasion... the 90th birthday of one of our favorite people in the whole world... Evening World Editor Emeritus, T. Perry Wesley.
Although it doesn't seem possible, since that happy event in 1995, the monthly calendar has turned over 144 times. The Evening World family shared another milestone when we wished our teacher, resource person, and all-around best friend a fond farewell.
Mr. Wesley passed away Monday morning, June 4, 2001 at the Owen Valley Health Campus in Spencer.
Quoting from an earlier Cluttered Desk, "I wish I could count all the times this gray-haired, ukulele-playing Kentuckian has played an important role in my life. We had our first encounter way back in 1960 when I was 18, he was 55... and it didn't take long for him to tell that I certainly 'wasn't dry behind the ears.' "
After a nine month stint in Spencer, the U.S. Air Force demanded my attention for nearly five years... with my return to the Evening World coming in January of 1967. From that point my association with Mr. Wesley became one of daily education and growing friendship.
As I searched for ways to celebrate his life, rather than grieve over his passing, it was extremely easy to come up with a long, long list of happy memories.
Jo and I had many opportunities to share special times with Mr. Wesley (he was never T. Perry to me), but one of the happiest had to be his induction into the Indiana Journalism Hall of Fame in April 1981.
A more recent honor came during a trip to French Lick in 1998, when he was joined by his very special friend Mary Lee Brinson, a wonderful woman who has been his devoted companion the past several years. The event resulted in Mr. Wesley being honored by his long-time newspaper friend, the late Indiana Governor Frank O'Bannon with the Indiana Democratic Editorial Association's first 50 year service award.
During that meeting IDEA President Wayne Jenner of the Kokomo Herald said, "T. Perry has experienced our country through horse and buggy, Model T's and contemporary interstate travel in air conditioned, cruise controlled automobiles. He has gone from the Wright Brothers' first flight in an airplane, to jets, to manned travel to the moon... T. Perry has got a lot of living under his belt and he has blessed us with his accounts of Hoosier life and politics."
In yet another special presentation, the Spencer-Owen Chamber of Commerce meeting in 1999 named him "Mr. Chamber of Commerce." The plaque from that final award was proudly hung in his room at the Owen Valley Health Campus.
Although his hearing and sight were failing badly, Mr. Wesley still came to the office several times a week up until about a year before his death... to "keep the troops in line" and work on his relentless research of E. M. Viquesney and The Spirit of the American Doughboy statue.
Although I've said it before in earlier columns about my friend and mentor... my opportunity to have a career in journalism here is a direct result of Mr. Wesley's teaching and guidance.
I have to admit that assuming his post as managing editor 26 years ago was my most humbling experience, but Mr. Wesley was always available to provide encouragement and instruction from his seemingly endless supply of information.
He was a man who maintained his love for journalism and the people of Owen County throughout the past half century, although he had to battle the deepening problems of aging and illness the past year.
He will certainly be missed, but he leaves me and many, many other people a treasure chest of wonderful memories.
[http://www.spencereveningworld.com/ourmrwesley.html]

