Printer Friendly
The Free Library
19,266,820 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Eastside journalist known as 'Mr. Kirkland'; Obituary.


Byline: Melissa Allison; Seattle Times business reporter

Published-correction date: 11/05/2009. This obituary said Chuck Morgan, also known as ''Mr. Kirkland,'' had been publisher of the Eastside Journal. When he worked at the newspaper, it was called the East Side Journal.

Greg Morgan grew up hearing his mother tell the story of how fast his father, Chuck, fell in love with Kirkland.

Chuck and Florence Morgan had lived in Kirkland for just one month, back in the late 1940s, when he came home from his newspaper job and proclaimed, "I'm going to spend the rest of my life in Kirkland. I love this place."

And he did, aside from the last several months when he lived in Wenatchee to be near family.

Mr. Morgan, who died Friday at the age of 98, was known as "Mr. Kirkland" for the role he played as a journalist and community activist in building the city.

Besides being an editor, then publisher, of the Eastside Journal for almost three decades, he co-founded the Kirkland Performance Center and was active in the Kirkland Rotary Club and Chamber of Commerce.

He helped locate the site of the 520 bridge and Interstate 405, and campaigned for Bellevue Community College, Cascadia Community College and Evergreen Hospital Medical Center.

Mr. Morgan was also an avid Democrat.

"One time he made a speech to a senior center, then called me and said, 'You know, honey, I realize I'm different from other people. I get more liberal as I get older,' " recalled his longtime friend G.G. Getz. "He knew I was involved with the Obama campaign locally, and he said, 'You've got to get me an Obama sign for my window, because my neighbors just got a McCain/Palin sign.' "

Mr. Morgan grew up in Michigan and graduated from the University of Michigan. He left a job as a cub reporter in Bad Axe, Mich., to go on a canoeing expedition in Alaska.

The expedition never happened, but Mr. Morgan stayed in Alaska working for The Associated Press and the local post office, his son Greg said.

His future wife, a Seattleite who had moved to Alaska for adventure, was impressed by dispatches he wrote as a reporter embedded on a dogsled trip with the U.S. Army. They met in Alaska, married and had a son, who died when he was 2 years old.

Mr. Morgan served in the Army's signal corps in Alaska during World War II, then moved to California for two years before settling in Kirkland, where he and his wife raised two sons.

"He loved the people for their friendliness and openness," Greg Morgan said. "Having come from the cold of Michigan and the cold of Alaska and the remote standoffishness of people in California, he thought the people in Kirkland were much more welcoming."

Mr. Morgan also liked the city's size, which was about 3,500 when he moved there. "He was sold on helping towns grow," Greg Morgan said.

He pushed for Kirkland to have clean water, paved streets and a city-manager form of government. In the 1960s, he advocated for the merger of the adjoining town of Houghton with Kirkland, which had a combined population of 13,500.

Mr. Morgan sold the Eastside Journal in 1976 to a new owner who merged it with the Bellevue American to form the Journal American, Greg Morgan said. He continued for a few more years as an advising editor.

But he and his wife spent much of their retirement traveling the world, visiting every continent except Antarctica.

After his wife died in 2004, Morgan stayed more active than most people in their 90s who have had a quadruple heart bypass.

For his 95th birthday party, he tangoed on stage at the Kirkland Performance Center.

He also appeared in productions there, parasailed and traveled with a local ballet company to Russia.

Morgan is survived by son Doug and daughter-in-law Joyce of Wenatchee, son Greg and daughter-in-law Elena Love of San Jose, Calif.; grandsons Brian and Kevin; and five great-grandchildren.

Melissa Allison: 206-464-3312 or mallison@seattletimes.com

CAPTION(S):

Chuck Morgan (0399573531)

Mark Harrison / The Seattle Times, 2006 : For his 95th birthday party, Chuck Morgan and Patty Leverett dance on stage at the Kirkland Performance Center. (0399573516)

Copyright (c) 2009 Seattle Times Company, All Rights Reserved.
COPYRIGHT 2009 The Seattle Times
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2009 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Title Annotation:NWMonday
Publication:The Seattle Times (Seattle, WA)
Article Type:Obituary
Date:Nov 2, 2009
Words:720
Previous Article:Ordinance zeros in on nuisance properties.(NWMonday)
Next Article:Dog's eco-footprint a Hummer, study says; Environmental impact; Resources needed to feed animals create quandary for green, canine-loving...



Related Articles
KIRKLAND WEB SITE MAY REPLACE BACK FENCE.(EAST)
EPHRAIM HARDCASTLE.
Mourning the passing of a true gentleman.(News)(Obituary)
Former Examiner MD dies.(News)
Roadside bomb kills soldier with family in area; Father contacts local veterans after son dies serving in Iraq.(LOCAL NEWS)
Two Guys Read the Obituaries.(Book review)
Murdered editor predicted own death in obituary.
Five Tips for Writing An Obituary
Creative Obituaries Something More for the Loved
UNESCO gives posthumous award to Sri Lankan editor

Terms of use | Copyright © 2010 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles