History
Colorado Press Women was organized in Denver by 58 women dedicated to a common interest: to foster the highest ideals of American journalism.
CPW's charter members had persevered and flourished in a field dominated by men. They included Katherine Prescott Bemis, former editor of the Littleton Independent, Catherine Dines Prosser, women's page editor of The Denver Post, Helen Black, drama editor of the Rocky Mountain News, Ellen Kate Dier, co-publisher and editor of the Alamosa Courier, and Eudochia
Bell Smith, a former reporter at the Rocky Mountain News and the Houston Chronicle.
CPW's organizational meeting was held in the tea room of The Denver Dry Goods Co. on July 26, 1941. Bertha Bless, dynamic president of the National Federation of Press Women, was there. Miss Prosser, the Post's women's editor, was to run the meeting, but had to turn the gavel over to freelancer Elisabeth Kuskulis "because of emergency work," the minutes say. The 25 women present fixed dues at $2 a year and the initiation fee at $1. Miss Kuskulis was elected the first president. The first regular meeting was set for and held on Oct. 4, 1941, in Flagler.
Records of CPW's first years make meetings sound very much like ladies' teas, replete with descriptions of centerpieces and corsages, and profuse thanks to hostesses. But professional education and national affairs were never neglected. CPW members' work took first place in the national contest of 1942. One of CPW's first resolutions, passed five days after the bombing of Pearl Harbor, supported civilian defense efforts. One early meeting discussed "How Press Women Can Meet the War Emergency." In 1947, the organization joined a national push to create a "Secretary of Peace" in the Cabinet, writing letters to President Truman and members of Congress.
In 1948 and still young, CPW, with 114 members, was second in size only to Illinois among NFPW's affiliates.
Through its first three decades, CPW took stands on issues that still raise heated debate today, including women's rights and family values. One issue demonstrates the chapter’s growth and changes influenced by current events: In 1946, CPW voted to write to the Colorado congressional delegation to say it did NOT support the Equal Rights Bill. Alas, minutes don't explain why. In 1976, however, the organization joined a coalition to save the ERA in Colorado.
In 1950, CPW condemned a Denver Post editorial on the affair between director Roberto Rossellini and actress Ingrid Bergman. The Post said the press must use good taste and moral uplift in coverage, and that the Post "would not drool over Hollywood alley cats."
In 1950, it joined the Porchlight Campaign begun by Miss Prosser in the Post and supported by other newspaper women throughout the state. The campaign urged homeowners to turn on porch lights to make it safe for women to walk home at night. CPW also helped raise funds to restore the Mount of the Holy Cross near Redcliff. Its crucifix-like formation had been damaged by erosion and mining blasting.
Today, CPW members continue to stress professional excellence through programs and its annual Communications Contest.
CPW Communicators of Achievement
2007 Marilyn Saltzman
2006 Joyce Davis
2005 Sandy Nance
2004 Marilyn Saltzman
2003 Miriam Goldberg
2002 Judy Taylor
2001 None
1999-2000 Lori Rapp
1998 Rosann Doran
1997 Sandy Graham
1996 Carole McKelvey
1995 Juliet Wittman
1994 Marlys Duran
1993 Ruth Anna
1992 Glennys McPhilimy
1991 Marilyn Saltzman
1990 Patricia Petty
1989 Miriam Goldberg
1988 None
1987 Mary Eshbaugh Hayes
1986 Ann Lockhart
1985 Ann Feeney
1984 Wilma Buck Gager
1983 Ruth Gillespie Lehman
1982 Barbara Gigone
1981 Helene Wentzel
1980 June Valentine Barker
1979 Joanne Easley Arnold*
1978 Kathy Piper*
1977 Hassell Bradley
1976 Reynelda Muse
1975 Kay Woestendiek
1974 Leatha Flanders
1973 Sue Mosier
1972 Lucille Hastings
1971 Olga Curtis
1970 Anne Thompson
1969 Vera Chance
1968 Helen Cudworth
1967 Virginia Green Millikin
1966 Anna Petteys
1965 Goldianne Thompson
1964 Helen Lowrie Marshall
1963 Nell Womack Evans
1960-62 None
1959 Jane Sterling (Doris Hilton)
* Also named National Communicator of Achievement
CPW Presidents
2007-present Gay Porter DeNileon
2004-07 Judi Buehrer
2003-04 Sandy Nance
2000-02 Rosann Doran
1998-2000 Marty Kusel
1996-98 Lori Rapp
1994-96 Judy Taylor
1992-94 Carmen Julseth
1991 Mary Sasaki
1988-91 Ruth Anna
1987-88 Shirley Johnson
1986-87 Sharon Almirall
1984-86 Marilyn Saltzman
1982-84 Kathy Caldwell
1980-82 Mary Gleason
1978-80 Ann J. Lockhart
1976-78 Glennys McPhilimy
1974-76 Leatha Flanders
1973-74 Twila Coffey
1971 -73 Barbara Gigone
1970-71 Theo Eson
1969-70 Olga L. Jackson
1968-69 Helen S. Phillips
1967-68 Mary Helen Crain
1966-67 Grace Lowe
1965-66 Helene Wentzel
1964-65 Mary Owen
1963-64 Edith Powell
1962-63 Nell Womack Evans
1961-62 Jane Harper
1960-61 Sue Mosier
1959-60 Helen Fletcher Collins
1958-59 Idelia M.Noel
1957-58 Margaret Martin
1956-57 Mildred Jordan
1955-56 Helen Cudworth
1954-55 Lucille Hastings
1953-54 Grace Guard
1952-53 Agnes Milhoan
1951-52 Thirza Simms
1949-51 Vera Chance
1948-49 Frances Graham
1946-48 Mattie D. Conner
1944-46 Vera West Parsons
1941-44 Elisabeth Kuskulis
Colorado Press Women