"Gladys
Wimert" Many local residents remember
Westminster journalist Gladys Wimert who wrote about local events for the Hanover Evening Sun newspaper and was also the
Westminster correspondent for the Associated Press. Mrs. Wimert was also well known for
her community work and her extensive collection of fashionable hats. The Hanover newspaper
described her career in the May 6, 1953 issue of the paper: |
"Westminster
Journalist With Paper For 27 Years Mrs. Gladys Wimert Sets
Enviable Record While Reporting News For The Evening Sun Youthful and
good-looking, with a trim figure, agile, graceful movements, and a happy voice, she is
something of a sensation to anyone meeting her for the first time. And evidently that is
something more than a first impression. For years of being in
everything hasn't led Westminster to take her for granted. Three years ago the Soroptimist Club picked her as the 'Woman of the Year in Carroll County.' Recently the Westminster Chamber of Commerce honored her for her 'efforts to further the material prosperity, intellectual advancement and moral improvement of Westminster.' She is the first woman
ever to be honored thus by the Chamber. The
last time the award was given was nine years ago. Twenty-Seven
Years on Paper Today marks her
twenty-seventh year on the Hanover (Pa.) Evening Sun. 'I'm not a sensational
reporter, I can't glamorize, so I have to depend on the facts, and they have to be right. And there isn't any place in Westminster where I
can't go back,' she explains, proud of the fact that none of her stories has ever made her
persona non grata in Westminster. She began her
newspaper work as Circulation, advertising, and news manager. For 21 years she bossed seventeen newsboys. In the meantime she built up the circulation of the paper until she figured that it went into '99 per cent of the homes in Westminster.' Although no longer
handling circulation, she still takes care of the advertising. As a reporter she is
either out gathering the news or else making it by organizing, promoting or helping with
most every community endeavor going. Paid At
Space Rate Thus she doesn't miss
out on anything. As she explains it, she
thinks in terms of inches. That's the way she is
paid, by the number of column inches she writes for her paper, and the more news the
better. In addition, Mrs.
Wimert has been Westminster correspondent for the Associated Press for twelve years, a job
that grew out of her six-year association with the Baltimore Sunpapers, for which she
worked also as Westminster correspondent. Newspaper work was no
burning ambition with Gladys 27 years ago. She simply wanted to
help out Mr. William Yingling, the Hanover (Pa.) Evening Sun correspondent, who was ill. The fact that she
wanted to help was stronger than the fact that she was 'scared to death' at the idea of
writing for a paper. The pay was small there,
but with her first savings she bought a labor-saving device for her home, so that she
could have more time for the newspaper work. That was a wooden
washing machine, the cylinder of which she turned by hand. It is impossible to
list all of Mrs. Wimert's activities. Besides,
everyone knows what they are, from Red Cross, cancer drives, March of Dimes (chairman for
ten years, she directs all her own campaigns and in the 1953 drive raised $15,518, the
largest sum ever raised in a Westminster charity drive). In that last endeavor
she had the backing of the Civitan Club. That
was a horse trade. She agreed to handle their
publicity in turn for a helping had with the drive. Three
Meetings A Night Always on the go, her limit is three business meetings
a night. Mrs. Wimert prevents
dissipation of her energies by working at home. Her
office is next to her kitchen. Here is where everyone
is sent who arrives in Westminster looking for help or information. She has no time for
vacations. But there was one
exceptionwhen she flew to Germany after World War II to see her son, Major Paul M.
Wimert Jr., and then toured Europe and got back to Westminster, all in fifteen days. Now her only trips
fare flying ones to see her son, daughter-in-law and grandchildren at Fort Knox. Gone on Friday, she is usually back on the job
Monday morning. She gets away from it
all by slipping into the movies. 'There I can
sit in the dark for two hours where no one can get me,' she explains. Born in
Baltimore He is her inspiration. Known as one of the best farm managers in
Baltimore county, he introduced the first mules into the county, Mrs. Wimert recalls. As a child, he also
shook hands with Abraham Lincoln the day he delivered the Gettysburg address. It was Grandfather
Chenoweth to whom she went for guidance and counsel, returning to him to report whether
she had failed or succeeded in her undertakings. And
she still seeks this guidance. Before undertaking any
project, Mrs. Wimert sits before a portrait of Grandfather Chenoweth. She tries to think what his advice would have
been. After following that
advice. Mrs. Wimert then returns to the
portrait to tell Grandfather how she has succeeded. Aboard Big
Burma As for relaxation, Mrs. Wimert simply goes out and
buys a hat.
The hat-buying also marks every celebration, anniversary or special event in her
life. Any excuse is a good
excuse to Gladys for buying a hat, 'I don't smoke, and drink doesn't interest me, so I've
got to do something so I buy a hat,' she says. Looking back over the
years, one of her biggest thrills also entailed buying a hat. It all happened when she rode 'Big Burma,' an
elephant, in a charity circus that played in Westminster. She did this two
successive years. Mr. Wimert wouldn't permit
Mrs. Wimert to don a costume appropriate to the occasion, so she improvised. The hat came first. That was a white feather hat with a big feather at
the side. Then she donned a rope of pearls,
a black satin and crepe dress and long white gloves.
Thus Mrs. Wimert was ready to ride 3 1/2-ton Big Burma. Dignified? Of course, and very smart in the bargain." |
In addition to the
work described in the article, Mrs. Wimert was also a good friend of the Historical
Society of Carroll County. Over the years, she donated a number of photographs, including
the one which accompanies this column. |
| Photo caption: | Mrs. Gladys Wimert posed in the living
room of her Westminster home with the contestants in the March of Dimes popularity contest
in February 1957. Historical Society of Carroll County, gift of Gladys Wimert, 1957. |