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Edward Baumann Obituary

Edward Weston Baumann

1925 - 2012

Edward Weston Baumann, 86, journalist, author, railroader, road builder, world traveler and circus roust-about, died Nov. 6, 2012 at his daughters house in Paxton, Ind. He began his newspaper career with the Waukegan News-Sun after World War II military service in the South Pacific. Six years later he found himself working at the legendary Hildig Hildy Johnsons old desk as Criminal Courts reporter for the fabled Chicago Daily News.

A lifelong Kenoshan, he was born Dec. 31, 1925, the oldest son of the late Irvin and Mabel (Austerland) Baumann. His father, a one-time semi-pro baseball player and amputee veteran of World War I, was the tax assessor; his mother had been a suffragette.

Baumann was a 1944 graduate of Mary D. Bradford High School. As a youth he was active in the Sons of the American Legion (SAL), and headed the Kenosha Squadron in 1943. He was also a drummer in the SAL drum and bugle corps.

His first full time job, at age 16, was head doorman at the Kenosha Theatre for $10 a week. While still in high school he also worked full-time as a freight handler for the Chicago & North Western Railroad until entering the military service.

After volunteering for induction on his 18th birthday, Baumann served as a cryptographer, enciphering and deciphering codes for the Army Air Corps in New Guinea, the Dutch East Indies and Philippines. In 1945 he was disciplined while stationed at an emergency landing strip behind Japanese lines on Northern Luzon, when he traded identities with an air crewman and flew as a waist gunner on an air-sea rescue mission over the China Sea. He won three battle stars for the New Guinea and Philippine Island campaigns, and was discharged with the rank of sergeant. From 1946-1952 he served in the U.S. Naval Reserve, and subsequently in the Coast Guard Auxiliary.

While serving with the Air Corps in California before shipping overseas, Baumann worked full time on the midnight shift at peach canneries in Sacramento, which paid military personnel 90 cents an hour to help ease the manpower shortage. After the war he worked for five years as an asphalt mixer operator and highway construction laborer while attending the University of Wisconsin, where he attained a journalism degree.

Baumann signed on as a reporter for the Waukegan News-Sun from 1951-1956; specializing in crime and politics. From 1956-1963 he was employed by the Chicago Daily News as Criminal Courts reporter, where he covered executions, rewriteman and assistant city editor. When the News changed ownership Baumann crossed the street to the Chicago American, where he served as city editor until 1970, when he was named administrative assistant to the publisher. When that newspaper ceased publication in 1974 he joined The Chicago Tribune as senior staff writer.

News subjects whom he counted among his person friends over the years included fan dancer Sally Rand, Africa adventuress Joy Adamson, con man Joseph Yellow Kid Weil, burglar Joseph Pops Panczko, super cop Jack Muller, kill cop Frank Pape, singer Dinah Shore, writer Ben Hecht, actress Helen Hayes, Chicago Mayor Richard J. Daley, and six Illinois governors. He covered every beat, including going aloft in the Goodyear Blimp, and down in a submarine.

A three-time Pulitzer Prize nominee, Baumann won the Chicago Newspaper Guilds Stick-O-Type Awards for investigative reporting in 1953 and 1959, and was named Lake County Newsman of the Year in 1959. Articles he wrote for the Tribune won first place in the Illinois Associated Press News Writing Contests in 1975 and 1976; and he won the Tribunes first Special Writing Award for Professionalist Under Deadline Pressure in 1977.

Throughout a journalism career that spanned four decades, Baumann commuted daily to Chicago, traveling the equivalent of 42 times around the world. Upon his retirement in 1988 the Chicago Press Veterans Association honored him as Chicago Press Veteran of the Year. He was inducted into the Chicago Journalism Hall of Fame in 2001 and given the Chicago Headline Clubs prestigious Lifetime Achievement Award in 2007. He received the Kenosha Bradford Alumni Associations Distinguished Alumni Award in 2004.

Although living in Kenosha, Baumann served as president of the 2,400-member Chicago Press Club (1974); chairman of the Chicago Press Veterans Association (1977 and 1978); director of the raffish Chicago Newspaper Reporters Association, and Vice President and board member of the elite Merry Gangsters Literary Society. He also served three terms as President of the Board of Friends of the Museum; was a sustaining member of CUSH (Congregations United to Serve Humanity), and was a member of the International Press Club of Chicago, Chicago Newspaper Veterans, Mystery Writers of America, Society of Midland Authors, Milwaukee Press Club, the AACS Alumni of Air Corps veterans, Kenosha County Historical Society, the State Historical Society of Wisconsin, National Railroad Museum, Green Bay, and the Circus Fans Association of America.