=======================
[http://doughboysearcher.tripod.com/id6.html]
T. PERRY WESLEY
Until his death in 2001, the most widely recognized Viquesney Doughboy expert was T. Perry Wesley of Spencer, Indiana.
Mr. Wesley never knew Viquesney, since he didn’t arrive in Spencer until he bought the Spencer Evening World in 1948, two years after Viquesney’s death. Still, he began collecting information about Viquesney, and his Doughboy and other sculptures, in the 1950s, and continued his quest until the 1990s. Most of what’s known about them today is information he gathered or information discovered from clues contained in that information. Even in his advanced age (he was born in 1905 in Casey County, Kentucky), people continued to call him for information until within a month or two of his June 4, 2001 death, just 25 days before his 96th birthday. His last weekly column as Editor-emeritus of the Evening World was published after he died. He was a remarkable man.
Mr. Wesley did an outstanding job of locating Viquesney’s Doughboys, but because of the lack of records, no list of locations will ever be known to include every Viquesney “Spirit.” Further, every list I have seen compiled by others erroneously includes other sculptures or locations where no Doughboy is known to have ever been placed.
The latter condition is at least partially due to the fact that, in the Summer of 1990, Mr. Wesley wrote a letter to the editor of Home and Away magazine asking people to advise him about locations of Doughboys. His letter was published and, while it resulted in locating many Doughboys, he also received many erroneous responses. Some identified other sculptures as Doughboys. Most of those others were doughboys by other sculptors, primarily those by sculptor John Paulding, but some were Civil War, Spanish American War, or other non-doughboy figures. Some were sculptures people had seen somewhere in their travels and reported to Mr. Wesley, sometimes naming towns where long-time local residents remember no Doughboy or similar sculpture to ever have existed.
Mr. Wesley set out to verify those of which he had been advised, but because of his age and limited resources, could only do a valiant, rather than complete, job. He sent information about several unverified erroneous locations, including several John Paulding doughboys, with indications that they are Doughboys, in a response to a Smithsonian project. The result is that confusion has been increased because of their inclusion in the Smithsonian’s Inventory of American Sculpture. Smithsonian representatives are aware of this and have indicated their willingness to make any corrections for which documentation is received.
After I had seen a few Doughboys and knew the locations of a few more, I wanted to see if I could find out where the others were, how many there were, and other information about them. (I didn’t imagine there would be anywhere near as many as there are.) In going through the Henryetta, Oklahoma library files during a visit there, I encountered a copy of T. P. Wesley’s letter to Home and Away, but the copy I saw didn’t indicate the name of the magazine or its date, so I couldn’t contact them. It did, however, have Mr. Wesley’s home address at the time. So I went through information operators. (When I told the information operator his name, her response gave me the distinct impression that she knew of him.) Fortunately, he still lived at that address and I managed to reach him on the phone. His hearing was very bad and after an attempt to introduce myself and the reason for the call, he told me that he was 92 and I’d have to speak up and speak slowly and clearly, so I started over. At the word, “Doughboy,” he took over. The dear man talked for about 45 minutes without pausing. I heard more about Doughboys than I thought possibly existed. I learned the rough number that exists. I heard of a stone one in my wife’s hometown that she hadn’t recognized as being one because it is stone. He even told me a humorous old story about the one in Henryetta and the name of a clothier he knew there when he was selling mens clothes in Oklahoma City in the 1920s. I could hardly get into the conversation – but he probably wouldn’t have heard me anyway. Before the call ended, we exchanged addresses and phone numbers and agreed that we would be in contact.
Within a few days, I had a thick package of information he’d mailed me about Viquesney and the Doughboy, and about Spencer and Owen County, Indiana – he was very proud of both. As we continued to have contact, he’d have Mary Lee Brinson, who lived a few doors from him in the same senior citizen apartments, listen to me about things he didn’t heard clearly and repeat my comments or questions to him. Then he would get on the phone with his deep voice and my end of the conversation was over again – but it was always enjoyable. Mary Lee also helped in his mailings to me. Over time, I learned how dependent he was on Mary Lee’s help and how strong their feelings for one another were, and she became an integral part of the relationship.
