Our team of reporter/bloggers is always on the lookout for interesting people, places and news. Got a story idea or news tip? Send us an e-mail.
Contributors:
Kathleen Merryman is a local news columnist for The News Tribune, where she's worked for a quarter of a century. Amazing, considering she is only 32. You're likely to find her fighting crime, righting wrongs or judging pies. You're less likely to find her in the newsroom. Call her at 253-597-8677 or e-mail her.
General assignment reporter Mike Archbold is a veteran Puget Sound journalist and a veteran veteran. He's ready to respond to your news tip. Call him at 253-597-8692 or e-mail him.
Brent Champaco is a communities reporter for The News Tribune, where he has worked since 2005. He covers areas west of Interstate 5, including Lakewood, and writes diversity stories. A native of the South Kitsap area, he has worked for newspapers in Eastern Washington, Idaho and the Bay Area. Call him at 253-597-8653 or e-mail him. You can also check out his Twitter page.
Steve Maynard is a communities reporter and religion reporter for The News Tribune. He covers Federal Way, Fife and Milton. He also has been the paper's religion reporter since joining The News Tribune in 1987. Maynard has reported for daily newspapers since 1979, previously in Walla Walla and Houston. Call him at 253-597-8647 or e-mail him.
- All
- Auburn (80)
- Bonney Lake (7)
- Cultures (17)
- Daffodil Festival (10)
- DuPont (11)
- Enumclaw (4)
- Farther afield (65)
- Federal Way (12)
- Fife (5)
- Fircrest (9)
- Fort Lewis (36)
- Fox Island (12)
- Frederickson (5)
- Gig Harbor (31)
- Graham (8)
- Happenings (108)
- Immigration (0)
- Issues (5)
- Brick City (17)
- December 2007 floods (24)
- Northwest Detention Center (31)
- Political turmoil in Ruston (18)
- Portland and 72nd (15)
- Resource Distribution Council (8)
- Revival of McKinley Hill (20)
- Tall Ships 2008 (89)
- Washington National Guard (20)
- Lakewood (71)
- Learn to spell, Washington (14)
- Letters from afar (4)
- McChord Air Force Base (13)
- Morning report (222)
- Olympia (19)
- Orting (20)
- Parkland (16)
- People (40)
- Puyallup (82)
- Puyallup Fair (2)
- Ruston (40)
- Seattle (60)
- Spanaway (28)
- Steilacoom (16)
- Summit-Waller (8)
- Sumner (20)
- Tacoma (761)
- Downtown (183)
- Eastside (95)
- Hilltop (44)
- Midland (23)
- North End (92)
- Northeast Tacoma (9)
- South End (58)
- South Tacoma (79)
- Tideflats (21)
- West End (64)
- University Place (30)
| Sun | Mon | Tue | Wed | Thu | Fri | Sat |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| << < | Current | > >> | ||||
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | |
| 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 |
| 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 |
| 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 | 27 |
| 28 | 29 | 30 | ||||
- October 2009 (1)
- September 2009 (10)
- August 2009 (32)
- July 2009 (35)
- June 2009 (34)
- May 2009 (51)
- April 2009 (55)
- March 2009 (22)
- February 2009 (12)
- January 2009 (14)
- December 2008 (9)
- November 2008 (18)
- More...
She stands 6 feet high, school bell in hand and keeping a watchful eye on her students.

But the bronze statue of pioneering schoolteacher Chloe Clark doesn’t overlook an untouched prairie or a backdrop of Evergreen trees, scenes she might have seen when she first started teaching at Fort Nisqually (now DuPont) in 1840 at a mission school. She was the first school teacher to arrive in the South Sound, historians say.
(To the right is a picture of Chloe Clark. It isn't the bronze statue, but it gives an idea of what it looks like. Key Peninsula sculptor John Jewell produced the real one)
Instead, Clark's statue overlooks buildings and asphalt near the Bronze Works foundry in Tacoma. The group of history enthusiasts who raised $86,000 for the statue's creation is ecstatic that it's complete.
But they'll have to wait until 2010 for the statue's installation at Chloe Clark Elementary School in DuPont. The Steilacoom Historical School District must perform about $100,000 worth of landscape improvements, including clearing trees and readying the area for a pedestal for the statue.
"Are we disappointed? I think so," said Retired Army Maj. Gen. John Hemphill, chairman of the Chloe Clark Memorial Committee. "But it is a lot of work."
