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“Best-known voice on radio” was staunch supporter of The
Salvation Army
Paul Harvey, a Chicago radio man whose melodious voice and
hearty "Hello, America" were cherished by millions on national
broadcasts, died Saturday, February 28, 2009. He was 90.
Harvey was a loyal supporter of The Salvation Army, and—along
with his wife, Angel—attended worship services for several years
at the Norridge Citadel Corps in Chicago. At the time Majors
Eugene and Joyce Anderson (Ret.) were the Norridge Corps
officers. They formed a close relationship with the Harvey's.
A humble and gracious
supporter
According
to Major Eugene Anderson (Ret.), “Paul and Angel Harvey attended
the Norridge Corps regularly from 1988 through our tenure as
corps officers...they always sat together, as close as possible
to the band’s drum section, and when asked what their draw to
the Army was, he shared that the ‘meetings appealed to them
because they had spirit and were like an Oasis in the desert’”.
“They
resisted any public attention in our public meetings and made it
know to me their desire was to be treated no differently than
any one else.
“On one
Thanksgiving Day Mr. Harvey came to the Corps unannounced and
found me in the building alone. He brought the biggest prepared
turkey I've ever seen and wondered if I could find some family
in need to get it. Our service list of families in need had
already been met....so he said "will you take it home to your
family?" Major Joyce, my son and I had turkey until
Christmas...compliments of Paul and Angel Harvey.
“On
several occasions Paul liked what was said in the Army's public
meetings and would use that in his radio broadcasts. On each
occasion he would give us a phone call just to check out the
facts and get our approval. His version always came out better
than ours!”
On the
occasion of our farewell from Norridge, Paul and Angel came to
the farewell dinner bringing a dish to pass just like everyone
else. A couple of years later when Major Joyce and I transferred
to south Asia (Sri Lanka), Paul personally invited us to dinner
with him and Angel at the ABC Studio in Chicago. Paul grilled us
at length about our motivation for going and then led us in
prayer with their blessing for our ministry.
A valued friend of The
Salvation Army
On a national scale, Harvey always spoke highly of The Salvation
Army—and would sometimes use a portion of his radio show to do
so. In a 2005 speech [listen to highlights here], at the
Salvation Army’s National Advisory Organizations Conference in
Minneapolis, Harvey expressed his conviction that “America Needs
The Salvation Army.”
Called “the voice of Middle America” by the media for his
flag-waving conservatism, Harvey died surrounded by family in a
Phoenix hospital, an ABC Radio Networks spokesman said.
“Paul Harvey was the most listened to man in the history of
radio,” said Bruce DuMont, president of the Museum of Broadcast
Communications and host of the nationally syndicated Beyond
the Beltway. “There is no one who will ever come close to
him.”
His five-minute “The Rest of the Story” broadcasts featured
historical vignettes with surprise endings…He'd end each
broadcast with his signature: “Paul Harvey. [long pause] Good
day!”
Good Day to you Mr. Harvey, and thank-you from The Salvation
Army! |