So Mr. Wesley was my very good friend, as was (is) Mary Lee. We communicated often, even visited Viquesney’s grave together and dined at his favorite eating place, Spencer’s Canyon Inn at McCormick Creek State Park. I visited the office that the Evening World still maintained for him forty years after he had sold the paper, and I got to meet all the people there that he loved so much. I still communicate frequently with Mary Lee.
Since Mr. Wesley’s vision and writing had started to fail, he made me some audio tapes to record his recollections of Viquesney and Doughboy facts, and other things about Spencer and Owen County. I’d send him empty tapes to record more.
In early 2000, I took my two sisters on a 11 day driving trip to renew childhood memories, and we spent some of that time in Spencer so we could all share time with Mr. Wesley and Mary Lee. We also managed to see six Doughboys on the trip - plus one John Paulding doughboy and three dead ends with no doughboys. Actually, we had a fourth dead end when we couldn’t get inside the Evansville American Legion Post to see their Doughboy.
Mr. Wesley moved to a nursing home – Owen Valley Health Campus – in September 1990 and spent his last nine months there. I was able to talk with him just a few times after the move, but Mary Lee and I were in very frequent contact and she would tell him of my calls. During his last months, I helped him by responding to two reporters writing articles about war monuments and his 50-year search for Doughboys, and to Don Conrad, who was compiling a travel guide of World War I monuments. Tom Douglas, editor of the Spencer Evening World, (now retired) also helped him.
Mr. Wesley died at Owen Valley early on June 4, 1991, just 25 days before his 96th birthday and I made calls that day to try to tell some of his “Doughboy Searchers” he had told me about. He is especially missed by his daughter, Betty Jo Blunk, by his dear caregiver and special love of his last few years, Mary Lee Brinson, by Tom Douglas and the entire staff of the Evening World, by many Spencer residents (he was called “Our Mr. Wesley” in Spencer), by his “Doughboy Searchers,” of which there have been quite a few, – and by me.
One of the reporters I helped for Mr. Wesley was Reuters reporter Phil Barbara who was writing an article about Mr. Wesley’s 50 year quest to locate Viquesney Doughboys. (Robert Widener of VFW Magazine contacted me about the same time about an article they were publishing in their Memorial Day issue, and it was as a result of contacts with one of the editors of the magazine that Les Kopel first learned of me.) Mr. Barbara’s article was originally planned to be a Memorial Day article, but he became concerned that Mr. Wesley might not live that long, so it was published May 17, 2001. Mr. Barbara had been able to talk with Mr. Wesley on a limited basis and quoted him to me as saying that when he was gone, a man in Texas named Earl Goldsmith would pick up his search. Mr. Barbara was going to Europe later in May, I think to do an article about D-Day. He was concerned that Mr. Wesley would die before he returned, so he wrote an obituary and gave it to the person at Reuters in Washington D. C. who was in charge of releasing things at the correct time (City Desk, City Editor, or something like that). He then called me and gave me the phone number to call to reach that person as soon as I learned Mr. Wesley had died. I called the number on June 4 and they released the obituary. Unfortunately, it wasn’t picked up by a lot of newspapers because of the lack of widespread interest. I found it on the Internet at the time, but for the life of me, can’t locate a copy in my files.
Back to Mr. Wesley’s statement that a man in Texas would pick up his search, I didn’t have any plans along those lines, even though I was interested in seeing a few. By the time Mr. Wesley died, I had probably seen about fifteen. I had the Smithsonian list and was already aware of some corrections that should be made to it. I had an immense appreciation for Mr. Wesley and enjoyed knowing about Doughboys, but I wasn’t bent on trying to pinpoint all of them or come up with an authoritatively correct list of locations.
Within days of Mr. Wesley’s death, that changed. I just decided that I would start spending time trying to run down all the information I could about them. Since then, I’ve had phone conversations and written communications with people all across the country. I hacked along and made quite a bit of progress by myself for a while, and then Les Kopel came along to give me a big and continuous boost.
Mr. Wesley’s records reflected about 35 erroneous doughboys but did not reflect about 35-40 other Doughboys that have been located. In the end, he had settled on a number that is very close to the number that exists.
Les and I have combined to compile lists that contain only Viquesney's World War I monuments and copies thereof. As time passes, we will find more.
[http://doughboysearcher.tripod.com/id6.html]

