Since the first edition of The Hartford (Conn.) Courant 242
years ago, its leaders have made consistent efforts to attract young
readers. From hiring young staffers to publishing sections written by
and for teenagers, the Courant,
during its long history, has modeled a number of successful tools to
attract youthful eyes and to create space for youth to contribute to
society.
Perhaps today's newspaper industry can learn from this rich past.
In 1764, Thomas Green was only 29 when he started The Hartford Courant.
Green's able assistant was Ebenezer Watson, 20, and in 1766, Green
hired George Goodwin, a nine-year-old printer's devil, according to
historian John Bard McNulty's 1964 book, "Older than the Nation." While Goodwin's employment at that age would be frowned upon now, he later bought the Courant from Green's widow.
"Green varied his news offerings with poetry and other material
designed to be 'instructive,' " McNulty wrote. "On March 25, 1765, the Courant
carried on its front page the alphabet, in Roman and italic, with a
suggestion for a new letter, and with a pronunciation key for each
letter. In doing so, Green started a tradition. The Courant still prints poetry in its weekly column, 'This Singing World,'
and it still stresses education, as in its sponsorship of the Junior
Classical League for young people interested in Greek and Latin
classics."
Yet McNulty missed perhaps the Courant's most impressive student project ever -- Parade of Youth, a four-page Sunday section written by and for Connecticut teens that ran from 1935 to about 1975.
The inaugural edition of Parade of Youth -- published Nov. 24, 1935 -- featured the banner headline: "Iowans Pilot Own Boat Down River." At first, Parade
editors from a Washington, D.C., syndicate office chose stories like
this one about three landlubber teens from Council Bluffs, Iowa aiming
for the Gulf of Mexico.
But within three years, Parade evolved into a local
newsgathering organization, where each week correspondents from nearly
every high school in central Connecticut received the standard byline
rate -- 15 cents per inch -- to write news and feature stories about
their high schools.
Courant education editor James F. Looby started advising Parade of Youth
in 1937, and was appointed its editor in 1939. He held that post until
his retirement in 1975. During his tenure, Looby cultivated a large
stable of newspaper and yearbook editors.
Judging by Parade's 1955 style guide, he held his students
to Associated Press standards and demanded quality. He also created
scholarships as an additional reward. Looby, who once trained for the
Roman Catholic priesthood, made efforts to marry education and
newspapering that won him a citation from Connecticut Gov. John Dempsey
in 1967.
Through radio shows, television appearances and the formation of
the Junior Classical League, Looby worked to boost teens. In 1957, one
such East Hartford High School freshman named Michael Pernal joined Parade of Youth. He remembered the experience at Parade of Youth as empowering.
"I was a cub reporter," said Pernal, now acting president of Eastern Connecticut State University. "This Parade of Youth
was a wonderful thing. It helped me learn how to write. It taught me
discipline. You were motivated to do the work because you got a byline."
In 1970, the Courant listed 135 students as reporters. Parade of Youth was discontinued, and Looby died in 1982. Only this January 2006, as part of budget cuts, did the Courant discontinue its long-running Golden Key high school writing awards ceremony.
Historian McNulty, now 85, said he hoped the cut would be
re-examined. He had his start as a high school journalist in the 1930s.
He was a missionary's son in Shanghai, and covered his prep school for
the China Press and the North-China Daily News.
"I think that experience on a scholastic newspaper helps one to
think objectively both about what goes on in school life and what also
in the surrounding community," McNulty said. "It was a valuable
experience."






















