Kenneth L. Dixon

Kenneth Lee "Ken" Dixon
Born (1915-04-03)April 3, 1915
Colchester, McDonough County
Illinois, USA
Died June 29, 1986(1986-06-29) (aged 71)
Baton Rouge, Louisiana
Resting place Mt. Auburn Cemetery in Colchester, Illinois
Nationality American
Occupation Journalist affiliated with seven newspapers, including the Baton Rouge Morning Advocate
Spouse(s) Ola Maye Montgomery Dixon (1914-1978) (m. 1938–78), originally from Hobbs, New Mexico
Children No children
Parent(s) Roy Lee and Martha R. Mourning Dixon
Notes
Dixon was also a World War II correspondent in the North Africa, European, and theaters, who flew on twenty-five combat air missions.

Kenneth Lee "Ken" Dixon (April 3, 1915 - June 29, 1986), was a prominent journalist who reported, edited, and penned columns for seven newspapers, including two in Louisiana -- Lake Charles and Baton Rouge. He was a war correspondent during World War II.

Dixon was born in McDonough County, Illinois, near the small town of Colchester to Roy Lee Dixon and the former Martha R. Mourning. He was educated in public schools and then obtained a two-year professional teaching diploma from Western Illinois University (then Western Illinois State Teacher's College) in Macomb, also located in McDonough County. He taught in rural schools for a time but then launched a newspaper career that began with the Macomb Daily Journal, where he was a reporter from 1934-1936. He was thereafter a reporter for the Canton Daily Ledger in Canton (Fulton County), Illinois.

Between 1936 and 1942, he went west and was an editor for the Hobbs Daily News in Hobbs in Lea County in eastern New Mexico and the Carlsbad Current Argus in Carlsbad in Eddy County, New Mexico.

On July 1, 1938, he married the former Ola Maye Montgomery (1914–1978) of Hobbs. They had no children.

Dixon joined the Associated Press in Washington, D.C., in 1942. He was a war correspondent in North Africa, Europe, and the Pacific theaters. His reporting in World War II won him Army, Navy, and Army Air Corps commendations and a citation from Sigma Delta Chi, the professional journalism society. He accompanied more than twenty-five air combat missions and was the only newspaperman present when American forces broke out of Anzio and advanced on Rome.[1] In December 1944, Dixon covered the successful exploits of then United States Army Mayor William Stewart Walker of Winnfield to rescue 380 American soldiers trapped behind Nazi lines in the Battle of the Bulge in Belgium.

From 1946-1949, Dixon was a syndicated columnist and reporter for International News Service and King Features.

He was the editor and columnist of the Lake Charles American Press from 1949-1961. In Lake Charles, he helped to expose a Louisiana gambling syndicate and won the praise of a judge who cleared him of defamation. During Dixon's tenure, the American Press doubled in circulation.[1]

He then became managing editor of The Meridian Star in Meridian in Lauderdale County in Eastern Mississippi, a position that he held from 1961 to 1964. He was a syndicated columnist for United Features from 1964–1967, when he became a reporter and editorial page editor for the capitol newspaper, the Baton Rouge Morning Advocate. He remained with the Advocate until 1971. While Dixon was at the Advocate, the managing editor was Margaret Richardson Dixon, the first woman to hold the top newsroom position. The two were not related.

After he left the Advocate, Dixon spent his last years as a free-lance writer. He died in Baton Rouge and was survived by a sister, Dorothy Dixon Burgard (born 1921) of Colchester. Dixon is interred in Mt. Auburn Cemetery in Colchester.

References

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