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Ancêtres (et descendants) de Theodore Perry Wesley

Theodore Perry Wesley
1905-2001

1928

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Les données affichées n'ont aucune source.

Événements historiques

  • La température au 29 juin 1905 était entre 11,2 et 25,5 °C et était d'une moyenne de 19,1 °C. Il y avait 9,6 heures de soleil (57%). La force moyenne du vent était de 3 Bft (vent modéré) et venait principalement du est-sud-est. Source: KNMI
  • Du 1 août 1901 au 16 août 1905 il y avait aux Pays-Bas le cabinet Kuijper avec comme premier ministre Dr. A. Kuijper (AR).
  • Du 17 août 1905 au 11 février 1908 il y avait aux Pays-Bas le cabinet De Meester avec comme premier ministre Mr. Th. de Meester (unie-liberaal).
  • En l'an 1905: Source: Wikipedia
    • La population des Pays-Bas était d'environ 5,5 millions d'habitants.
    • 20 février » début de la bataille de Mukden pendant la guerre russo-japonaise.
    • 23 février » |Paul Harris et trois entrepreneurs fondent le Rotary Club, premier club de service mondial.
    • 30 mars » les Grecs de Crète se soulèvent contre les Turcs.
    • 31 mars » début de la crise de Tanger.
    • 27 juin » début de la mutinerie du cuirassé Potemkine.
    • 18 novembre » Haakon VII accède au trône de Norvège.
  • La température au 2 juin 1928 était entre 4,6 et 18,6 °C et était d'une moyenne de 12,0 °C. Il y avait 14,5 heures de soleil (88%). La force moyenne du vent était de 3 Bft (vent modéré) et venait principalement du nord-nordest. Source: KNMI
  • Du 8 mars 1926 au 10 août 1929 il y avait aux Pays-Bas le cabinet De Geer I avec comme premier ministre Jonkheer mr. D.J. de Geer (CHU).
  • En l'an 1928: Source: Wikipedia
    • La population des Pays-Bas était d'environ 7,6 millions d'habitants.
    • 9 février » première projection houleuse du film de Germaine Dulac La Coquille et le clergyman (scénario de Germaine Dulac et d'Antonin Artaud, également acteur dans le film) au studio des Ursulines à Paris.
    • 19 février » |un incendie aux mines d'or Hollinger à Timmins, en Ontario, fait trente-neuf morts.
    • 2 août » l'Italie signe un traité d'amitié de 20 ans avec l'Abyssinie.
    • 27 août » signature du pacte Briand-Kellogg. Les soixante-trois pays signataires s’engagent à ne plus avoir recours à la guerre pour régler leurs différends.
    • 6 novembre » Herbert Hoover est élu Président des États-Unis.
    • 10 novembre » intronisation de l'empereur du Japon Hirohito.
  • La température au 4 juin 2001 était entre 6,2 et 16,9 °C et était d'une moyenne de 12,0 °C. Il y avait -0.1 mm de précipitation. Il y avait 1,5 heures de soleil (9%). Il faisait très nuageux. La force moyenne du vent était de 2 Bft (vent faible) et venait principalement du ouest. Source: KNMI
  • Du lundi, août 3, 1998 au lundi, juillet 22, 2002 il y avait aux Pays-Bas le cabinet Kok II avec comme premier ministre W. Kok (PvdA).
  • En l'an 2001: Source: Wikipedia
    • La population des Pays-Bas était d'environ 16,0 millions d'habitants.
    • 17 février » |un cargo, l' «East Sea», transportant 908 immigrants clandestins, pour la plupart des Kurdes irakiens, s'échoue sur une plage de Saint-Raphaël après sept jours de traversée dans des conditions inhumaines.
    • 8 mars » l'OTAN autorise la Serbie à garder sa frontière avec le Kosovo, face aux incursions de rebelles albanophones venus de Macédoine.
    • 16 mars » |le Sénégal signe un cessez-le-feu avec les séparatistes de Casamance, dans un conflit vieux de treize ans.
    • 27 mars » accident ferroviaire de Pécrot, dans le Brabant wallon.
    • 1 mai » l'administration Bush promet de doter les États-Unis d'un système de bouclier antimissile.
    • 7 juin » réélection, au Royaume-Uni, d'un gouvernement travailliste dirigé par Tony Blair; fondation de l'Organisation pour la démocratie et le développement (GUAM).


Même jour de naissance/décès

Source: Wikipedia

Source: Wikipedia

  • 1997 » Ronnie Lane, musicien britannique, membre du groupe Small Faces (° 1 avril 1946).
  • 2001 » John Hartford, musicien et compositeur américain (° 30 décembre 1937).
  • 2002 » Fernando Belaúnde Terry, homme d’État péruvien, président du Pérou de 1963 à 1968 puis de 1980 à 1985 (° 7 octobre 1912).
  • 2004 » Steve Lacy, saxophoniste américain (° 23 juillet 1934).
  • 2005 » Chloe Jones, actrice américaine (° 17 juin 1975).
  • 2007 » Clete Boyer, joueur de baseball américain (° 9 février 1937).

Sur le nom de famille Wesley

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  • Afficher des informations sur Wesley sur le site Archives Ouvertes.
  • Trouvez dans le registre Wie (onder)zoekt wie? qui recherche le nom de famille Wesley.

La publication Généalogie Wylie a été préparée par .contacter l'auteur
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Kin Mapper, "Généalogie Wylie", base de données, Généalogie Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/genealogie-wylie/I310491.php : consultée 30 avril 2024), "Theodore Perry Wesley "T. Perry" (1905-2001)".