By Bill Huntzicker
Professor Hazel Dicken-Garcia, 79, who was among the first to explore the evolution of ethics in journalism and whose students populate newsrooms and universities around the nation, died May 30 at Our Lady of Peace hospice in St. Paul, Minn., two miles from the home in which she lived since the 1980s.
Dr. Dicken-Garcia taught in the School of Journalism and Mass Communication at the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis for 30 years.
Her second and best-known book, Journalistic Standards in Nineteenth-Century America, won the Frank Luther Mott Kappa Tau Alpha research award in 1989. She received the American Journalism Historians Association’s Kobre Award for Lifetime Achievement in 2006.
Born in a log house in rural Clinton County, Kentucky, near the town of Albany on March 4, 1939, she recalled hitching a mule to a harrow plow to break up clods on the family farm. As a child, she walked more than two miles to a one-room school that had no library. An avid reader, she said she had read all the books in the school before she reached the eighth grade.
To attend Clinton County High School, she had to move to town, because there was no road suitable for a bus to reach her rural home. After graduation in 1957, she attended Berea College, founded in 1855 (before the abolition of slavery) to provide an integrated education for poor black and white students. The college required work in lieu of tuition, so she worked her way through school.
After graduating in 1961, she worked for two years with the American Friends Service Committee (AFSC) in India. Returning to the United States, she worked with AFSC for three years as a youth program director in four states, organizing programs and conferences on social issues, including poverty, racism, and mental illness.
She worked at part-time jobs and as a reporter in Ann Arbor while she earned her master’s degree from the University of Michigan, completing it in 1969. Three years later, she moved to Madison to work on her doctorate at the University of Wisconsin, where she studied mass communication history, finishing the degree in 1977.
She taught at the University of Wisconsin, Waukesha County; the University of Wisconsin, Madison, the University of Iowa, Iowa City; the University of Maryland, College Park; American University in D.C.; the University of Michigan;and the University of Massachusetts-Amherst. She settled at the University of Minnesota, where she designed a variety of mass media history, law, theory, and ethics courses.
In addition to Journalistic Standards, Dr. Dicken-Garcia wrote To Western Woods: The Breckinridge Family Moves to Kentucky in 1793 (2008), which is about early communication on the frontier. Earlier, she coauthored Communication History (1980) and Hated Ideas and the American Civil War Press (2007). She wrote many academic articles on media history.
She also wrote an autobiographical introduction to Beyond the Ivory Tower: A Symposium Honoring Mass Media Historian Hazel Dicken-Garcia, which was published by Minnesota’s journalism school in 2010.
Dr. Dicken-Garcia was deeply involved in the annual Symposium on the 19th Century Press, the Civil War, and Free Expression at the University of Tennessee in Chattanooga, where she served as president of the steering committee for more than a decade. The symposium honors a journalism historian each year with the Hazel Dicken-Garcia Award for Distinguished Scholarship. (Dr. Dicken-Garcia was the first winner of the award, which subsequently was named in her honor.) She and her students have presented numerous papers that have become chapters in the books published from the symposium.
Friends and colleagues of Dr. Hazel Dicken-Garcia will gather for a memorial at 2 p.m. on June 22 at Unity Church-Unitarian, 733 Portland Ave., St. Paul, Minn. 55104
The Rev. Janne Eller-Isaacs has asked friends to send her stories or anecdotes to be read at the ceremony. She will pass the unabridged versions of notes on to the family. She can be reached at janne@unityunitarian.org and 651-228-1456 x106.
Memorials in lieu of flowers can be sent to her favorite causes, including the Symposium. Send contributions to: the Hazel Dicken-Garcia Fund for the Symposium on the 19th Century Press, the Civil War, and Free Expression, c/o David B. Sachsman, 212 Frist Hall, Dept. 3003, University of Tennessee at Chattanooga, 615 McCallie Ave., Chattanooga, TN 37403.
Questions can be directed to David-Sachsman@utc.edu.
Another fund in her honor is the Hazel Dicken-Garcia Graduate Fellowship, which supports graduate students in the School of Journalism and Mass Communications at the University of Minnesota. Contributions can be sent to University of Minnesota Foundation; P.O. Box 860266; Minneapolis, MN 55486-0266; The link: https://makingagift.umn.edu/give/fund.html?id=5003
She also supported Berea College, CPO 2216, Berea, KY 40404. Questions answered at edwardse@berea.edu. Another of her favorite causes is her church at the address above.
Her remains will be buried near her parents at the Cedar Hill Cemetery in Clinton County, Ky.
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