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Honoring a life

Morley Ballantine, longtime Herald editor, inducted into Colorado Women’s Hall of Fame
The late Morley Cowles Ballantine, former editor and chairman of The Durango Herald, sits in her office at the newspaper shortly after moving into the Herald’s new building at 1275 Main Ave., in 1965. She and her late husband, Arthur Ballantine, moved to Durango in 1952 after buying the town’s two newspapers. For many years, she and her husband shared an office.

DENVER – Last spring, Rochelle Mann attended a reception in Durango for the Colorado Women’s Hall of Fame and noticed something was missing.

She saw a lack of inductees from the Western Slope.

“I was standing next to Debra Parmenter, and we looked at each other and both said at the same time: ‘Morley,’” Mann said.

The omission that Mann and Parmenter spotted was corrected Thursday night, when Morley Cowles Ballantine, the longtime chairman and editor of The Durango Herald, was inducted into the Colorado Women’s Hall of Fame, taking a place alongside pioneers, artists, judges and diplomats who have shaped the state.

Among the 10 inductees this year are U.S. District Judge Christine Arguello and entrepreneur Kristina Johnson, an internationally known expert on crystal display technology used in high-definition television and 3-D movies.

“This is such an honor for her, coming from such an isolated part of the state, and it shows how her influence grew throughout her life to encompass the whole state,” said her daughter, Helen Ballantine Healy, who accepted the award on her mother’s behalf.

Morley Ballantine died Oct. 10, 2009, at 84.

Ballantine and her husband, Arthur, bought the Durango News and the Durango Herald-Democrat in 1952. She took over as publisher of the Herald when Arthur died in 1975.

“Maybe a lot of people didn’t understand that she put out the paper for 30 years of her life using a magnifying glass to do all her reading and writing,” Ballantine Healy said.

But Morley Ballantine had influence and interests far beyond the press.

Her philanthropy helped nonprofits and causes throughout Southwest Colorado and the state. She served on boards of trustees for Fort Lewis College and the University of Denver.

She helped found the Women’s Resource Center in Durango and was a major supporter of Planned Parenthood.

“Along with all that, her big job, she felt, was mentoring. And I didn’t fully understand that until my mother died,” Ballantine Healy said.

But in the days after her mother’s death, dozens of women stopped Ballantine Healy to tell her about how her mother had taken an interest and supplied advice and encouragement.

Mann, former head of the Fort Lewis College music department, was one of those people.

“Morley was always one of my mentors, not that she knew that,” Mann said.

Mann spent a few months completing the extensive application for the Colorado Women’s Hall of Fame.

Marilyn Van Derbur Atler introduced Ballantine’s story to the crowd of about 500 at the Marriott City Center hotel.

“Through her philanthropy and journalism, Morley campaigned for women’s equality issues, such as equal pay for equal work, protection from workplace harassment and the right to choose. Her efforts extend far beyond Durango, benefiting the entire state of Colorado,” Van Derbur Atler said.

Jill Tietjen, president of the National Women’s Hall of Fame, said the state and national halls are important because history overlooks women.

“Only 20 percent of news articles are about women,” Tietjen said. “Although today women earn the majority of college degrees, women make up 19 percent of the U.S. Congress and less than 5 percent of Fortune 500 executives.”

Counting this year’s class, the Colorado Women’s Hall of Fame honors 142 women.

Inductees include former first lady Mamie Doud Eisenhower; former Secretary of State Madeline Albright; former Israeli prime minister Golda Meir; folk singer Judy Collins; and Clara Brown, a freed slave who was thought to be the first African-American woman to cross the plains during the Pikes Peak gold rush. Brown became a successful mine owner and bought the freedom of many other slaves.

“I think she would have been very proud and honored, and maybe humbled in some ways, to join this amazing group of women from Colorado who have achieved so much and really benefited the state,” Ballantine Healy said.

jhanel@durangoherald.com

Awards

Morley Ballantine’s service has been honored many times during her lifetime. These are a few major ones:

1953: First journalism award, first place in editorial writing from Colorado Press Association.

1967: Outstanding Journalism recognition to Arthur and Morley Ballantine by the University of Colorado School of Journalism.

1970: First-ever Fort Lewis College Distinguished Service Award to Arthur and Morley Ballantine.

1980: Honorary degree from Simpson College in Iowa.

1990: Citizen of the Year by Durango Area Chamber Resort Association.

1998: Athena Award for women in public service from DACRA. In 2007, DACRA renames the Athena Award to the Morley Ballantine Award.

2000: Colorado Philanthropist of the Year at National Philanthropy Day.

2001: Bonfils Stanton Foundation Arts & Humanities Award. Named to Colorado Business Hall of Fame.

2002: Honorary doctorate from the University of Denver.

2004: Margaret Sanger Award, Planned Parenthood’s highest honor. First woman awarded Fort Lewis College Honorary Degree.

Milestones

May 21, 1925: Elizabeth Morley Cowles was born to John and Elizabeth Morley Bates Cowles in Des Moines, Iowa. She is the third generation of a newspaper publishing family.

July 1, 1944: She marries Pvt. Richard P. Gale Jr. He later dies by suicide in March 1946.

July 26, 1947: She marries Arthur A. Ballantine Jr. in Minneapolis.

June 1, 1952: The Ballantines purchase the Durango News and the Durango Herald-Democrat, merging them into The Durango Herald in 1960. Mr. and Mrs. Ballantine work at adjoining desks.

1957: The Ballantines found the Ballantine Family Fund to support local nonprofits.

1960-65: Morley Ballantine serves on the state board of the League of Women Voters as well as on state boards on anti-discrimination, educational endeavors and higher education.

Mid-1960s: After having helped to found it, she begins stint as president of the Southwest Colorado Mental Health Center.

1967: The Ballantines help found the Center of Southwest Studies at Fort Lewis College, eventually donating more than $1 million to the center and its collections.

1968: Morley Ballantine is named the first female chairman of the Colorado Associated Press Association.

April 1975: After attending Smith College, Stanford University and the University of Minnesota, she earns her Bachelor of Arts in Southwest Studies from FLC. She is just a few weeks shy of her 50th birthday.

1977: She joins the Des Moines and Minneapolis boards of the Cowles Media Co., and participates in difficult family decisions such as selling the family’s flagship newspaper, the Des Moines Register & Tribune, to Gannett Newspapers.

1987: She helps launch the Women’s Resource Center in Durango.

May 7, 2005: The League of Women Voters of La Plata County honors her as the chapter’s first 50-year member.

Oct. 10: 2009: Morley Cowles Gale Ballantine dies of respiratory failure at her home in Durango at the age of 84.



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