Columnists join The Recorder

2009-08-27 / Front Page

The Fairfield Recorder announces two new features beginning this week, a column written by 59- year community newspaper veteran and Freestone county native Willis Webb, and a column chronicling a year long walk around the perimeter of Texas.

The perimeter walk is by S. Matt Read, a native of Corpus Christi undertaking his travels to reconnect with his state.

Webb's career, all in Texas, encompasses a period from 1947 through 2006. For more than 50 of those 59 years he either edited and published small town newspapers or was a consultant to a number of community publications.

He has been a consistent award winner on regional, state and national levels in a number of writing categories including columns, editorials, sports, features and news as well as photography, page design and advertising copy and design.

The last 16 years of Webb's career were spent editing and publishing The Jasper Newsboy where he covered and directed such news events as the race- hate dragging death of an African American by three white men which brought an influx of national and international news media to Jasper over a period of three years; the space shuttle crash in a neighboring county; a 17,000-acre forest fire; and Hurricane Rita's 2005 utter destruction of the East Texas infrastructure.

In other locations, Webb was editor of The Conroe Courier where he and his staff broke the story of a new hometown, The Woodlands, in January 1972. While also at Conroe, he directed coverage of the infamous 1974 attempted prison break in Huntsville by Fred Gomez Carrasco in which three Conroe residents were hostages. The coverage netted The Courier a first place from the Associated Press Managing Editors Association.

Webb has extensively covered city and county politics as well as state and national figures who have appeared numerous times in venues he served. He has edited and/or published papers in Teague, Galena Park, Rosenberg, Cleveland, Conroe, Lockhart, Fredericksburg, Missouri City and Jasper.

"I may know more genuine Texas characters, good and bad, than anyone in the state because I seem to be drawn to them. And, when I say that my wife rolls her eyes and says, 'I wonder why'," Webb said.

Webb is a sought-after speaker, particularly about the effects of events surrounding the race-hate killing on Jasper, its residents and on the newspaper itself, and on humorous and unusual events in his more than a half century of journalism.

Read is a freelance writer, baker, hiker and inventor who spent the last nine years outside his native state.

His journey is somewhat similar to "The National Tour of Texas" sponsored by Texas Monthly magazine several years ago in which senior editor Dick J. Reavis, brother of The Recorder publisher Joe Reavis, drove every highway mile in the state and wrote a monthly column of the things he saw.

Return to top