Biographical
& Genealogical History of Appanoose & Monroe Counties, Iowa
New
York, Lewis Publishing Co. 1903
George
C. McCormick page 594
No
paper in Monroe county, Iowa, publishes more news, is more public spirited in
its support of all measures affecting the town and county or enjoys more fully
the backing of the citizens of the county, as shown by the large and
representative subscription list, than the Albia Republican, whose success is
the result of the efforts of its enterprising and energetic editor, G.C.
McCormick. And it is most fitting to
record the life history of the journal and its owner in this book of biography
of two of Iowa’s most progressive counties.
Mr.
McCormick comes of Scotch-Irish ancestry, who came to America before the
Revolution, members of the family taking part in that war, also in the war of
1812, the Mexican and Civil wars, so that they may be listed among the
patriotic families of America. The
first ancestors settled in Virginia, then migrated west to Indiana, and from there
to Iowa, in 1867. The parents of our
Monroe county editor were Mont and Hattie McCormick; the former was a farmer
and veterinarian and served three years in Company A, Fifty-ninth Indiana,
during the Civil war; his wife was a school teacher and a most estimable woman,
as the lasting influence she exercised over her children proved.
It
was after his parents had taken up their residence in Sandyville, Warren
county, Iowa, that George C. McCormick came into the world, on October 20,
1872. He was not born with a silver
spoon in his mouth, and now that he is on the fair road to success he might
have considered that an incumbrance rather than a benefit. But he was industrious from the start, and
the fact that the first eighteen years of his life were spent on a farm
probably had much to do with the shaping of his character and subsequent
development.
At
the age of eighteen he moved to College Springs, Iowa, and entered the
preparatory department of Amity College at that place. As he was not afraid of hard work, he paid
his way through school by doing chores for his board, teaching school and
acting as general agent for a book company, and notwithstanding such
restrictions he went through with his class and graduated in 1897 with the
degree of Ph. B., having covered the general collegiate course of studies. He had already decided to make a career of
journalism, and three months before graduation had bought the College Springs
Current Press. He published this paper
until January, 1899, when he bought the Albia Republican and removed to Albia
in order to enter upon his duties as editor and publisher.
Mr.
McCormick is a man of push and ability, and he has, in the short time he has
owned it, made his paper the official organ of the county and has placed it on a
firm financial basis, so that it is a paying property. The paper, like its editor, is straight
Republican in politics, but on the questions of general policy that are
continually before the people for settlement it advocates progress and the
general welfare of all. In 1902 he
built a two-story printing office, and the entire office has been newly
equipped in the last four years, so that there are few country newspapers
anywhere which are better fitted up for their work. The paper is a six-column quarto, all home print, and the average
circulation for 1902 was 2,204 copies.
Mr.
McCormick is one of the whole-souled, genial gentlemen who make friends
everywhere they go, and his hitherto successful career is due to these and
other solid elements of character. He
early learned how to work hard and effectively, and this happy quality,
combined with his enthusiasm, makes him a winner in whatever field of endeavor
he may engage. While he has advocated
the principles of the Republican party and thus has been able to be of much
assistance to his party, he has never chosen to enter the field of politics,
and prefers to devote himself to his business.
He is a member of the Methodist church, belongs to the Masons, the Woodmen
and the Yeoman fraternities, and is a willing helper in all branches of social
and religious work. On June 22, 1897,
Mr. McCormick was married at College Springs, Iowa, to Miss Carrie Sherman, the
daughter of S.L. Sherman. She was born
and reared at College Springs, Page county.
They have one son, Paul Sherman McCormick, who was born August 12, 1901.
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