He was a founding member of the MAGGOTS, a fellowship society for men and women in the news media that was a throwback to Chicagos rollicking, hard-drinking Front Page Era, and was co-founder of the Chicago Daily News Breakfast Club. He was also the founder of The Late Edition, a newsletter for former employees of the Chicago American. He was the originator and editor locally of Home Town Update, a chatty newsletter for high school friends of the 40s now living in other parts of the country.

He was a life member of Junker-Ball Post 1865, Veteran of Foreign Wars; American Legion Post 21, and a lifetime member and former deacon of Trinity Lutheran Church. He was a former member of the Brotherhood of American Railway Employees (BARE), the Hod Carriers Union, the Chicago Newspaper Guild, and the Chicago Editorial Association.

Baumann was the author or co-author of 10 true crime books, and more than 300 detective magazine articles published internationally. A world traveler who visited 34 countries and 46 states, Baumanns other interests included power boating, antiques and carpentry he once built his own three-bedroom home from the ground up. His most prized antiques included an ornate mirror from a New Orleans brothel, and a moonshiners still in his back yard.

Baumann married Ann Cacciapaglio of Rockford while in college. That union was dissolved, and he married Caroline Skeels Karber of St. Louis in 1959. After Caroline died of cancer at age 47, Baumann married the former Lenore (Schend) Leonard in the chapel at Carthage College in 1976.

With his wife Lenore, he was involved in community volunteer work, including the INNS homeless shelter; the Shalom Center Soup Kitchen, Friends of the Museum, Kenosha Art Fair, and the Kenosha Theatre rehabilitation project. In 1992, at the age of 66, he realized every boys ambition and ran away to join the circus. For the next 13 summers he and his wife were Circus World Museum volunteers on the Great Circus Parade grounds in Milwaukee, where Baumann worked as a cowboy, roustabout and animal handler.

Baumann is survived by a son, Corey, in Ironwood, Mich.; three step-daughters, Lisa (David) McCammon, Paxton, Ind., Leslie Ferraro, Makanda, Ill., and Carole (Wayne) Reid, Lincoln, Calif.; 12 grandchildren; two great-grandchildren, and one great-great grandson. His daughter, Amy Cairo; a brother, Theodore; and a step-brother, Richard, preceded him in death.

A private service of Christian committal will be held at Mr. Baumanns grave site at Sunset Ridge Memorial Park. He will be accorded full military honors. A gathering of relatives and friends will take place in the lower level of Trinity Evangelical Lutheran Church, 7104 39th Avenue, Kenosha, WI, 53142, on Saturday, Nov. 10, 2012, at 12 Noon.

In lieu of flowers, memorials to Trinity Evangelical Lutheran Church would be appreciated by the family.

Piasecki-Althaus Funeral Home

3720 39th Avenue

Kenosha, Wisconsin 53144

262-658-4101

Online Condolences at www.piasecki-althaus.com

To plant trees in memory, please visit the Sympathy Store.

Published by Kenosha News on Nov. 9, 2012.

Memories and Condolences
for Edward Baumann

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6 Entries

Janis Robinson

November 12, 2012

Ed was quite a guy and I enjoyed his books and annual Christmas card. Thanks for giving my cousin Lenore so many years of love and circus adventures!

Judy Testard

November 11, 2012

I never met Ed that I know of but thinking I am 72 and might have seen him as a doorman at the Kenosha Theater many times in the fifty's I went there every Saturday.

What I do remember is for years now we have received his emails giving us updates from the Kenosha News. So many have enjoyed them especially those who no longer live in Kenosha like me and we will miss them. My thoughts and prayers go out to his family and friends.

You will surly be missed update, Ed Baumann. Nice to put a face with your name. :) RIP.

JOHN FLOOD

November 10, 2012

So long to My Pal, See you down the road Eddie - say hello to O'Brien

John J Flood
Cook County Police Department ( RET )

Jan Dorn-

November 9, 2012

My sympathy goes out to Norrie, Lisa and Leslie for your loss. May you take comfort from knowing that he is at peace, pain free and in a better place. Love , Jan Holderness Dorn

November 9, 2012

will be sadly. Missed. Enjoyed his Kenosha news emails our sympathy to the family. Harold and Elsie Bastrup Anaheim calif.

Chaplain Richard Reuer

November 9, 2012

I wish to extend to you and to members of your family my deepest sympathy on your loss. May the Lord's loving promises comfort you and give you strength as you walk through this difficult time. On behalf of a grateful nation and an expression of appreciation for the honorable and faithful service rendered by your loved one, if you wish for a personalized memorial card mailed to you with history of playing of taps, 21 gun salutes, meaning of each fold of the flag as a keepsake, please send your request to:
Chaplain Richard Reuer, Honoring Those Who Served Ministry
1206 6th St SW
Minot, ND 58701
Or click on “CONTACT ME” to email me your mailing address.

This service is free to all veteran families. I wish to thank you for your serving from one veteran to another – Thanks!

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