William C. Mc gaw passed away on Friday, September 10,
2004, in Colorado Springs, Colorado. Born on May 14, 1914, in Kokomo, Indiana,
Bill lived the life most men only dream of. He was a newspaperman, publisher,
boxing and show business promoter, restaurateur, historian, politician,
racehorse owner, actor, and all-around character. Bill began his career shortly
after graduation from high school when he was hired as the editor of the
Noblesville, Indiana newspaper. From there he went on to work as a reporter on
such newspapers as the Tampa Times and the New Orleans Times-Picayune. He was
also a sports writer for The Philadelphia Record. In Philadelphia, he discovered
an up-and-coming young boxer whom he managed and proclaimed "the next
middleweight champion of the world." Sugar Ray Robinson was the young
fighter who went on to become middleweight champion.
During the late 1930's he worked for a short time as the announcer for Joie
Chitwood's Auto Daredevils, an automobile stunt show, replacing Jackie Gleason
whose career was just beginning to blossom.
Bill served as the medical officer on a U.S. Merchant
Marine vessel in World War II. After the war, he married Dorothy Oliver, a
nurse, and returned to work on the Philadelphia Record. When the paper folded in
1948, Bill moved his family to California and took over ownership of the
Tournament of Thrills, an automobile stunt show sponsored by the Ford Motor
Company. Bill and the Tournament of Thrills appeared in the 1950 movie, "To
Please A Lady," directed by Clarence Brown and starring Clark Gable,
Barbara Stanwyck and Adolph Menjou. After making the movie, Bill traveled the
country annually with the Tournament of Thrills until 1959.
In 1959, Bill moved to Columbus, NM and began his extensive study of the
history of the Southwest and mountain men. He was instrumental in the
establishment of the Pancho Villa State Park in Columbus, and from 1961 until
1968 published The Southwesterner newspaper. He also produced and appeared in a
TV show, "The Southwesterner," on two local TV stations, KTSM and KROD
in El Paso, Texas. In 1961 the show "drew more fan mail than any show,
local or network, ever to be presented on (KTSM)".
After moving to Columbus, Bill began research on James
Kirker, a mountain man and one of the first settlers of Silver City, NM. He
eventually published a biography of Kirker, "Savage Scene, The Life and
Times of James Kirker." His book, "Southwest Saga, the Way it Really
Was," a collection of stories that originally appeared in The
Southwesterner, was published in 1988.
In the late 1960's, Bill and his family moved to El Paso and he started The
New Orleans Cafe, indulging his life-long passion for Cajun and French cuisine.
In the early 1970's Bill again turned to show business, this time promoting The
Royal Lipizzaner Stallions of Austria.
In 1975 he founded The El Paso Journal, a weekly newspaper whose motto was,
"All the news that fits, we print." After selling his interest in the
Journal, to Michael Webster, he briefly worked with Jay Armes and Jack Anderson
as part owner and publisher of a national magazine, The Investigator. The El
Paso Herald-Post named Bill "One of El Paso's 10 Most Interesting
Characters" in 1984.
Bill and Dorothy were members of Vista Ysleta United Methodist Church prior
to moving to Colorado Springs.