The Palo Alto History Project
Elinor Cogswell                                                              
                                                                                  
                                                                                       959 Waverley Street      
Elinor Cogswell: Editor in Chief

The newspaper business has always been an old boys network.  In the days before television, when
newspapers were king and fast-talking beat reporters chased fire trucks and raced for bar payphones to
beat their cross-town rivals, only a few scattered daily papers were led by women editors.  Sixty years later,
as newspaper reporters bang out their stories on PCs and rush them onto the internet, men still hold 86% of
the top jobs in the newspaper business. It’s been a tough glass ceiling to break.  

But in Palo Alto, newswoman Elinor Cogswell shattered that glass ceiling long before Rosie the Riveter,
Betty Friedan or feminism reached full stride.  The year was 1938 when Cogswell took over as chief editor
of the Palo Alto Times --- the city’s highly respected and lone daily newspaper.  And by the time she retired
from journalism in 1959, Cogswell had spent four decades in all at the Times, fighting for causes as big as
racial tolerance and McCarthy-era free speech and as small as the preservation of the tiny plot of grass
downtown that now bears her name.

Elinor Cogswell was born in the frontier village of Klamath Falls, Oregon.  As a small girl, she used to stand
across the street from the Portland Oregonian and tingle with excitement as the papers were shuttled out to
the news trucks.  Pursuing her love of the written word, Cogswell moved to Palo Alto to attend Stanford
University, earning a B.A. in English in 1916 and a Master’s in 1917.  After graduation, and a year teaching
with her mother in Maui, she returned to Palo Alto seeking a job.  As it turned out, her timing couldn’t have
been better.  On the day in 1918 when she walked into the office of the Palo Alto Times, the city editor had
just gone out on another drinking spree, never to return.  Soon it was Cogswell who was covering city affairs
on the three person staff of this small town newspaper.  

In those early days, Cogswell reported on just about everything --- fires, murders, social news.  She even
put out the sports page on emergency occasions.  And as the town began to grow, the paper also grew, and
Cogswell’s duties increased.  In the early 1930s she assumed the rather antiquated title of “Editor of
Woman’s Interests.”  Then in 1938, when the paper’s venerable editor Dallas Wood moved upstairs to
become executive editor of Peninsula Newspapers Incorporated, Elinor took over as the paper’s chief
editor.  When she did, she became the only woman in California to hold that title.  Over the next 16 years,
Cogswell would lead Palo Alto’s paper of record through the city’s most expansive era.  

During her helm at the top, Cogswell saw her paper as a cause for good --- a watchdog protecting Palo
Alto’s quality of life, as the city rushed forward in its expansion.  As she asked on more than one occasion in
her “EVC at Bat” column, “What effect is all this going to have on our charming, self-satisfied, self-sufficient
community?”   Cogswell kept the local drum beating on a variety of causes --- hobby horses she once called
them.  A December 1946 column, for instance, included a variety of wishes for the new year including:
“relief of the housing problems for the low income families now living under slum conditions, better lighting of
the streets in the now dangerously dark residential districts, those downtown public toilets I have been
talking about for nearly two years, and first steps toward getting underpasses at California Avenue and other
death-trap crossings in the area.”  While she was not averse to writing on larger national and international
matters, it was the fight for the people of Palo Alto to which Cogswell and her paper was most devoted.

And Cogswell was never ashamed to be a city booster.  She was a champion for the city’s Chamber of
Commerce, the Palo Alto Historical Association and Palo Alto’s reputation in general.  Preserving her young
city’s history was always important to Cogswell.  In November of 1954, she rallied her readers to support
the “adequate display --- and care --- of the valuable collection of Palo Alto historical material.  This is now
crowded into a corridor of the [library] basement, accessible only to those who venture down a dark flight
of stairs and hunt out Historian Guy Miller among the stacks.”  Of course, cherishing the relics of Palo Alto’s
past was not necessarily a natural impulse for the residents of a California city just 50 years old.  But having
given up dreams of “bigger and better things in New York, Paris and other exciting places” to focus her
career on a smaller pond, she seemed to possess a particular fondness for her adopted hometown.

Still, Cogswell was not shy in critiquing Palo Alto when necessary.  In 1946, in the scramble for post-war
housing, Cogswell wrote that there is “a widespread feeling that Palo Alto is shutting its doors in the faces of
men who went through hell to keep such charming and smug communities secure.  That’s an ugly way to put
it, but I’ve heard a lot of people put it even more bluntly.”

And she was often concerned with the self-righteous air that Palo Altans put on in order to ignore the city’s
thornier problems.  In one column, Cogswell pointed to “the need for Palo Alto people to snap out of their
smugness about ‘our superior little city,’ wake up to its shortcomings, share responsibility for them and
participate actively in bringing about conditions that will make this community really superior.”

Despite such tough talk, Cogswell cherished her city and the newspaper that she saw as an agent to change
it for the better.   Stepping down as editor in 1954 to become the paper’s full-time editorial columnist she
said, “The sadness would be greater if I weren’t going to have an office right off the news room.  I’ll be able
to hear what’s going on, catch the excitement of stories breaking and work in the middle of the familiar
clatter.”  It is in the middle of the clatter and commotion of that old Times newsroom where Elinor Cogswell
will always be remembered.

                                                                                                                              -Matt Bowling
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Sources:
Palo Alto Historical Association, Palo Alto Weekly, Palo Alto Times,
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"Editor & Publisher" magazine, Woman's
E-News, the Apnec Weekly, The Palo Altan
A Palo Alto Times front page
from the Cogswell era.
Guy Miller, Palo Alto's early
historian was supported by
Cogswell. (PAHA)
A map of the City Hall area including the old Palo Alto Times building where Elinor Cogswell worked.
 Zoom in and out with the + and - symbols in the top left corner of the map...
Palo Alto: Then & Now

1949
2008
Elinor Cogswell, shortly after
her retirement.
(PA Times)
The old Palo Alto Times building (above left) in 1949 as Elinor Cogswell served as chief editor.  Occupying the southwest
corner of Hamilton and Ramona, the old building had a lot more character than the present version --- ivy, a great old sign
and a cool roof frontage design.  Since then the site has hosted many businesses from Radio Shack to the present Lotus
Custom Decor, although that too is on its way out.
Elinor Cogswell at work.
After fighting in her column
for the establishment of a park
near Lytton and Bryant
downtown, the small patch of
grass now bears her name.
Elinor Cogswell Park on a
lazy Saturday.