NEW LONDON, N.H. – James Edward DeCourcy, longtime New England weekly newspaper editor known for his defense of civil liberties, bow ties, fastidious grammar and graceful writing, died Thursday in a New London nursing home. He was 93.
A family member said he died of a stroke.
Ed DeCourcy, as he was known, retired in 1982 after 21 years as editor and publisher of the Newport Argus-Champion.
At the Argus-Champion, he insisted that three types of stories always be on the front page: drunken driving arrests; men and women entering military service; and people volunteering for the Peace Corps.
DeCourcy was born in Darien, Conn., where he attended Darien High School, was editor of the school newspaper and a stringer for the Norwalk (Conn.) Hour.
He met his wife, the late Alice Carolyn Dyer, at the University of Maine at Orono, where he was editor of The Maine Campus. They graduated in 1934 and were married two years later. She died in 2003.
DeCourcy began his journalistic career after graduating from college as a stringer for the Bridgeport (Conn.) Post and the Boston (Mass.) Post and spent five years at Printing, a trade magazine in New York. During World War II, he worked in public relations for the Bridgeport Brass Co. in Bridgeport, Conn.
He was editor of the Milford (Conn.) Citizen from 1949 to 1961 and earlier was editor of the Westport (Conn.) Town Crier.
DeCourcy was a member of the Community Newspaper Hall of Fame of the New England Press Association. He was a founding member and past president of NEPA as well as past president of the International Society of Weekly Newspaper Editors.
In 1971, he won ISWNE’s International Golden Quill award for the best editorial of the previous year, was voted into the Academy of New England Journalists and received the Yankee Quill award of the Society of Professional Journalists. A decade later, he received ISWNE’s Eugene Cervi award for courage in journalism.
After he retired, DeCourcy continued to write columns for the Argus-Champion as well as other New England newspapers.
After his retirement, he was honored with the New Hampshire Governor’s Award of Distinction in 1982. In 1986 he received the Bill of Rights award of the New England Civil Liberties Union Foundation and in 1988 was named Newport’s Man of the Year.
The University of Maine Alumni Association gave him the Alumni Career award in 1986 and the Black Bear award in 1979 for outstanding service to the university.
Survivors include a daughter, Jane (Mrs. Stephen Wong) of Berkeley, Calif.; son Thomas DeCourcy of Kaunakakai, Hawaii; four grandchildren; brother Robert L. DeCourcy of Washington, Conn.; and two cousins, Jack Frederick of Milford, Conn., and Mary Lou Levers of Kennebunkport, Maine.
Funeral arrangements are by the Newton-Bartlett Funeral Home in Newport. A memorial service will be held next week at the South Congregational Church in Newport. Burial will be at the Forest City Cemetery in South Portland, Maine.
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